lllostgirlll
lllostgirlll
#1 Skade, Aelswith, and Brida Apologist
2K posts
(Icon: made on picrew. Banner: found on tumblr. About me is pinned.)
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lllostgirlll · 4 days ago
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obsessive/unhinged dark!Felix x inexperienced!reader
18+ drabbles are marked with (*)
poppy*
felix actively losing his mind*
the cameras are for your own good*
where it started
time for a new wardrobe*
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lllostgirlll · 13 days ago
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developing an insane hyperfixation about the lego batman movie rn like
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lllostgirlll · 14 days ago
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i know i’m late to the party but i just watched the lego batman movie. a thousand plagues upon whoever cancelled the sequel i’m not even kidding
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lllostgirlll · 15 days ago
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I’m no better than a man
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lllostgirlll · 26 days ago
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who up kingdoming they heaven right now?
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lllostgirlll · 27 days ago
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lllostgirlll · 27 days ago
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Lord, I would advise that you don’t attend the negotiations. The presence of the king and father would only serve to increase their price.
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lllostgirlll · 28 days ago
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May I present my kitten Alfred, who is named after a certain king, giving said king a shoulder grab?
Bonus: my cat vs. the guy he was named after
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lllostgirlll · 29 days ago
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hey don't cry. turn seasons 1-4 ok?
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lllostgirlll · 1 month ago
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haven’t even seen thunderbolts yet but i fear it has awoken my marvel obsession like a sleeper agent once more
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lllostgirlll · 1 month ago
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i’m not even a bucky girl but i might be after this 😅 i used to be during winter soldier and civil war and then i guess i just wasn’t big on the direction they took his character??? idk i haven’t seen falcon and winter soldier or anything but bucky has such a rich backstory and it felt like they just reduced him to “snarky one liner man” for a while. but i haven’t seen thunderbolts yet. anyways sorry for the ramble but yeah this fanfic was really really good and is definitely going to be a multiple time re-read for me 🫶🏻
ALSO for whatever reason i love the ‘falling into a frozen lake and saved’ trope??? i have NO explanation for that 😅
Hold Fast | Bucky Barnes x Reader
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Summary: A winter mission goes sideways, forcing you to cross a frozen lake under fire. The ice doesn’t hold—and when you go under, Bucky is the only thing between you and the dark.
MCU Timeline Placement: Post Thunderbolts*
Master List: Find my other stuff here!
Warnings: THUNDERBOLTS SPOILERS, hypothermia, near-drowning, descriptions of drowning, blood, injuries, limb trauma, hospitalization, PTSD symptoms, emotional vulnerability, protective behavior, team banter, soft angst with resolution!
Word Count: 9.5k
Author’s Note: had so much fun with this request!! this one really reminded me of no way but through, which holds such a special place in my little cold-weather-loving heart. i loooove icy mission settings, hypothermic chaos, and painfully soft bucky barnes, so this was basically a dream to write. also couldn’t help myself and had to bring in the full thunderbolts/new avengers crew at the end. i am nothing if not predictable <3
────────────────────────
The wind off the lake bit harder than it had twenty minutes ago.
Not that it mattered. You’d stopped registering the cold a while back, after the second ridge, where the frost had started creeping into the inside seam of your gloves. Or maybe when you heard the first round of gunfire echo through the trees, half-muted by the thick snow-laden branches overhead.
Your teeth weren’t chattering. That would’ve meant your body had enough energy to waste on something so useless. Instead, everything inside you was pulling inward. Tightening. Conserving. Slowing.
“Keep moving,” Bucky’s voice snapped, low and close behind your left shoulder, and you did.
Not because he told you to. Because you had to.
The mission had gone wrong in the kind of way that didn’t leave room for debriefs. No secure exit point, no external comms, no second wave coming in behind you. Just you, Bucky, and the last evac flare tucked in Yelena’s pack two klicks east—across a frozen lake, through the trees, past whatever was still hunting you from the west ridge.
You hadn’t seen what hit the quinjet. Just felt the shockwave under your boots, then the plume of smoke curling over the horizon. Yelena had been the one closest to the treeline. She moved faster, covered more ground when it mattered, and she was carrying the extraction beacon. So when everything went to hell and the team scattered, it was you and Bucky left circling back to pull recon on the ones who shot your ride out of the sky.
Bucky walked behind you now, a half-step slower than usual. Calculated. Watching your six, probably watching your feet, too. 
“Northeast ridge is clear,” Yelena’s voice crackled softly in your comms. “Found an evac point. I’ll hold position.”
“Copy,” Bucky muttered. He was closer now. You could hear the rough edge in his voice, the constant scrape of concern just underneath it. “Let us know if anything shifts.”
There was a pause, a soft click, and then silence.
It had been thirty-two minutes.
Thirty-two minutes of sprinting across a frozen forest, every breath burning in your lungs. Thirty-two minutes of feeling Bucky’s presence hovering behind you like a shadow stitched to your spine, keeping pace, always watching. Watching your six, probably watching your feet, too.
“We’re near the lake,” Bucky said quietly.
You nodded once. Didn’t slow.
The lake had shown up on recon, a massive spread of black and silver on the satellite map, completely iced over and ringed by skeletal trees. You hadn’t planned to get near it. No cover. No depth perception. And the ice…
There were warnings. Cracks. Inconsistent freeze. The warm weeks earlier in the month had made it unreliable. Solid in places, dangerously thin in others.
Your fingers flexed around your weapon. You could still feel the scabbed-over cuts along your knuckles from the last mission. You hadn’t even gotten the blood out of the gloves. It had frozen stiff.
“They’re pushing,” Bucky said, eyes scanning the treeline. “Trying to flank.”
“We keep moving.”
“You’re hurt.”
“Not bad.”
“That’s not what I asked.”
Your jaw locked.
There was blood soaking into the seam of your left leg, trailing down to right where the fabric met your boot. You didn’t look down. Couldn’t. It hadn’t slowed you down yet. If it did, you’d think about it. Not now.
You didn’t tell him how deep the cut went. You didn’t need to. He could smell it by now, metallic, sharp, slicing through the scent of ice and pine. It left a trail behind you, carved like a signature across the snow. If any of the hostiles had dogs, you were as good as marked.
The lake came into full view as you crested the ridge. It didn’t shimmer, didn’t glint—it was too dark for that now. Instead, it stretched wide and waiting, flat as glass and just as merciless. A wound in the landscape, glossy and black, veins of fracture spidering out across the surface where the snow had been blown off by the earlier blast wave.
Bucky said nothing, but he stopped just behind you. You could feel the weight of his silence.
“We don’t have time to go around,” you said, voice thin. “They’ll have us before the trees thicken again.”
“There’s no cover out there.” His tone wasn’t harsh. It was worse, quiet, steady, resigned. “If they catch sight of us, we’re open. Sitting ducks. You know that.”
“They won’t.” You adjusted your grip on your weapon. The trigger guard was sticking, your blood had frozen at the seam. “There’s mist coming off the surface. It’ll give us some visual buffer if we move fast.”
“You’re bleeding.”
“Which is why I can’t climb another fucking ridge.”
Your voice barely made it past your lips. It felt thinner than the air you were pulling into your chest. You didn’t need to look at Bucky to know he was staring at you again—sharp, narrowed, assessing you the way he did before a breach. Not checking for weakness. Measuring the cost.
But there was no time for costs anymore.
The crack of gunfire ricocheted off the ridge behind you. 
Not the echo of distant threat, but close. Immediate. 
Bark splintered off a tree trunk ten paces from your position, and Bucky moved instantly, grabbing your arm and yanking you down into a crouch behind the lip of an ice-encased boulder. 
You landed hard on your knee, your injured leg screaming in protest. Warm blood surged and stuck to the inside of your pants, and it was only then that you realized the muscle was torn. Not grazed. Torn.
Bucky didn’t flinch at the impact, but you caught the way his jaw clenched. “They’ve got fucking elevation,” he muttered under his breath. “How the hell did they—”
Another round cracked off a rock to your left. You ducked lower.
You didn’t answer him. You were trying not to pass out.
The second ridge. That was where they’d circled back. They must’ve doubled back around while you were sweeping east, using the wreckage and smoke trail from the quinjet as cover. You should’ve clocked it. Should’ve seen the trail crossing itself on the HUD.
But you’d been too busy bleeding.
A comms stutter broke through your earpiece. Yelena’s voice, brittle and curt: “Multiple heat signatures—tracking southeast. Six or seven. Aggressive push. Fast. You need to move.”
“Noted,” Bucky muttered, and clicked off.
He turned toward you, and there was something behind his eyes now. Not fear. Urgency. That hard-edged tension you’d only ever seen once before, when he’d carried your unconscious body out of a compound fire and spent the next forty minutes in complete silence.
“We’re not getting around the lake,” he said flatly.
Another shot cracked the air.
You flinched. He didn’t.
“They’re herding us,” you said quietly, barely audible. “Driving us into the open.”
He nodded once. “They want the intel. They don’t want to kill us. Not yet.”
“Could’ve fooled me.”
More shouts. They were getting louder. You heard the low whine of an engine somewhere, a snowmobile, maybe. Not yours. Yours was ash.
“We need to split,” Bucky said suddenly.
You turned sharply. “No.”
“I’ll draw them off. You follow the lake’s edge. Keep to the trees.”
“They’re tracking us both. They know there’s two.”
“They don’t know where you are,” he said, already rising to his feet. “Not exactly. You haven’t fired since the breach. You’re harder to trace. Let me pull them west, and—”
“No.”
It came out louder than you meant it to. It silenced the forest.
You were breathing too hard. The edges of your vision had started to smear. Your leg was going numb.
“Bucky—”
Another shot. Close. Too close.
He didn’t hesitate.
He turned and hurled a flashbang toward the sound. The white light ignited against the snow with a violent hiss, smoke billowing out and momentarily masking your position.
Then—
Movement.
From your left. Fast.
You turned, raised your weapon, but it was too late. Something barreled through the trees and tackled you full force, body slamming into yours and driving you back, pain blooming white-hot in your thigh where the wound tore wider.
You hit the ground hard, your weapon flung into the snow. The hostile landed on top of you, mask fogged, breath rapid. He went for your throat. You reached for your boot knife, fingers numb, clumsy.
The lake was right there. Ten feet behind you. Maybe less.
You heard Bucky shout your name.
The knife slid into your hand. You didn’t think. You just moved.
You drove the blade up under his jaw, hard and clean, and rolled him off you before he could finish choking.
You were on your feet again—limping, half-hopping, gun lost, blood pouring down your leg now—and the others were coming.
You saw five through the smoke. At least five .
Too many.
You could try to crawl back to Bucky. Hope they didn’t shoot you in the open. Hope he could carry you.
Or—
Or you could do the thing you shouldn’t.
The thing that would buy you time.
The thing that would probably kill you.
You turned and ran toward the lake.
Bucky was still shouting, but his voice was muffled now, lost to the scream of your pulse and the way the air changed as you broke through the treeline.
Your feet hit the ice, and it sang beneath you.
A deep, haunted groan that vibrated up your legs and through your spine. The kind of sound the earth makes when it doesn’t want to be touched.
You didn’t stop.
The mist coming off the surface curled like fingers, wrapping around your boots, your knees, your breath. It shielded you, just enough. You heard the men behind you shouting, confused, uncertain. They’d lost you in the fog. For now.
But they’d find you again if you stopped moving.
You didn’t expect to make it across. That wasn’t the point.
You weren’t stupid. You’d seen the fractures on recon. Knew the freeze was uneven, knew the surface tension wouldn’t hold under sustained weight, and certainly not without punishing you for the arrogance of trying. You also knew there were at least four men behind you, maybe more, and you weren’t going to outrun them through another ridge. Not on a torn leg. Not dragging blood like breadcrumbs.
But you could give Bucky a chance. A window.
You weren’t going to last much longer anyway. Your sidearm was gone. Your rifle was jammed. Your limbs were starting to seize—not from fear, not from cold, but from simple math. The cost of staying alive had begun to outweigh what your body could give.
So you played the only card left.
If you could get two of them on the ice. Maybe three. And if you timed it right, kept your distance, baited them into giving chase, made them run heavier than you walked, there was a chance the lake would decide who stayed topside and who went under. You weren’t built like them. Smaller frame. Lighter gear. You knew how to move soft. They wouldn’t.
They were cocky. Angry. Trigger-happy and armored to hell. That kind of weight broke tension in seconds. You’d seen it happen. Watched it once during a training exercise, how a man with sixty extra pounds of ammo sank in four seconds flat when he tried to follow a sniper across a riverbed in spring thaw.
It might kill you too. But it might not. And if even one of them went in—
That was one less gun Bucky had to deal with. One less bullet in the air. One less thing clawing for your neck.
That was something.
Your breath came faster, colder. The cut in your leg had gone numb, finally, but you could feel the wetness inside your boot. The weight of it. The imbalance.
You didn’t know how far out you were.
The fog was thicker now, curling up your spine, swallowing the tree line. You could’ve been ten meters from shore or two. Could’ve been standing over solid ice or the thinnest patch on the lake.
Didn’t matter. You had to keep going.
There was shouting again. Closer. Heavier footsteps now, rapid and uncoordinated. They’d spotted your prints. One of them yelled to the others. Someone fired, blind and stupid, too far to your left to matter. The shot cracked across the lake and echoed, turning the world sharp and brittle.
You heard the ice answer.
A moan beneath the surface. A shift. A warning.
Still, you didn’t stop.
Another shot hit near your feet, spitting a web of cracks like a warning flare. You stumbled. Went to one knee. Pain flared up your hip. You hissed through your teeth and scrambled upright.
Behind you, closer now, another shout.
And then, footsteps on ice.
They were following you.
You felt the lake notice. The way it strained. The way it listened.
You started weaving, not running, but changing angles. You knew better than to move in a straight line. Spread the pressure. Make them adjust their balance. You could almost hear their weight dragging the surface down. Could hear how reckless their strides were. One of them slipped, boots sliding, cursing and shouting, and the others answered in angry Finnish.
You adjusted again, shifting your weight to the balls of your feet as you zig-zagged across the ice, lungs straining, vision speckled with spots. The cold had crawled under your skin now—made a home in the corners of your elbows, the hollow between your shoulder blades, the soft hinge of your jaw. You weren’t shivering anymore. That would have required your body to care whether it was dying.
Behind you, the men had begun to split. Two followed your path directly, weapons raised and boots clumsy across the frost, the third veering wide, trying to cut off your arc. You didn’t know where the fourth had gone. You didn’t have the capacity to guess. You’d passed beyond the edge of tactics and into instinct.
The ice beneath you moaned again, longer this time, a groaning, glacial sound that rippled underfoot like a living thing. The cracks spidered wider at the edges of your vision, faint lines of fracture glowing pale beneath the frost-dusted sheen. You counted every step in your head, each one a wager against weight and water.
You needed them closer. Just a little closer. You needed them to get stupid again, greedy for the kill.
And they did.
One of them shouted something guttural in Finnish, laced with adrenaline and mockery, and opened fire. The shot missed your side by inches, skimming the air close enough that you felt it kiss your ribs. You dropped hard into a crouch, used the momentum to pivot left, and rolled back into a full sprint. The surface answered with another shriek of pressure.
You couldn’t tell if it was a warning or a promise.
Then another sound, behind the gunfire—something real, something known.
Bucky’s voice.
Low at first, almost lost in the chaos. Then sharper, clearer, a shout that carved through the storm like a blade. He was yelling your name. You didn’t turn. Couldn’t. You could barely see anymore, and the fog curled tighter now, clouding everything but the space directly in front of you.
A second burst of fire came from the opposite edge of the lake—sharper, faster. Controlled. You recognized it immediately. Not hostile. That was him.
He was flanking.
You caught the flicker of movement through the mist just ahead and to your right. Bucky breaking the line of trees at a full sprint, a blur of black and gunmetal, eyes fixed on you like he could will you to stop. He was shouting again, but your ears had gone dull. All you could hear was the ice. The awful, pulsing hum of it underfoot, vibrating with your heartbeat.
And then one of the hostiles did what you’d hoped. He fired while running.
The recoil jolted his center of gravity, boots sliding out from under him as he fell sideways. He hit the ground hard, and the impact buckled the surface beneath him, cracks detonating outward like glass under a hammer. It sounded like thunder.
The other two tried to stop, but it was too late. One went down to a knee, skidding, scraping across the slick, and the third barreled into him, toppling them both in a tangle of limbs and shouted curses.
For a breath, you thought it had worked.
But it didn’t matter.
Because the fourth man, the one you couldn’t see, had circled wide, just like you feared. You didn’t hear him until he was right behind you. There was no gunshot. No shout. Just the thud of weight as he tackled you square in the back.
You hit the ice with a sickening crack, elbows slamming down first. The pain stole the breath from your lungs. Your vision whitewashed. Your cheek scraped frozen mist and split open.
He tried to roll you, get leverage to pin you down, but you were already moving. Already driving the knife from your belt up under his ribs, your fingers so numb you couldn’t tell if it connected.
It did. You felt him grunt, deep and surprised, before he staggered back, and you surged to your feet, but—
But the ice had had enough.
It screamed beneath you. A seismic groan, deeper than the others, wrong in every register. You felt the surface ripple like a muscle torn mid-strain. Your knees bent automatically, weight shifting light, trying to disperse, but it was too late.
The cracks burst outward from where the hostile had landed. The seams raced under your feet, intersecting, multiplying, fracturing the world beneath you in real time.
You heard Bucky shout your name again.
Closer.
Desperate.
And then he was there, just at the edge of your sightline. His face was bloodless, teeth bared, feet skidding to a stop as he reached out like he could catch you from twenty feet away.
“Don’t move!” he barked.
You didn’t.
Didn’t breathe. Didn’t blink.
But the ice moved anyway.
It bowed beneath you.
Then split.
The water came up like a hand and yanked you under.
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Bucky saw the ice go before he heard it.
Not the split, but the way your knees flexed, just slightly, the way your arms went out as if your body knew before your mind did. That half-second of weightlessness right before everything collapsed. Bucky knew that look. He’d seen it in jump footage, in buildings on fire, in the eyes of people who understood they weren’t getting out unless someone came back for them.
He was already running.
Not thinking. Not planning. Just moving. Snow churned under his boots, breath barely fogging the air. He heard your name tear out of his throat, loud and raw and useless.
You were looking right at him. Eyes wide. Mouth slightly open. But you didn’t say anything. Didn’t scream. Didn’t even move.
You just dropped.
The ice beneath you opened like a mouth.
He reached the edge just in time to see the water close back over you.
The sound was sickening. One second you were there, the next you weren’t. The lake swallowed you whole, and all that remained was mist and the soft sound of new cracks racing toward him.
Bucky didn’t hesitate.
He launched himself forward, boots slamming into the ice, the weight of his landing enough to make the surface whine under him. He dropped into a slide, knees bent, palm out to brace, momentum hurtling him across the ice toward the place you’d gone under.
The cold didn’t register. Not the air, not the wind, not the water as it seeped through the cracks already kissing the soles of his boots. The serum kept his blood from reacting the way a normal man’s would. No immediate shock. No burning in the lungs. But it didn’t make him immune to the knowledge of what cold did to you.
You had maybe ninety seconds before the water started convincing your body to stop trying.
His hand was already going to his comm.
“Belova, she fell through,” he said, voice sharp, clipped. “The lake. Northwest section. I’m going in.”
Yelena’s reply came fast, static, then her voice, tight with urgency. “That lake is thirty meters deep in the center, Barnes. If you lose her—”
“I won’t.”
“You better not. I’ll find a snowmobile. If you’re still breathing, I’ll come get you.”
He reached the hole, just barely visible now. It was a jagged, black wound in the surface, already sheeting over at the edges with a thin glaze of refreeze. He dropped to his knees, leaned over, peered in—
And saw nothing.
Just black.
No movement. No sound. No trace.
“Northwest,” he repeated, already stripping his rifle off one shoulder and driving it into the snow at the edge of the break. “Tell evac. We’ll need heat. And a med kit.”
“Copy,” she said. “Don’t die.”
He could feel the press of his heartbeat in his teeth.
“Shit.” His voice cracked out of him like a whip.
He stripped the rifle from his shoulder, shoved it into the snow behind him, and without another thought, threw himself in.
The lake gripped him like a vice.
It wasn’t like diving into water. It was like diving into a vacuum. It swallowed him. Crushed him. Everything disappeared at once. Sight, sound, weight. He didn’t kick. Didn’t thrash. He let himself drop, arms out, the metal of his left dragging him faster. One breath in his lungs. That’s all he allowed.
He opened his eyes.
There was nothing.
Only black, smeared with silver light from the hole above him, already shifting, narrowing. Snow-dust had drifted across the opening. It would vanish in seconds. He needed to find you now.
He rotated once. No sign of you. Kicked again, deeper. The pressure increased, the cold turning the skin of his right arm to fire. He ignored it. Turned again. Saw—
Movement.
To his left.
A flicker. A shape. Limbs caught in the water’s drag. No fight in them.
He pushed toward it.
You weren’t moving. Your arms floated loosely, your legs bent at strange angles, one boot still half-trailing a blood-red ribbon through the current. Your head was tilted, hair haloing out in the dark.
For a split-second, something in him broke.
He reached you in three kicks. One arm wrapped around your chest, hand braced under your jaw, holding your head above your shoulders. Your face was waxy, mouth parted, lashes spiked with ice. He pulled you in, curled his metal arm across your ribs, and angled upward.
The surface was gone.
The hole was gone, nowhere near.
He turned in a tight circle, one-handed, dragging you with him. No openings. No shadows above, no light. The ice was seamless.
His vision tunneled.
He launched upward, fist first, and when his knuckles hit solid, he didn’t stop. He punched.
The sound was muffled underwater, more sensation than noise. The vibration hit his bones, the resistance of ancient ice refusing to yield. He drove his arm up again—once, twice—until the metal met fracture.
The ice split.
The hole widened just enough. He kicked upward and shoved you ahead of him, breaking the surface with a gasp you didn’t make.
The air burned. The cold above was nothing compared to below.
He hauled himself out of the water, grabbing you under the arms and dragging you with him, the both of you half-dead and slick with lakewater, steam rolling off your clothes as the air hit them.
You weren’t breathing.
“No—” he rasped. He dropped to his knees, pressed two fingers under your jaw. Nothing. His hand flattened against your chest. Still nothing. He tipped your head, cleared your mouth, and without pausing, sealed his lips to yours and breathed.
Twice.
Again.
Your body jerked, but only from the force.
He pressed down hard. His hands trembled, just slightly. Not from the cold.
“C’mon,” he muttered, voice cracked and low, barely human. “Don’t you fucking dare—”
Another breath.
You coughed.
Violent. Wet. Your whole frame arched up before collapsing into him, lungs sputtering lakewater and whatever else you’d swallowed, mouth opening to drag in air like it hurt to exist.
Bucky’s arms locked around you the second your head tilted forward.
You were shaking now. Not convulsing. Not yet. But the kind of full-body tremor that said your blood wasn’t moving fast enough. That your skin was freezing from the inside out.
“I got you,” he whispered, over and over, voice half-strangled as he pulled you close, as close as he could get without hurting you more. “I got you, I got you.”
He didn’t realize he was rocking you until your fingers clenched in his jacket. A tiny, involuntary twitch—no force behind it, no awareness—but it was enough. Enough to tell him you were still here. Still fighting. Still fucking breathing.
“Easy,” he whispered against your hair. “Just stay with me. I’ve got you.”
You made a sound. Barely anything. A cracked whimper caught in the wreckage of your throat. He pressed a hand to the back of your neck, fingers splayed wide, trying to shield as much of your skin as he could from the wind.
Your body was ice. Every inch soaked through. Your gear, your boots, the back of your neck, all of it was clinging to you like a second skin, each layer working against you now, not for.
The low snarl of a snowmobile engine cut through the trees, carving hard across the frozen ground. He didn’t look up. Didn’t shift. Just curled tighter around you and angled his body between yours and the open lake.
The engine cut off twenty feet away, skidding to a halt. Snow crunched under boots. Then—
“Shit.” Yelena’s voice dropped the usual smirk. “She’s hypothermic?”
“Full submersion,” Bucky said, barely audible. “At least a minute. Maybe longer.”
Yelena was already moving, yanking her pack off and crouching beside him. “Then we need her out of those clothes, now. You too. You’re soaked.”
“I’m fine.”
“You’re wet,” she snapped. “You’re not immortal.”
“She’s freezing.”
“Exactly why we strip her down and use what’s dry. I brought a tarp rig for the back—get her on it. We’ll wrap her, I’ll drive.”
Bucky didn’t argue. He peeled his jacket off one arm, then the other, movements sharp and economical. It hit the snow with a wet slap. His gear vest followed. Then he reached for the zipper at your collar, fingers already numbing where they met the icy fabric.
“Hey,” he said softly, tipping your chin. Your eyes fluttered open for a breath, then closed again. “I know it’s cold. But we gotta get you out of this stuff. Alright?”
You didn’t answer. Just let him move you, limp and loose like your bones had gone slack. He tried to be fast. Careful. Stripped your coat first, then the soaked thermal underlayer, exposing your shoulders to the air. You flinched. He wanted to curse out loud. Wanted to punch the goddamn lake.
Yelena shrugged off her own jacket. “Here.”
He took it without looking and shoved your arms through the sleeves. It was warm. And dry. It didn’t matter if it was hers or his or stolen off a corpse. He’d have wrapped you in skin if it meant getting your body temp up fast enough.
But it wasn’t enough.
Your pants were soaked through. So were the boots. And your left leg—fuck.
He saw the blood pooled inside the boot as he started to peel it off. Frozen red around the seams. Your thigh was still bleeding, sluggish now from shock, but still enough to be dangerous.
“Yelena,” he barked without turning. “Gauze. Whatever you’ve got.”
“Med kit’s in the sled,” she called, already unrolling the tow platform and yanking the thermal tarp open. “Field wrap’s on the side.”
He ripped the second boot off, tossed both aside. The pants clung like wet parchment. He muttered something sharp under his breath and took the knife from his belt, slicing the fabric clean up the seam to the waistband. He didn’t pause. Didn’t look at your face. Just cut them free and tossed them into the snow.
Your leg was a mess. Torn muscle, ragged edge, blood sluggish but still weeping. He didn’t have time to be gentle. He grabbed the wrap from Yelena’s outstretched hand and packed the gauze into the wound, fingers fast and precise. Then he cinched the bandage tight just above your knee.
You groaned, weak and hoarse, but it meant you were still responsive.
“I know,” he muttered. “I know it hurts. Just hang on.”
Yelena was already back at the sled, lifting the flap on the side and unfurling the padding. “We’ve got maybe ten minutes before she drops out completely. Help me get her in.”
He moved without answering. One arm behind your back, one under your legs. You were a deadweight bundle of wet limbs and heatless skin.
Together, they settled you into the tow rig—padded, shielded at the sides, thermal canopy overhead. Standard evac mod. But it still looked like a coffin.
He hated that it looked like a coffin.
Yelena threw him a blanket roll, and he tucked it tight over your chest and shoulders, then your hips and thighs, arms crossed low over your ribs. Your skin was damp, your hair frozen at the ends, lashes rimmed in ice. He didn’t let himself stop moving. He kept one hand pressed just over your heart, the other ready to shield your face from wind.
His hand stayed there.
Just a second too long.
She didn’t call him on it.
“You’re going with her,” Yelena said instead, already climbing back onto the snowmobile. “I can drive. You monitor her breathing. Try and get her talking if you can. If she fully passes out—”
“She won’t.”
“I’m just saying—”
“She won’t.”
His voice was steel. He wasn’t yelling. He wasn’t pleading. He just knew.
Yelena didn’t argue again. She gunned the engine, and the machine roared to life.
He climbed into the tow sled, kneeling beside you, one hand on your chest, the other braced against the frame. Wind blasted past them as they launched forward, but he didn’t feel it.
All he felt was the shallow rise and fall beneath his hand.
────────────────────────
You surfaced slowly.
Not all at once. Not in a cinematic way—no gasping, no full-body jolt, no sudden realization that you were still alive. Just pressure. First behind your eyes, then in your chest. A tightness, dull and deep, like your lungs had been filled with stones and someone had stacked their weight across your ribcage to make sure they stayed there.
Your mouth was open. You hadn’t meant it to be. Something cool and artificial was feeding air through your nose, down your throat. Plastic tubing, you realized after a beat, half-formed thoughts dragging behind sensation. An oxygen cannula. 
Your head ached.
Not a sharp pain. Not even pain, really. Just distance. Like your skull had been filled with static and your thoughts had to crawl through it on hands and knees to reach you. When you tried to move, just a twitch of your shoulder, your body didn’t respond. Not fully. Your nerves were slow, reluctant. Your arms felt like they belonged to someone else.
Then, light. Soft, not blinding. White above you. Clinical. Cold. You tried to blink and felt the dry pull of your lashes against skin that had been left too long without moisture.
There were sounds now. Somewhere in the periphery.
Muffled voices. Beeping.
A hiss of something mechanical resetting. Maybe a vitals monitor, maybe a heat unit.
The next thing you noticed was your skin.
Your entire body felt like it had been peeled back and glued together wrong. Your legs ached. Not in the sharp, obvious way of a gunshot or blade, but deeper. Bone deep. Joint deep. There was a dull, pulsing throb in your left thigh that you couldn’t place, and you realized after a moment that you didn’t want to.
You were alive.
You weren’t supposed to be.
A slow breath pulled through your chest. It hurt. Not like you’d broken anything, but like your lungs had fought too hard to keep you, and they were punishing you for it now. You could feel the heaviness in them, the stiffness—residual fluid, probably. You weren’t coughing, but your chest was tight, and something wet shifted faintly every time you inhaled.
Hypothermia. Near-drowning. Soft tissue trauma. Blood loss.
The words filtered in one by one like files retrieved from a burned cabinet.
You didn’t remember the evac. Just ice. The smell of pine. A scream half-swallowed by the wind. The weight of water crushing your body into stillness. And then, heat. Arms. Metal against your ribs. Something solid that refused to let go.
Something you’d stopped fighting for before it found you.
There was a voice outside the room, beyond a curtain surrounding you. Sharp. Familiar.
Yelena.
“—two hours max. That’s what the doc said. She needs rest, not another round of brooding Bucky Barnes breathing exercises.”
A grunt. Quieter. Male.
“Don’t look at me like that.”
A beat.
“Oh my god. You’re already doing it.”
You tried to turn your head toward the sound, but your body was too heavy. The world tilted and dragged behind you. Then, footsteps. Two sets. One softer, reluctant. One clipped.
They didn’t come in.
Their voices faded just enough to let the quiet crawl back in. Only the monitors kept humming, a soft rhythmic count of your survival, like the room was measuring every second you stayed alive and wasn’t convinced yet that you would.
You lay there, still and heavy, unsure if your body would obey you at all. Everything felt wrapped in gauze. Muted. Far away. But your chest remembered. The weight, the pressure, the water. The ache that lingered behind your ribs told you the lake hadn’t really let go. Not completely.
You tried again.
It wasn’t even a word at first. Just a shift. A breath caught too sharply in your throat. Your fingers twitched against the blanket. Or maybe they didn’t. Maybe you imagined it. You turned your head, just barely, toward the voices outside the curtain, and let your lips part.
“Buck—”
Your voice wasn’t a voice. It was air dragged across a raw throat, shredded in the middle, collapsing before it made it to sound. But it was enough. Enough to make the effort real. Enough to make your pulse spike on the monitor. Enough to send a tremor through your lungs.
The curtain shifted instantly.
Then opened.
Bucky’s silhouette filled the space between the light and the noise. For a second, he didn’t say anything. Just looked at you, jaw clenched, shoulders set. His face didn’t change, but you saw it anyway. Relief. The kind that didn’t need expression to be known.
“You’re awake.” His voice was low. Too steady.
You swallowed—or tried to. It scraped. Burned. Your throat felt flayed.
He crossed the room in two strides, dropping into the chair beside your bed like he’d been ready to launch himself forward the whole time and was only now allowed. His hand hovered near yours, not quite touching.
“Do you need the doc?” he asked. “I’ll go get them. Just hold on—”
You moved before you could think.
Not much. Not even fast. But your hand lifted, weak and trembling, and curled around his wrist as he started to move. The motion cost everything. Your arm dropped a second later like it had been cut loose, but it did its job.
Bucky froze.
You tried to speak again. The word caught halfway up your throat and crumpled. You coughed instead, once, hard enough to burn, and his hand was on you instantly, palm flat against your sternum like he could keep you from falling apart just by holding you still.
“You’re okay.” His voice was different now. Thinner. “You’re okay. Just breathe.”
You tried.
Your chest shook with it. Your lungs were still too tight. Too full of memory. But the oxygen tubing helped, and eventually the coughing stopped. Your body settled back against the sheets, exhausted from the effort of existing.
His hand didn’t move.
“I’m fine,” you rasped. Or tried to.
The word sounded nothing like a word.
It scraped the back of your throat and shattered. You winced. He shook his head once, almost imperceptible.
“Don’t,” he murmured. “You don’t have to talk. Not yet.”
You blinked up at him.
He was too close. Not in a way that made you uncomfortable, never that, but in the way that made you aware of how much space he took up without saying a word. The way his presence made the machines quieter. The way the lines around his mouth looked carved from stone. The way his hand hadn’t left your chest.
“You scared the hell out of me,” he said, softer now. “I thought—”
He didn’t finish.
You didn’t need him to.
You felt it in the way his shoulders curled forward. In the way he kept watching your pulse monitor like it owed him something. In the way his eyes kept returning to your mouth, to your neck, to the shallow rise and fall that proved you were still here.
You opened your mouth again.
The words didn’t come. You weren’t sure they could. Your throat felt like someone had taken a wire brush to the inside of it. But you moved your lips anyway, slow, deliberate, shaping around the simplest thing you could mouth.
How long?
Bucky blinked.
For a second, you thought maybe he hadn’t caught it. Then his hand left your chest—not completely, just enough to curl around your wrist again, warm and solid, anchoring.
“Seven days,” he said quietly. “You’ve been under for seven.”
You let that sit. Let it press.
Seven days.
Not just unconscious. Unresponsive. Monitored. Kept warm. Intubated, probably, if your throat was any indication. You were certain there’d been a moment, maybe more than one, where they weren’t sure you were going to come back at all. Where your body might have decided to give up on the rest of you even after the lake let you go.
You let your head tip, eyes dragging slowly across the room. The motion made your neck ache. Even that, especially that, felt like a small defeat.
There was a table beside the bed. Narrow. Stainless steel. You hadn’t noticed it before.
It was cluttered.
Not with the usual medical shit. Not gauze or tubing or pill cups. Something else. Something… softer.
There were a few folded paper cranes, wings dipped in bright marker ink. A knitted square of fabric, uneven at the edges, with a giant uneven “W” stitched into the center in dark blue yarn. A cheap plastic snow globe—Branson, Missouri—with fake snow and a peeling label. A tiny flickering LED tea light. A single packet of hot chocolate. A folded sketch torn from someone’s notebook paper.
You stared at it. Confused.
Your brow furrowed, unsteady, and you felt Bucky’s eyes move with yours.
He shifted in his chair, the leather creaking faintly under him.
“Those are from Bob.” He nodded toward the cranes. “He said paper folding helps with anxiety. Sat outside your room for two hours trying to get that red one right. Said you’d like it because it was ugly. Had character.”
Your lips twitched. Or tried to. He saw it.
Bob had tried to teach you once, back when missions were lighter and your hands steadier. He’d brought a pack of neon origami paper into the rec room like it was contraband, all sheepish grin and muttered instructions, and you’d spent an hour cursing under your breath while he quietly folded a perfect flock beside you. 
You never managed a proper crane, just a deeply cursed paper lump with uneven wings, but he’d kept it anyway. Called it your “battle bird.” Said it looked like it had been through something. Just like you.
“The tea light is Ava’s,” Bucky continued. “She said you always lit a candle on briefing nights. Figured you’d want one burning when you woke up.”
You did. Always the same squat little votive, tucked on the corner of your desk, flickering through every debrief while the rest of the team pretended not to notice. Ava had, though—said the sound and smell helped her keep her pacing in check, the rhythm of it steadier than her own breath some nights.
Bucky pointed at the snow globe, grimacing. “Walker. No note. Don’t ask.”
You made a rough sound, not quite a laugh, and regretted it immediately. Your chest ached. You swallowed it down.
Of course he brought Branson, Missouri.
The man had one week of leave and spent it sending you unsolicited selfies from a dinner theater called “Yakov’s Last Laugh,” wearing a cowboy hat two sizes too small and arguing over text about whether Silver Dollar City technically counted as “historic.”
You’d told him Branson wasn’t a real place. Just a Midwest fever dream built entirely out of unlicensed Elvis impersonators and knockoff Dollywood energy. He’d called it “America’s soul.”
You’d called it “a cry for help in gift shop form.”
And now it sat beside your medical chart, a tiny, glittering monument to the world’s pettiest inside joke.
God help you if it made you smile again.
“The sketch is from Alexei,” he went on. “It’s supposed to be you in the snow, fighting a bear. Or dancing with one. He wasn’t clear.”
You blinked slowly. That tracked. He’d once told you, entirely unprompted, that your “ferocity under pressure” reminded him of a Siberian she-bear. You’d assumed it was a compliment. Probably.
“And that,” he added, gesturing to the hot chocolate, “Yelena. Said hospital cocoa was an abomination and if she caught you drinking any she’d pull your IV herself.”
You smiled faintly. Yelena was the one who started it. Midnight cocoa in the mess when neither of you could sleep, hands still shaking from whatever dreams you'd clawed your way out of. No talking. No questions. Just heat, sugar, and silence until your pulses evened out again. A truce in a mug.
Your throat was still raw. You didn’t dare try a full word, but the question was there—in the slow blink, the glance toward the yarn.
“That’s from Walker too,” Bucky said, deadpan. “He learned to knit. Apparently.”
Your eyes drifted back to him. He hadn’t looked away from you once. Not really.
There was one more thing on the table. You hadn’t noticed it before. Smaller than the rest. Set slightly apart. A small matchbox-sized tin. Dark blue. Metal. Worn at the corners.
Bucky followed your gaze. His jaw tightened.
You looked at him.
He didn’t speak.
Just reached over slowly, picked it up, turned it once in his palm like he wasn’t sure if he regretted leaving it there.
Then he held it out to you. Didn’t press it into your hand, just let it rest there, cradled against his fingers, waiting.
You tilted your head toward it, but your muscles were still too slow, coordination still too shot. He noticed. Said nothing. Just flipped the lid open himself.
Inside, nestled into the tin’s base on a folded strip of linen, was a tiny object. Barely bigger than your thumb. Faintly metallic. Dull silver at the edges, matte black at the center.
It was a music box cylinder. A fragment. Something old, worn smooth. The kind used in hand-crank players—the ones tucked inside the little wind-up boxes you used to fidget with as a child, flipping them open and closed like they were meant to be solved.
You blinked.
Once.
Twice.
Bucky was watching you. Carefully. Like the weight of your reaction might crack him open.
“You said,” he said quietly, “a few months ago… that you had one when you were a kid. Broke in a move. Said you remembered the sound but not the song.”
You remembered. You hadn’t thought he had.
You hadn’t thought anyone had been listening.
“I found that in a market in Riga,” he went on, voice low, roughened at the edges. “The guy didn’t know what it played. Didn’t have the housing. Just this. It was rusted shut. Took me a few days to clean it.”
He paused.
“I was gonna wait to give it to you. But I didn’t know when the right time was.”
You tried to speak again. Your throat clenched. No sound came.
Still—you pushed the air up, forced it out like it owed you something. Like you had to say it, even if it burned.
“Why?”
It rasped out of you like broken glass dragged across stone. More breath than voice. But the word made it past your lips this time, and that was enough.
Bucky didn’t answer right away.
Didn’t look at you, either. Not at first. His eyes had dropped back to the tin, as if the shape of it might tell him how to start.
The silence stretched.
You didn’t push him.
“I didn’t know if you’d want it,” he said finally. The words came low. Barely above a whisper. “Didn’t know if it meant anything coming from me.”
He shifted in the chair like he didn’t trust it to hold his weight. Like he was trying not to lean too close.
“You said that thing about the music box and it just—stuck. I don’t even think you realized you said it. We were talking about… something else. Some mission. I can’t even remember which. You were just fiddling with your comm and you mentioned it. How the song used to help you sleep, but now you can’t remember the tune. Just that it made you feel… safe. Back then.”
He rubbed his thumb over his knee, like he needed something to ground himself.
“I remembered,” he said again, quieter this time. “And I kept looking. For months. In every market, every junk bin, every fucked-up antique shop we passed through. Most of them were trash. Broken. Stolen. Or the wrong kind. But then I found that one. Just the cylinder. No box. No sound. Just…possibility.”
His jaw twitched.
“I figured I’d give it to you when… I don’t know. When things slowed down. When we weren’t bleeding every week or crawling through wreckage or losing people left and right. But things don’t slow down. Not for us. So I waited.”
He finally looked at you.
And the look in his eyes—God. It made your breath stutter beneath the oxygen tube. It wasn’t pity. It wasn’t soft, either. It was sharp. Too sharp. Like the only way he knew how to look at you was like he was still checking for exit wounds.
“I thought I missed my chance.”
He said it so plainly you almost didn’t feel it at first. But it settled in your chest like a weight. Like truth.
“I thought you were gone,” he went on. “On that lake… when I couldn’t find the surface, when I finally got you out, when your body—” He stopped himself. Shook his head. “You weren’t moving. You weren’t breathing. You were just drifting. And I remember thinking—that’s it. That’s the end. That’s where I lose you.”
Your chest tightened. Not from pain. Not from cold. Just the sound of him.
“I don’t lose people like that anymore,” he said. “Not like I used to. Not if I can help it. And sure, I’ve said that before. But this time—” His voice cracked, just once. “This time it was you.”
You blinked. Hard.
He leaned forward now, elbows braced on his knees, voice lower than before.
“You don’t get it,” he said, rambling on like the words were exiting his mouth before he even thought about them. “You think you’re just… part of the team. That you’re one of us. And you are. But it’s not the same. Not for me.”
He exhaled, sharp and tired and fraying.
“You get under my skin in ways that nothing else does. You keep me tethered when shit goes sideways. You ask questions no one else asks. You call me on my bullshit without making it feel like I’m back in some shrink’s office getting dissected. You make space. And I didn’t know how much I needed that—no—wanted it. Until I thought I’d lost it.”
You didn’t know you’d started crying until you tasted salt at the edge of your mouth. Just a few tears. Silent. Clean. Your throat hurt too much for sobbing. Your eyes hurt too much to keep them open.
But he noticed.
He sat forward quickly, hand reaching for the call button. “Shit—do you want the doc? I can get them, they said to page if you—”
You lifted your hand again. Just barely. Just enough to curl your fingers around his wrist.
“No,” you whispered. Barely there. Barely sound.
His hand hovered an inch above the call button, frozen. You felt the way his wrist flexed beneath your fingers, the way the tendons in his forearm pulled tight like he wasn’t sure whether to move or stay. His eyes searched your face again, sharp and clinical for one second—checking your color, your breathing, your pupils—and then he exhaled, quieter this time. Sat back.
Didn’t pull away.
You swallowed. The effort scraped down your throat like sandpaper, but you did it anyway. Forced air past the ruined edges of your voice until it shaped something. Small. Crooked. Yours.
“I didn’t… know you remembered,” you rasped, each word a dry scrape across something bruised and tender. “The music box.”
Bucky exhaled. Short. Quiet. Almost a laugh, except there was nothing funny in it.
“I remember everything you don’t think I do,” he said. “You always think no one’s paying attention. But I see it. All of it. The way you cover for people when they’re tired. How you pass your dessert off to Bob when he pretends he’s not hungry. That little stretch you do before every mission.”
Your lips parted, breath caught halfway to forming something else. But your throat cracked mid-inhale, so you let it go. Let him keep speaking.
He leaned forward again, this time more gently, his forearms braced on either side of your legs, like he was trying to fold himself smaller. Make himself quieter. Like he didn’t want the rest of the world to hear what came next.
“I see you,” he repeated, quieter now. “Even when you think you’re blending in. When you’re holding it together for everyone else.”
You blinked slowly. The tears had stopped, or maybe your body had just run out. Your eyes burned from the effort of keeping them open. But they stayed on him.
“I think…” You paused, tried to clear your throat, but it made it worse. You grimaced through it, blinked hard. He moved like he might reach for you, or call again, but you shook your head, barely. 
“Let me,” you croaked, voice shot to hell, every syllable catching like thread pulled through torn cloth. “I think I… do the stretch… because I’m scared.”
His eyes didn’t widen. He didn’t flinch. Just watched. Still. So fucking still.
You blinked again, slow and raw. “Not of dying. Not really.”
That earned a twitch of his mouth. Not amusement. Something darker. Sadder. Knowing.
“Of what, then?” he asked, voice low.
You swallowed hard. The air in your lungs felt too thick now, heavy with what you hadn’t said before the lake took you. “Of… getting close. Of being… close. And then it ending.”
Something in his expression fractured. Not broken, not open, just bare. Like you’d peeled something back without meaning to. Like you’d stepped too close to the place he kept boarded up with silence and mission reports and one-liners that didn’t quite pass for humor.
He nodded once. Not like he was agreeing. Like he understood.
“You’re not the only one,” he said quietly. “You think I didn’t notice how long it took you to unpack after the Bataysk job? You kept your bag zipped by the door for three weeks.”
You almost laughed. Almost. But it came out too soft, caught on the edge of a breath.
“You knew?”
“I always knew.”
You looked at him again. Really looked. His hands weren’t covered by gloves like they normally were. They were bare, calloused, fingertips nicked and bruised. His left hand rested beside your blanket, the metal dull and wet-lit under the fluorescents, motionless.
Your hand moved before your brain caught up.
Weak. Slow. You lifted your fingers and reached for the edge of his sleeve, but your arm shook with the effort and dropped short. He caught it before it fell completely—his flesh hand, warm and scarred and careful—and guided your palm over the metal one like it wasn’t strange at all. Like you’d done it a thousand times. His jaw ticked.
“It’s cold,” you whispered.
He nodded. “I know.”
“I don’t mind.”
He let his thumb brush across the edge of your wrist, slow and grounding. Not a stroke. Not comforting. Just there. “I didn’t think I’d get to tell you any of this,” he said. “When I pulled you out, when you weren’t breathing, I—” He cut himself off again, jaw tightening. “I thought you were already gone.”
You wanted to say something, anything, but the only sound you made was breath.
It was enough.
“I wasn’t ready to lose you,” he said. “Not like that. Not ever. But especially not without… you knowing.”
Your throat pulled tight.
“Knowing what?” you whispered, wrecked.
He didn’t hesitate.
“That I give a damn. That I think about you more than I should. That you’re not just some mission partner I cover in the field. That you matter.”
You opened your mouth again. Closed it. Your lips trembled.
Bucky moved closer, just slightly, head still bowed low like the words had weight. Like if he spoke too loud they might splinter.
“You matter to me,” he said. “More than I ever planned for.”
Your eyes burned. Your hand twitched in his, a pathetic excuse for a squeeze, but he felt it. He held on tighter.
You swallowed again, painful and raw. “Me too,” you said, barely audible. “You… matter.”
Something broke in his face. Not his composure. Not his strength. Just the smallest trace of distance, pulled away. A breath he hadn’t been able to take until now.
You saw it in his eyes.
And maybe that would’ve been enough. Maybe in another world—one with less noise, less blood—you would’ve stayed like that for another minute. Maybe you would’ve reached for him again, said something more, pulled the words from the ruin of your voice just to hear him say your name in that same, low, wrecked way.
But this wasn’t that world.
And the curtain tore open before you could even draw your next breath.
“MY BEAR CUB LIVES!”
Alexei’s voice exploded through the medbay like cannon fire, and before you could brace for it, before Bucky could so much as turn in his seat, there were arms. So many arms. Warm, clumsy, massive arms wrapping around you like a weighted blanket made of noise and Soviet linen.
You wheezed. A sharp, involuntary gasp you couldn’t help as Alexei crushed half your torso in a rib-cracking hug.
Bucky was on his feet instantly. “Hey—hey! Easy! Watch it, she’s still—”
“Bah!” Alexei cut him off with a wave of one enormous hand. “She is strong! Like small elk! Look at this—already upright, already beautiful, skin like ice sculpture!” He reached out and cradled your jaw for a second, then kissed your forehead in a way that nearly knocked the oxygen cannula askew. “You do not die on me. You are not allowed to die on me. I would never forgive you.”
“I tried to stop him,” Yelena muttered dryly, appearing behind him with arms crossed and absolutely no remorse. “I tackled him in the hallway. Didn’t matter. He just kept bounding.”
She was flanked by three more figures—Bob, shifting awkwardly and clutching a bouquet that looked like it had been stolen from a funeral arrangement, Ava hovering beside him with a look of cautious relief, and John leaning just far enough into the room to smirk.
“Look who decided to rejoin the land of the living,” Walker called, voice light but eyes sharp. “Don’t do that again. It’s bad for team morale.”
Bucky hadn’t moved far from your bedside, just enough to make room, to stop Alexei from inadvertently crushing a vein or breaking an already-bruised rib. He was still watching you, eyes flicking between your face and your vitals monitor like he couldn’t help himself.
Alexei finally released you with a thud and an affectionate slap to the shoulder that nearly dislocated something. You blinked hard through the swirl of motion, coughing once as your lungs protested the sudden influx of people and oxygen.
“Careful,” Bucky muttered again, more to himself than anyone else.
But you caught his wrist before he could move back.
Just a small touch. Nothing demanding. Just enough.
He didn’t say anything. Didn’t need to.
The others kept talking—Yelena launching into a commentary about how ugly the paper cranes were before realizing Bob made them and immediately changing the subject, Ava threatening to install a lock on the medbay door, Bob quietly asking if you wanted him to adjust the light overhead, Walker declaring he’d brought “real food” and pulling a suspicious-looking bag from behind his back that Yelena immediately swatted out of his hands.
It was chaos. Loud and jagged and human.
But you didn’t look at them.
You looked at Bucky.
And he looked at you.
And in that small, quiet moment—under the hum of machines, under the curtain pulled halfway back, under the noise and the mess and the aching throb in your chest—you felt it settle. All of it. The tension. The fear. The distance you’d both kept because you didn’t know what would happen if you crossed it.
He stayed exactly where you needed him. Elbow resting on the frame of your bed, hand lax in your grip, eyes never leaving yours even when someone bumped the curtain again or when Yelena started swearing in Russian under her breath because she had opened the bag Walker had and apparently it smelled.
You didn’t speak.
Neither did he.
But your fingers stayed curled around his wrist, weak and unsteady, still trembling from the cold that still lived somewhere in your bones, and he didn’t pull away.
Didn’t shift.
Didn’t give you some line about rest or recovery or needing to take a break from all this noise.
He just stayed.
Not because you asked.
But because that’s what he did.
What he’d always done, quietly, behind the chaos.
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lllostgirlll · 1 month ago
Text
Hold Fast | Bucky Barnes x Reader
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Summary: A winter mission goes sideways, forcing you to cross a frozen lake under fire. The ice doesn’t hold—and when you go under, Bucky is the only thing between you and the dark.
MCU Timeline Placement: Post Thunderbolts*
Master List: Find my other stuff here!
Warnings: THUNDERBOLTS SPOILERS, hypothermia, near-drowning, descriptions of drowning, blood, injuries, limb trauma, hospitalization, PTSD symptoms, emotional vulnerability, protective behavior, team banter, soft angst with resolution!
Word Count: 9.5k
Author’s Note: had so much fun with this request!! this one really reminded me of no way but through, which holds such a special place in my little cold-weather-loving heart. i loooove icy mission settings, hypothermic chaos, and painfully soft bucky barnes, so this was basically a dream to write. also couldn’t help myself and had to bring in the full thunderbolts/new avengers crew at the end. i am nothing if not predictable <3
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The wind off the lake bit harder than it had twenty minutes ago.
Not that it mattered. You’d stopped registering the cold a while back, after the second ridge, where the frost had started creeping into the inside seam of your gloves. Or maybe when you heard the first round of gunfire echo through the trees, half-muted by the thick snow-laden branches overhead.
Your teeth weren’t chattering. That would’ve meant your body had enough energy to waste on something so useless. Instead, everything inside you was pulling inward. Tightening. Conserving. Slowing.
“Keep moving,” Bucky’s voice snapped, low and close behind your left shoulder, and you did.
Not because he told you to. Because you had to.
The mission had gone wrong in the kind of way that didn’t leave room for debriefs. No secure exit point, no external comms, no second wave coming in behind you. Just you, Bucky, and the last evac flare tucked in Yelena’s pack two klicks east—across a frozen lake, through the trees, past whatever was still hunting you from the west ridge.
You hadn’t seen what hit the quinjet. Just felt the shockwave under your boots, then the plume of smoke curling over the horizon. Yelena had been the one closest to the treeline. She moved faster, covered more ground when it mattered, and she was carrying the extraction beacon. So when everything went to hell and the team scattered, it was you and Bucky left circling back to pull recon on the ones who shot your ride out of the sky.
Bucky walked behind you now, a half-step slower than usual. Calculated. Watching your six, probably watching your feet, too. 
“Northeast ridge is clear,” Yelena’s voice crackled softly in your comms. “Found an evac point. I’ll hold position.”
“Copy,” Bucky muttered. He was closer now. You could hear the rough edge in his voice, the constant scrape of concern just underneath it. “Let us know if anything shifts.”
There was a pause, a soft click, and then silence.
It had been thirty-two minutes.
Thirty-two minutes of sprinting across a frozen forest, every breath burning in your lungs. Thirty-two minutes of feeling Bucky’s presence hovering behind you like a shadow stitched to your spine, keeping pace, always watching. Watching your six, probably watching your feet, too.
“We’re near the lake,” Bucky said quietly.
You nodded once. Didn’t slow.
The lake had shown up on recon, a massive spread of black and silver on the satellite map, completely iced over and ringed by skeletal trees. You hadn’t planned to get near it. No cover. No depth perception. And the ice…
There were warnings. Cracks. Inconsistent freeze. The warm weeks earlier in the month had made it unreliable. Solid in places, dangerously thin in others.
Your fingers flexed around your weapon. You could still feel the scabbed-over cuts along your knuckles from the last mission. You hadn’t even gotten the blood out of the gloves. It had frozen stiff.
“They’re pushing,” Bucky said, eyes scanning the treeline. “Trying to flank.”
“We keep moving.”
“You’re hurt.”
“Not bad.”
“That’s not what I asked.”
Your jaw locked.
There was blood soaking into the seam of your left leg, trailing down to right where the fabric met your boot. You didn’t look down. Couldn’t. It hadn’t slowed you down yet. If it did, you’d think about it. Not now.
You didn’t tell him how deep the cut went. You didn’t need to. He could smell it by now, metallic, sharp, slicing through the scent of ice and pine. It left a trail behind you, carved like a signature across the snow. If any of the hostiles had dogs, you were as good as marked.
The lake came into full view as you crested the ridge. It didn’t shimmer, didn’t glint—it was too dark for that now. Instead, it stretched wide and waiting, flat as glass and just as merciless. A wound in the landscape, glossy and black, veins of fracture spidering out across the surface where the snow had been blown off by the earlier blast wave.
Bucky said nothing, but he stopped just behind you. You could feel the weight of his silence.
“We don’t have time to go around,” you said, voice thin. “They’ll have us before the trees thicken again.”
“There’s no cover out there.” His tone wasn’t harsh. It was worse, quiet, steady, resigned. “If they catch sight of us, we’re open. Sitting ducks. You know that.”
“They won’t.” You adjusted your grip on your weapon. The trigger guard was sticking, your blood had frozen at the seam. “There’s mist coming off the surface. It’ll give us some visual buffer if we move fast.”
“You’re bleeding.”
“Which is why I can’t climb another fucking ridge.”
Your voice barely made it past your lips. It felt thinner than the air you were pulling into your chest. You didn’t need to look at Bucky to know he was staring at you again—sharp, narrowed, assessing you the way he did before a breach. Not checking for weakness. Measuring the cost.
But there was no time for costs anymore.
The crack of gunfire ricocheted off the ridge behind you. 
Not the echo of distant threat, but close. Immediate. 
Bark splintered off a tree trunk ten paces from your position, and Bucky moved instantly, grabbing your arm and yanking you down into a crouch behind the lip of an ice-encased boulder. 
You landed hard on your knee, your injured leg screaming in protest. Warm blood surged and stuck to the inside of your pants, and it was only then that you realized the muscle was torn. Not grazed. Torn.
Bucky didn’t flinch at the impact, but you caught the way his jaw clenched. “They’ve got fucking elevation,” he muttered under his breath. “How the hell did they—”
Another round cracked off a rock to your left. You ducked lower.
You didn’t answer him. You were trying not to pass out.
The second ridge. That was where they’d circled back. They must’ve doubled back around while you were sweeping east, using the wreckage and smoke trail from the quinjet as cover. You should’ve clocked it. Should’ve seen the trail crossing itself on the HUD.
But you’d been too busy bleeding.
A comms stutter broke through your earpiece. Yelena’s voice, brittle and curt: “Multiple heat signatures—tracking southeast. Six or seven. Aggressive push. Fast. You need to move.”
“Noted,” Bucky muttered, and clicked off.
He turned toward you, and there was something behind his eyes now. Not fear. Urgency. That hard-edged tension you’d only ever seen once before, when he’d carried your unconscious body out of a compound fire and spent the next forty minutes in complete silence.
“We’re not getting around the lake,” he said flatly.
Another shot cracked the air.
You flinched. He didn’t.
“They’re herding us,” you said quietly, barely audible. “Driving us into the open.”
He nodded once. “They want the intel. They don’t want to kill us. Not yet.”
“Could’ve fooled me.”
More shouts. They were getting louder. You heard the low whine of an engine somewhere, a snowmobile, maybe. Not yours. Yours was ash.
“We need to split,” Bucky said suddenly.
You turned sharply. “No.”
“I’ll draw them off. You follow the lake’s edge. Keep to the trees.”
“They’re tracking us both. They know there’s two.”
“They don’t know where you are,” he said, already rising to his feet. “Not exactly. You haven’t fired since the breach. You’re harder to trace. Let me pull them west, and—”
“No.”
It came out louder than you meant it to. It silenced the forest.
You were breathing too hard. The edges of your vision had started to smear. Your leg was going numb.
��Bucky—”
Another shot. Close. Too close.
He didn’t hesitate.
He turned and hurled a flashbang toward the sound. The white light ignited against the snow with a violent hiss, smoke billowing out and momentarily masking your position.
Then—
Movement.
From your left. Fast.
You turned, raised your weapon, but it was too late. Something barreled through the trees and tackled you full force, body slamming into yours and driving you back, pain blooming white-hot in your thigh where the wound tore wider.
You hit the ground hard, your weapon flung into the snow. The hostile landed on top of you, mask fogged, breath rapid. He went for your throat. You reached for your boot knife, fingers numb, clumsy.
The lake was right there. Ten feet behind you. Maybe less.
You heard Bucky shout your name.
The knife slid into your hand. You didn’t think. You just moved.
You drove the blade up under his jaw, hard and clean, and rolled him off you before he could finish choking.
You were on your feet again—limping, half-hopping, gun lost, blood pouring down your leg now—and the others were coming.
You saw five through the smoke. At least five .
Too many.
You could try to crawl back to Bucky. Hope they didn’t shoot you in the open. Hope he could carry you.
Or—
Or you could do the thing you shouldn’t.
The thing that would buy you time.
The thing that would probably kill you.
You turned and ran toward the lake.
Bucky was still shouting, but his voice was muffled now, lost to the scream of your pulse and the way the air changed as you broke through the treeline.
Your feet hit the ice, and it sang beneath you.
A deep, haunted groan that vibrated up your legs and through your spine. The kind of sound the earth makes when it doesn’t want to be touched.
You didn’t stop.
The mist coming off the surface curled like fingers, wrapping around your boots, your knees, your breath. It shielded you, just enough. You heard the men behind you shouting, confused, uncertain. They’d lost you in the fog. For now.
But they’d find you again if you stopped moving.
You didn’t expect to make it across. That wasn’t the point.
You weren’t stupid. You’d seen the fractures on recon. Knew the freeze was uneven, knew the surface tension wouldn’t hold under sustained weight, and certainly not without punishing you for the arrogance of trying. You also knew there were at least four men behind you, maybe more, and you weren’t going to outrun them through another ridge. Not on a torn leg. Not dragging blood like breadcrumbs.
But you could give Bucky a chance. A window.
You weren’t going to last much longer anyway. Your sidearm was gone. Your rifle was jammed. Your limbs were starting to seize—not from fear, not from cold, but from simple math. The cost of staying alive had begun to outweigh what your body could give.
So you played the only card left.
If you could get two of them on the ice. Maybe three. And if you timed it right, kept your distance, baited them into giving chase, made them run heavier than you walked, there was a chance the lake would decide who stayed topside and who went under. You weren’t built like them. Smaller frame. Lighter gear. You knew how to move soft. They wouldn’t.
They were cocky. Angry. Trigger-happy and armored to hell. That kind of weight broke tension in seconds. You’d seen it happen. Watched it once during a training exercise, how a man with sixty extra pounds of ammo sank in four seconds flat when he tried to follow a sniper across a riverbed in spring thaw.
It might kill you too. But it might not. And if even one of them went in—
That was one less gun Bucky had to deal with. One less bullet in the air. One less thing clawing for your neck.
That was something.
Your breath came faster, colder. The cut in your leg had gone numb, finally, but you could feel the wetness inside your boot. The weight of it. The imbalance.
You didn’t know how far out you were.
The fog was thicker now, curling up your spine, swallowing the tree line. You could’ve been ten meters from shore or two. Could’ve been standing over solid ice or the thinnest patch on the lake.
Didn’t matter. You had to keep going.
There was shouting again. Closer. Heavier footsteps now, rapid and uncoordinated. They’d spotted your prints. One of them yelled to the others. Someone fired, blind and stupid, too far to your left to matter. The shot cracked across the lake and echoed, turning the world sharp and brittle.
You heard the ice answer.
A moan beneath the surface. A shift. A warning.
Still, you didn’t stop.
Another shot hit near your feet, spitting a web of cracks like a warning flare. You stumbled. Went to one knee. Pain flared up your hip. You hissed through your teeth and scrambled upright.
Behind you, closer now, another shout.
And then, footsteps on ice.
They were following you.
You felt the lake notice. The way it strained. The way it listened.
You started weaving, not running, but changing angles. You knew better than to move in a straight line. Spread the pressure. Make them adjust their balance. You could almost hear their weight dragging the surface down. Could hear how reckless their strides were. One of them slipped, boots sliding, cursing and shouting, and the others answered in angry Finnish.
You adjusted again, shifting your weight to the balls of your feet as you zig-zagged across the ice, lungs straining, vision speckled with spots. The cold had crawled under your skin now—made a home in the corners of your elbows, the hollow between your shoulder blades, the soft hinge of your jaw. You weren’t shivering anymore. That would have required your body to care whether it was dying.
Behind you, the men had begun to split. Two followed your path directly, weapons raised and boots clumsy across the frost, the third veering wide, trying to cut off your arc. You didn’t know where the fourth had gone. You didn’t have the capacity to guess. You’d passed beyond the edge of tactics and into instinct.
The ice beneath you moaned again, longer this time, a groaning, glacial sound that rippled underfoot like a living thing. The cracks spidered wider at the edges of your vision, faint lines of fracture glowing pale beneath the frost-dusted sheen. You counted every step in your head, each one a wager against weight and water.
You needed them closer. Just a little closer. You needed them to get stupid again, greedy for the kill.
And they did.
One of them shouted something guttural in Finnish, laced with adrenaline and mockery, and opened fire. The shot missed your side by inches, skimming the air close enough that you felt it kiss your ribs. You dropped hard into a crouch, used the momentum to pivot left, and rolled back into a full sprint. The surface answered with another shriek of pressure.
You couldn’t tell if it was a warning or a promise.
Then another sound, behind the gunfire—something real, something known.
Bucky’s voice.
Low at first, almost lost in the chaos. Then sharper, clearer, a shout that carved through the storm like a blade. He was yelling your name. You didn’t turn. Couldn’t. You could barely see anymore, and the fog curled tighter now, clouding everything but the space directly in front of you.
A second burst of fire came from the opposite edge of the lake—sharper, faster. Controlled. You recognized it immediately. Not hostile. That was him.
He was flanking.
You caught the flicker of movement through the mist just ahead and to your right. Bucky breaking the line of trees at a full sprint, a blur of black and gunmetal, eyes fixed on you like he could will you to stop. He was shouting again, but your ears had gone dull. All you could hear was the ice. The awful, pulsing hum of it underfoot, vibrating with your heartbeat.
And then one of the hostiles did what you’d hoped. He fired while running.
The recoil jolted his center of gravity, boots sliding out from under him as he fell sideways. He hit the ground hard, and the impact buckled the surface beneath him, cracks detonating outward like glass under a hammer. It sounded like thunder.
The other two tried to stop, but it was too late. One went down to a knee, skidding, scraping across the slick, and the third barreled into him, toppling them both in a tangle of limbs and shouted curses.
For a breath, you thought it had worked.
But it didn’t matter.
Because the fourth man, the one you couldn’t see, had circled wide, just like you feared. You didn’t hear him until he was right behind you. There was no gunshot. No shout. Just the thud of weight as he tackled you square in the back.
You hit the ice with a sickening crack, elbows slamming down first. The pain stole the breath from your lungs. Your vision whitewashed. Your cheek scraped frozen mist and split open.
He tried to roll you, get leverage to pin you down, but you were already moving. Already driving the knife from your belt up under his ribs, your fingers so numb you couldn’t tell if it connected.
It did. You felt him grunt, deep and surprised, before he staggered back, and you surged to your feet, but—
But the ice had had enough.
It screamed beneath you. A seismic groan, deeper than the others, wrong in every register. You felt the surface ripple like a muscle torn mid-strain. Your knees bent automatically, weight shifting light, trying to disperse, but it was too late.
The cracks burst outward from where the hostile had landed. The seams raced under your feet, intersecting, multiplying, fracturing the world beneath you in real time.
You heard Bucky shout your name again.
Closer.
Desperate.
And then he was there, just at the edge of your sightline. His face was bloodless, teeth bared, feet skidding to a stop as he reached out like he could catch you from twenty feet away.
“Don’t move!” he barked.
You didn’t.
Didn’t breathe. Didn’t blink.
But the ice moved anyway.
It bowed beneath you.
Then split.
The water came up like a hand and yanked you under.
────────────────────────
Bucky saw the ice go before he heard it.
Not the split, but the way your knees flexed, just slightly, the way your arms went out as if your body knew before your mind did. That half-second of weightlessness right before everything collapsed. Bucky knew that look. He’d seen it in jump footage, in buildings on fire, in the eyes of people who understood they weren’t getting out unless someone came back for them.
He was already running.
Not thinking. Not planning. Just moving. Snow churned under his boots, breath barely fogging the air. He heard your name tear out of his throat, loud and raw and useless.
You were looking right at him. Eyes wide. Mouth slightly open. But you didn’t say anything. Didn’t scream. Didn’t even move.
You just dropped.
The ice beneath you opened like a mouth.
He reached the edge just in time to see the water close back over you.
The sound was sickening. One second you were there, the next you weren’t. The lake swallowed you whole, and all that remained was mist and the soft sound of new cracks racing toward him.
Bucky didn’t hesitate.
He launched himself forward, boots slamming into the ice, the weight of his landing enough to make the surface whine under him. He dropped into a slide, knees bent, palm out to brace, momentum hurtling him across the ice toward the place you’d gone under.
The cold didn’t register. Not the air, not the wind, not the water as it seeped through the cracks already kissing the soles of his boots. The serum kept his blood from reacting the way a normal man’s would. No immediate shock. No burning in the lungs. But it didn’t make him immune to the knowledge of what cold did to you.
You had maybe ninety seconds before the water started convincing your body to stop trying.
His hand was already going to his comm.
“Belova, she fell through,” he said, voice sharp, clipped. “The lake. Northwest section. I’m going in.”
Yelena’s reply came fast, static, then her voice, tight with urgency. “That lake is thirty meters deep in the center, Barnes. If you lose her—”
“I won’t.”
“You better not. I’ll find a snowmobile. If you’re still breathing, I’ll come get you.”
He reached the hole, just barely visible now. It was a jagged, black wound in the surface, already sheeting over at the edges with a thin glaze of refreeze. He dropped to his knees, leaned over, peered in—
And saw nothing.
Just black.
No movement. No sound. No trace.
“Northwest,” he repeated, already stripping his rifle off one shoulder and driving it into the snow at the edge of the break. “Tell evac. We’ll need heat. And a med kit.”
“Copy,” she said. “Don’t die.”
He could feel the press of his heartbeat in his teeth.
“Shit.” His voice cracked out of him like a whip.
He stripped the rifle from his shoulder, shoved it into the snow behind him, and without another thought, threw himself in.
The lake gripped him like a vice.
It wasn’t like diving into water. It was like diving into a vacuum. It swallowed him. Crushed him. Everything disappeared at once. Sight, sound, weight. He didn’t kick. Didn’t thrash. He let himself drop, arms out, the metal of his left dragging him faster. One breath in his lungs. That’s all he allowed.
He opened his eyes.
There was nothing.
Only black, smeared with silver light from the hole above him, already shifting, narrowing. Snow-dust had drifted across the opening. It would vanish in seconds. He needed to find you now.
He rotated once. No sign of you. Kicked again, deeper. The pressure increased, the cold turning the skin of his right arm to fire. He ignored it. Turned again. Saw—
Movement.
To his left.
A flicker. A shape. Limbs caught in the water’s drag. No fight in them.
He pushed toward it.
You weren’t moving. Your arms floated loosely, your legs bent at strange angles, one boot still half-trailing a blood-red ribbon through the current. Your head was tilted, hair haloing out in the dark.
For a split-second, something in him broke.
He reached you in three kicks. One arm wrapped around your chest, hand braced under your jaw, holding your head above your shoulders. Your face was waxy, mouth parted, lashes spiked with ice. He pulled you in, curled his metal arm across your ribs, and angled upward.
The surface was gone.
The hole was gone, nowhere near.
He turned in a tight circle, one-handed, dragging you with him. No openings. No shadows above, no light. The ice was seamless.
His vision tunneled.
He launched upward, fist first, and when his knuckles hit solid, he didn’t stop. He punched.
The sound was muffled underwater, more sensation than noise. The vibration hit his bones, the resistance of ancient ice refusing to yield. He drove his arm up again—once, twice—until the metal met fracture.
The ice split.
The hole widened just enough. He kicked upward and shoved you ahead of him, breaking the surface with a gasp you didn’t make.
The air burned. The cold above was nothing compared to below.
He hauled himself out of the water, grabbing you under the arms and dragging you with him, the both of you half-dead and slick with lakewater, steam rolling off your clothes as the air hit them.
You weren’t breathing.
“No—” he rasped. He dropped to his knees, pressed two fingers under your jaw. Nothing. His hand flattened against your chest. Still nothing. He tipped your head, cleared your mouth, and without pausing, sealed his lips to yours and breathed.
Twice.
Again.
Your body jerked, but only from the force.
He pressed down hard. His hands trembled, just slightly. Not from the cold.
“C’mon,” he muttered, voice cracked and low, barely human. “Don’t you fucking dare—”
Another breath.
You coughed.
Violent. Wet. Your whole frame arched up before collapsing into him, lungs sputtering lakewater and whatever else you’d swallowed, mouth opening to drag in air like it hurt to exist.
Bucky’s arms locked around you the second your head tilted forward.
You were shaking now. Not convulsing. Not yet. But the kind of full-body tremor that said your blood wasn’t moving fast enough. That your skin was freezing from the inside out.
“I got you,” he whispered, over and over, voice half-strangled as he pulled you close, as close as he could get without hurting you more. “I got you, I got you.”
He didn’t realize he was rocking you until your fingers clenched in his jacket. A tiny, involuntary twitch—no force behind it, no awareness—but it was enough. Enough to tell him you were still here. Still fighting. Still fucking breathing.
“Easy,” he whispered against your hair. “Just stay with me. I’ve got you.”
You made a sound. Barely anything. A cracked whimper caught in the wreckage of your throat. He pressed a hand to the back of your neck, fingers splayed wide, trying to shield as much of your skin as he could from the wind.
Your body was ice. Every inch soaked through. Your gear, your boots, the back of your neck, all of it was clinging to you like a second skin, each layer working against you now, not for.
The low snarl of a snowmobile engine cut through the trees, carving hard across the frozen ground. He didn’t look up. Didn’t shift. Just curled tighter around you and angled his body between yours and the open lake.
The engine cut off twenty feet away, skidding to a halt. Snow crunched under boots. Then—
“Shit.” Yelena’s voice dropped the usual smirk. “She’s hypothermic?”
“Full submersion,” Bucky said, barely audible. “At least a minute. Maybe longer.”
Yelena was already moving, yanking her pack off and crouching beside him. “Then we need her out of those clothes, now. You too. You’re soaked.”
“I’m fine.”
“You’re wet,” she snapped. “You’re not immortal.”
“She’s freezing.”
“Exactly why we strip her down and use what’s dry. I brought a tarp rig for the back—get her on it. We’ll wrap her, I’ll drive.”
Bucky didn’t argue. He peeled his jacket off one arm, then the other, movements sharp and economical. It hit the snow with a wet slap. His gear vest followed. Then he reached for the zipper at your collar, fingers already numbing where they met the icy fabric.
“Hey,” he said softly, tipping your chin. Your eyes fluttered open for a breath, then closed again. “I know it’s cold. But we gotta get you out of this stuff. Alright?”
You didn’t answer. Just let him move you, limp and loose like your bones had gone slack. He tried to be fast. Careful. Stripped your coat first, then the soaked thermal underlayer, exposing your shoulders to the air. You flinched. He wanted to curse out loud. Wanted to punch the goddamn lake.
Yelena shrugged off her own jacket. “Here.”
He took it without looking and shoved your arms through the sleeves. It was warm. And dry. It didn’t matter if it was hers or his or stolen off a corpse. He’d have wrapped you in skin if it meant getting your body temp up fast enough.
But it wasn’t enough.
Your pants were soaked through. So were the boots. And your left leg—fuck.
He saw the blood pooled inside the boot as he started to peel it off. Frozen red around the seams. Your thigh was still bleeding, sluggish now from shock, but still enough to be dangerous.
“Yelena,” he barked without turning. “Gauze. Whatever you’ve got.”
“Med kit’s in the sled,” she called, already unrolling the tow platform and yanking the thermal tarp open. “Field wrap’s on the side.”
He ripped the second boot off, tossed both aside. The pants clung like wet parchment. He muttered something sharp under his breath and took the knife from his belt, slicing the fabric clean up the seam to the waistband. He didn’t pause. Didn’t look at your face. Just cut them free and tossed them into the snow.
Your leg was a mess. Torn muscle, ragged edge, blood sluggish but still weeping. He didn’t have time to be gentle. He grabbed the wrap from Yelena’s outstretched hand and packed the gauze into the wound, fingers fast and precise. Then he cinched the bandage tight just above your knee.
You groaned, weak and hoarse, but it meant you were still responsive.
“I know,” he muttered. “I know it hurts. Just hang on.”
Yelena was already back at the sled, lifting the flap on the side and unfurling the padding. “We’ve got maybe ten minutes before she drops out completely. Help me get her in.”
He moved without answering. One arm behind your back, one under your legs. You were a deadweight bundle of wet limbs and heatless skin.
Together, they settled you into the tow rig—padded, shielded at the sides, thermal canopy overhead. Standard evac mod. But it still looked like a coffin.
He hated that it looked like a coffin.
Yelena threw him a blanket roll, and he tucked it tight over your chest and shoulders, then your hips and thighs, arms crossed low over your ribs. Your skin was damp, your hair frozen at the ends, lashes rimmed in ice. He didn’t let himself stop moving. He kept one hand pressed just over your heart, the other ready to shield your face from wind.
His hand stayed there.
Just a second too long.
She didn’t call him on it.
“You’re going with her,” Yelena said instead, already climbing back onto the snowmobile. “I can drive. You monitor her breathing. Try and get her talking if you can. If she fully passes out—”
“She won’t.”
“I’m just saying—”
“She won’t.”
His voice was steel. He wasn’t yelling. He wasn’t pleading. He just knew.
Yelena didn’t argue again. She gunned the engine, and the machine roared to life.
He climbed into the tow sled, kneeling beside you, one hand on your chest, the other braced against the frame. Wind blasted past them as they launched forward, but he didn’t feel it.
All he felt was the shallow rise and fall beneath his hand.
────────────────────────
You surfaced slowly.
Not all at once. Not in a cinematic way—no gasping, no full-body jolt, no sudden realization that you were still alive. Just pressure. First behind your eyes, then in your chest. A tightness, dull and deep, like your lungs had been filled with stones and someone had stacked their weight across your ribcage to make sure they stayed there.
Your mouth was open. You hadn’t meant it to be. Something cool and artificial was feeding air through your nose, down your throat. Plastic tubing, you realized after a beat, half-formed thoughts dragging behind sensation. An oxygen cannula. 
Your head ached.
Not a sharp pain. Not even pain, really. Just distance. Like your skull had been filled with static and your thoughts had to crawl through it on hands and knees to reach you. When you tried to move, just a twitch of your shoulder, your body didn’t respond. Not fully. Your nerves were slow, reluctant. Your arms felt like they belonged to someone else.
Then, light. Soft, not blinding. White above you. Clinical. Cold. You tried to blink and felt the dry pull of your lashes against skin that had been left too long without moisture.
There were sounds now. Somewhere in the periphery.
Muffled voices. Beeping.
A hiss of something mechanical resetting. Maybe a vitals monitor, maybe a heat unit.
The next thing you noticed was your skin.
Your entire body felt like it had been peeled back and glued together wrong. Your legs ached. Not in the sharp, obvious way of a gunshot or blade, but deeper. Bone deep. Joint deep. There was a dull, pulsing throb in your left thigh that you couldn’t place, and you realized after a moment that you didn’t want to.
You were alive.
You weren’t supposed to be.
A slow breath pulled through your chest. It hurt. Not like you’d broken anything, but like your lungs had fought too hard to keep you, and they were punishing you for it now. You could feel the heaviness in them, the stiffness—residual fluid, probably. You weren’t coughing, but your chest was tight, and something wet shifted faintly every time you inhaled.
Hypothermia. Near-drowning. Soft tissue trauma. Blood loss.
The words filtered in one by one like files retrieved from a burned cabinet.
You didn’t remember the evac. Just ice. The smell of pine. A scream half-swallowed by the wind. The weight of water crushing your body into stillness. And then, heat. Arms. Metal against your ribs. Something solid that refused to let go.
Something you’d stopped fighting for before it found you.
There was a voice outside the room, beyond a curtain surrounding you. Sharp. Familiar.
Yelena.
“—two hours max. That’s what the doc said. She needs rest, not another round of brooding Bucky Barnes breathing exercises.”
A grunt. Quieter. Male.
“Don’t look at me like that.”
A beat.
“Oh my god. You’re already doing it.”
You tried to turn your head toward the sound, but your body was too heavy. The world tilted and dragged behind you. Then, footsteps. Two sets. One softer, reluctant. One clipped.
They didn’t come in.
Their voices faded just enough to let the quiet crawl back in. Only the monitors kept humming, a soft rhythmic count of your survival, like the room was measuring every second you stayed alive and wasn’t convinced yet that you would.
You lay there, still and heavy, unsure if your body would obey you at all. Everything felt wrapped in gauze. Muted. Far away. But your chest remembered. The weight, the pressure, the water. The ache that lingered behind your ribs told you the lake hadn’t really let go. Not completely.
You tried again.
It wasn’t even a word at first. Just a shift. A breath caught too sharply in your throat. Your fingers twitched against the blanket. Or maybe they didn’t. Maybe you imagined it. You turned your head, just barely, toward the voices outside the curtain, and let your lips part.
“Buck—”
Your voice wasn’t a voice. It was air dragged across a raw throat, shredded in the middle, collapsing before it made it to sound. But it was enough. Enough to make the effort real. Enough to make your pulse spike on the monitor. Enough to send a tremor through your lungs.
The curtain shifted instantly.
Then opened.
Bucky’s silhouette filled the space between the light and the noise. For a second, he didn’t say anything. Just looked at you, jaw clenched, shoulders set. His face didn’t change, but you saw it anyway. Relief. The kind that didn’t need expression to be known.
“You’re awake.” His voice was low. Too steady.
You swallowed—or tried to. It scraped. Burned. Your throat felt flayed.
He crossed the room in two strides, dropping into the chair beside your bed like he’d been ready to launch himself forward the whole time and was only now allowed. His hand hovered near yours, not quite touching.
“Do you need the doc?” he asked. “I’ll go get them. Just hold on—”
You moved before you could think.
Not much. Not even fast. But your hand lifted, weak and trembling, and curled around his wrist as he started to move. The motion cost everything. Your arm dropped a second later like it had been cut loose, but it did its job.
Bucky froze.
You tried to speak again. The word caught halfway up your throat and crumpled. You coughed instead, once, hard enough to burn, and his hand was on you instantly, palm flat against your sternum like he could keep you from falling apart just by holding you still.
“You’re okay.” His voice was different now. Thinner. “You’re okay. Just breathe.”
You tried.
Your chest shook with it. Your lungs were still too tight. Too full of memory. But the oxygen tubing helped, and eventually the coughing stopped. Your body settled back against the sheets, exhausted from the effort of existing.
His hand didn’t move.
“I’m fine,” you rasped. Or tried to.
The word sounded nothing like a word.
It scraped the back of your throat and shattered. You winced. He shook his head once, almost imperceptible.
“Don’t,” he murmured. “You don’t have to talk. Not yet.”
You blinked up at him.
He was too close. Not in a way that made you uncomfortable, never that, but in the way that made you aware of how much space he took up without saying a word. The way his presence made the machines quieter. The way the lines around his mouth looked carved from stone. The way his hand hadn’t left your chest.
“You scared the hell out of me,” he said, softer now. “I thought—”
He didn’t finish.
You didn’t need him to.
You felt it in the way his shoulders curled forward. In the way he kept watching your pulse monitor like it owed him something. In the way his eyes kept returning to your mouth, to your neck, to the shallow rise and fall that proved you were still here.
You opened your mouth again.
The words didn’t come. You weren’t sure they could. Your throat felt like someone had taken a wire brush to the inside of it. But you moved your lips anyway, slow, deliberate, shaping around the simplest thing you could mouth.
How long?
Bucky blinked.
For a second, you thought maybe he hadn’t caught it. Then his hand left your chest—not completely, just enough to curl around your wrist again, warm and solid, anchoring.
“Seven days,” he said quietly. “You’ve been under for seven.”
You let that sit. Let it press.
Seven days.
Not just unconscious. Unresponsive. Monitored. Kept warm. Intubated, probably, if your throat was any indication. You were certain there’d been a moment, maybe more than one, where they weren’t sure you were going to come back at all. Where your body might have decided to give up on the rest of you even after the lake let you go.
You let your head tip, eyes dragging slowly across the room. The motion made your neck ache. Even that, especially that, felt like a small defeat.
There was a table beside the bed. Narrow. Stainless steel. You hadn’t noticed it before.
It was cluttered.
Not with the usual medical shit. Not gauze or tubing or pill cups. Something else. Something… softer.
There were a few folded paper cranes, wings dipped in bright marker ink. A knitted square of fabric, uneven at the edges, with a giant uneven “W” stitched into the center in dark blue yarn. A cheap plastic snow globe—Branson, Missouri—with fake snow and a peeling label. A tiny flickering LED tea light. A single packet of hot chocolate. A folded sketch torn from someone’s notebook paper.
You stared at it. Confused.
Your brow furrowed, unsteady, and you felt Bucky’s eyes move with yours.
He shifted in his chair, the leather creaking faintly under him.
“Those are from Bob.” He nodded toward the cranes. “He said paper folding helps with anxiety. Sat outside your room for two hours trying to get that red one right. Said you’d like it because it was ugly. Had character.”
Your lips twitched. Or tried to. He saw it.
Bob had tried to teach you once, back when missions were lighter and your hands steadier. He’d brought a pack of neon origami paper into the rec room like it was contraband, all sheepish grin and muttered instructions, and you’d spent an hour cursing under your breath while he quietly folded a perfect flock beside you. 
You never managed a proper crane, just a deeply cursed paper lump with uneven wings, but he’d kept it anyway. Called it your “battle bird.” Said it looked like it had been through something. Just like you.
“The tea light is Ava’s,” Bucky continued. “She said you always lit a candle on briefing nights. Figured you’d want one burning when you woke up.”
You did. Always the same squat little votive, tucked on the corner of your desk, flickering through every debrief while the rest of the team pretended not to notice. Ava had, though—said the sound and smell helped her keep her pacing in check, the rhythm of it steadier than her own breath some nights.
Bucky pointed at the snow globe, grimacing. “Walker. No note. Don’t ask.”
You made a rough sound, not quite a laugh, and regretted it immediately. Your chest ached. You swallowed it down.
Of course he brought Branson, Missouri.
The man had one week of leave and spent it sending you unsolicited selfies from a dinner theater called “Yakov’s Last Laugh,” wearing a cowboy hat two sizes too small and arguing over text about whether Silver Dollar City technically counted as “historic.”
You’d told him Branson wasn’t a real place. Just a Midwest fever dream built entirely out of unlicensed Elvis impersonators and knockoff Dollywood energy. He’d called it “America’s soul.”
You’d called it “a cry for help in gift shop form.”
And now it sat beside your medical chart, a tiny, glittering monument to the world’s pettiest inside joke.
God help you if it made you smile again.
“The sketch is from Alexei,” he went on. “It’s supposed to be you in the snow, fighting a bear. Or dancing with one. He wasn’t clear.”
You blinked slowly. That tracked. He’d once told you, entirely unprompted, that your “ferocity under pressure” reminded him of a Siberian she-bear. You’d assumed it was a compliment. Probably.
“And that,” he added, gesturing to the hot chocolate, “Yelena. Said hospital cocoa was an abomination and if she caught you drinking any she’d pull your IV herself.”
You smiled faintly. Yelena was the one who started it. Midnight cocoa in the mess when neither of you could sleep, hands still shaking from whatever dreams you'd clawed your way out of. No talking. No questions. Just heat, sugar, and silence until your pulses evened out again. A truce in a mug.
Your throat was still raw. You didn’t dare try a full word, but the question was there—in the slow blink, the glance toward the yarn.
“That’s from Walker too,” Bucky said, deadpan. “He learned to knit. Apparently.”
Your eyes drifted back to him. He hadn’t looked away from you once. Not really.
There was one more thing on the table. You hadn’t noticed it before. Smaller than the rest. Set slightly apart. A small matchbox-sized tin. Dark blue. Metal. Worn at the corners.
Bucky followed your gaze. His jaw tightened.
You looked at him.
He didn’t speak.
Just reached over slowly, picked it up, turned it once in his palm like he wasn’t sure if he regretted leaving it there.
Then he held it out to you. Didn’t press it into your hand, just let it rest there, cradled against his fingers, waiting.
You tilted your head toward it, but your muscles were still too slow, coordination still too shot. He noticed. Said nothing. Just flipped the lid open himself.
Inside, nestled into the tin’s base on a folded strip of linen, was a tiny object. Barely bigger than your thumb. Faintly metallic. Dull silver at the edges, matte black at the center.
It was a music box cylinder. A fragment. Something old, worn smooth. The kind used in hand-crank players—the ones tucked inside the little wind-up boxes you used to fidget with as a child, flipping them open and closed like they were meant to be solved.
You blinked.
Once.
Twice.
Bucky was watching you. Carefully. Like the weight of your reaction might crack him open.
“You said,” he said quietly, “a few months ago… that you had one when you were a kid. Broke in a move. Said you remembered the sound but not the song.”
You remembered. You hadn’t thought he had.
You hadn’t thought anyone had been listening.
“I found that in a market in Riga,” he went on, voice low, roughened at the edges. “The guy didn’t know what it played. Didn’t have the housing. Just this. It was rusted shut. Took me a few days to clean it.”
He paused.
“I was gonna wait to give it to you. But I didn’t know when the right time was.”
You tried to speak again. Your throat clenched. No sound came.
Still—you pushed the air up, forced it out like it owed you something. Like you had to say it, even if it burned.
“Why?”
It rasped out of you like broken glass dragged across stone. More breath than voice. But the word made it past your lips this time, and that was enough.
Bucky didn’t answer right away.
Didn’t look at you, either. Not at first. His eyes had dropped back to the tin, as if the shape of it might tell him how to start.
The silence stretched.
You didn’t push him.
“I didn’t know if you’d want it,” he said finally. The words came low. Barely above a whisper. “Didn’t know if it meant anything coming from me.”
He shifted in the chair like he didn’t trust it to hold his weight. Like he was trying not to lean too close.
“You said that thing about the music box and it just—stuck. I don’t even think you realized you said it. We were talking about… something else. Some mission. I can’t even remember which. You were just fiddling with your comm and you mentioned it. How the song used to help you sleep, but now you can’t remember the tune. Just that it made you feel… safe. Back then.”
He rubbed his thumb over his knee, like he needed something to ground himself.
“I remembered,” he said again, quieter this time. “And I kept looking. For months. In every market, every junk bin, every fucked-up antique shop we passed through. Most of them were trash. Broken. Stolen. Or the wrong kind. But then I found that one. Just the cylinder. No box. No sound. Just…possibility.”
His jaw twitched.
“I figured I’d give it to you when… I don’t know. When things slowed down. When we weren’t bleeding every week or crawling through wreckage or losing people left and right. But things don’t slow down. Not for us. So I waited.”
He finally looked at you.
And the look in his eyes—God. It made your breath stutter beneath the oxygen tube. It wasn’t pity. It wasn’t soft, either. It was sharp. Too sharp. Like the only way he knew how to look at you was like he was still checking for exit wounds.
“I thought I missed my chance.”
He said it so plainly you almost didn’t feel it at first. But it settled in your chest like a weight. Like truth.
“I thought you were gone,” he went on. “On that lake… when I couldn��t find the surface, when I finally got you out, when your body—” He stopped himself. Shook his head. “You weren’t moving. You weren’t breathing. You were just drifting. And I remember thinking—that’s it. That’s the end. That’s where I lose you.”
Your chest tightened. Not from pain. Not from cold. Just the sound of him.
“I don’t lose people like that anymore,” he said. “Not like I used to. Not if I can help it. And sure, I’ve said that before. But this time—” His voice cracked, just once. “This time it was you.”
You blinked. Hard.
He leaned forward now, elbows braced on his knees, voice lower than before.
“You don’t get it,” he said, rambling on like the words were exiting his mouth before he even thought about them. “You think you’re just… part of the team. That you’re one of us. And you are. But it’s not the same. Not for me.”
He exhaled, sharp and tired and fraying.
“You get under my skin in ways that nothing else does. You keep me tethered when shit goes sideways. You ask questions no one else asks. You call me on my bullshit without making it feel like I’m back in some shrink’s office getting dissected. You make space. And I didn’t know how much I needed that—no—wanted it. Until I thought I’d lost it.”
You didn’t know you’d started crying until you tasted salt at the edge of your mouth. Just a few tears. Silent. Clean. Your throat hurt too much for sobbing. Your eyes hurt too much to keep them open.
But he noticed.
He sat forward quickly, hand reaching for the call button. “Shit—do you want the doc? I can get them, they said to page if you—”
You lifted your hand again. Just barely. Just enough to curl your fingers around his wrist.
“No,” you whispered. Barely there. Barely sound.
His hand hovered an inch above the call button, frozen. You felt the way his wrist flexed beneath your fingers, the way the tendons in his forearm pulled tight like he wasn’t sure whether to move or stay. His eyes searched your face again, sharp and clinical for one second—checking your color, your breathing, your pupils—and then he exhaled, quieter this time. Sat back.
Didn’t pull away.
You swallowed. The effort scraped down your throat like sandpaper, but you did it anyway. Forced air past the ruined edges of your voice until it shaped something. Small. Crooked. Yours.
“I didn’t… know you remembered,” you rasped, each word a dry scrape across something bruised and tender. “The music box.”
Bucky exhaled. Short. Quiet. Almost a laugh, except there was nothing funny in it.
“I remember everything you don’t think I do,” he said. “You always think no one’s paying attention. But I see it. All of it. The way you cover for people when they’re tired. How you pass your dessert off to Bob when he pretends he’s not hungry. That little stretch you do before every mission.”
Your lips parted, breath caught halfway to forming something else. But your throat cracked mid-inhale, so you let it go. Let him keep speaking.
He leaned forward again, this time more gently, his forearms braced on either side of your legs, like he was trying to fold himself smaller. Make himself quieter. Like he didn’t want the rest of the world to hear what came next.
“I see you,” he repeated, quieter now. “Even when you think you’re blending in. When you’re holding it together for everyone else.”
You blinked slowly. The tears had stopped, or maybe your body had just run out. Your eyes burned from the effort of keeping them open. But they stayed on him.
“I think…” You paused, tried to clear your throat, but it made it worse. You grimaced through it, blinked hard. He moved like he might reach for you, or call again, but you shook your head, barely. 
“Let me,” you croaked, voice shot to hell, every syllable catching like thread pulled through torn cloth. “I think I… do the stretch… because I’m scared.”
His eyes didn’t widen. He didn’t flinch. Just watched. Still. So fucking still.
You blinked again, slow and raw. “Not of dying. Not really.”
That earned a twitch of his mouth. Not amusement. Something darker. Sadder. Knowing.
“Of what, then?” he asked, voice low.
You swallowed hard. The air in your lungs felt too thick now, heavy with what you hadn’t said before the lake took you. “Of… getting close. Of being… close. And then it ending.”
Something in his expression fractured. Not broken, not open, just bare. Like you’d peeled something back without meaning to. Like you’d stepped too close to the place he kept boarded up with silence and mission reports and one-liners that didn’t quite pass for humor.
He nodded once. Not like he was agreeing. Like he understood.
“You’re not the only one,” he said quietly. “You think I didn’t notice how long it took you to unpack after the Bataysk job? You kept your bag zipped by the door for three weeks.”
You almost laughed. Almost. But it came out too soft, caught on the edge of a breath.
“You knew?”
“I always knew.”
You looked at him again. Really looked. His hands weren’t covered by gloves like they normally were. They were bare, calloused, fingertips nicked and bruised. His left hand rested beside your blanket, the metal dull and wet-lit under the fluorescents, motionless.
Your hand moved before your brain caught up.
Weak. Slow. You lifted your fingers and reached for the edge of his sleeve, but your arm shook with the effort and dropped short. He caught it before it fell completely—his flesh hand, warm and scarred and careful—and guided your palm over the metal one like it wasn’t strange at all. Like you’d done it a thousand times. His jaw ticked.
“It’s cold,” you whispered.
He nodded. “I know.”
“I don’t mind.”
He let his thumb brush across the edge of your wrist, slow and grounding. Not a stroke. Not comforting. Just there. “I didn’t think I’d get to tell you any of this,” he said. “When I pulled you out, when you weren’t breathing, I—” He cut himself off again, jaw tightening. “I thought you were already gone.”
You wanted to say something, anything, but the only sound you made was breath.
It was enough.
“I wasn’t ready to lose you,” he said. “Not like that. Not ever. But especially not without… you knowing.”
Your throat pulled tight.
“Knowing what?” you whispered, wrecked.
He didn’t hesitate.
“That I give a damn. That I think about you more than I should. That you’re not just some mission partner I cover in the field. That you matter.”
You opened your mouth again. Closed it. Your lips trembled.
Bucky moved closer, just slightly, head still bowed low like the words had weight. Like if he spoke too loud they might splinter.
“You matter to me,” he said. “More than I ever planned for.”
Your eyes burned. Your hand twitched in his, a pathetic excuse for a squeeze, but he felt it. He held on tighter.
You swallowed again, painful and raw. “Me too,” you said, barely audible. “You… matter.”
Something broke in his face. Not his composure. Not his strength. Just the smallest trace of distance, pulled away. A breath he hadn’t been able to take until now.
You saw it in his eyes.
And maybe that would’ve been enough. Maybe in another world—one with less noise, less blood—you would’ve stayed like that for another minute. Maybe you would’ve reached for him again, said something more, pulled the words from the ruin of your voice just to hear him say your name in that same, low, wrecked way.
But this wasn’t that world.
And the curtain tore open before you could even draw your next breath.
“MY BEAR CUB LIVES!”
Alexei’s voice exploded through the medbay like cannon fire, and before you could brace for it, before Bucky could so much as turn in his seat, there were arms. So many arms. Warm, clumsy, massive arms wrapping around you like a weighted blanket made of noise and Soviet linen.
You wheezed. A sharp, involuntary gasp you couldn’t help as Alexei crushed half your torso in a rib-cracking hug.
Bucky was on his feet instantly. “Hey—hey! Easy! Watch it, she’s still—”
“Bah!” Alexei cut him off with a wave of one enormous hand. “She is strong! Like small elk! Look at this—already upright, already beautiful, skin like ice sculpture!” He reached out and cradled your jaw for a second, then kissed your forehead in a way that nearly knocked the oxygen cannula askew. “You do not die on me. You are not allowed to die on me. I would never forgive you.”
“I tried to stop him,” Yelena muttered dryly, appearing behind him with arms crossed and absolutely no remorse. “I tackled him in the hallway. Didn’t matter. He just kept bounding.”
She was flanked by three more figures—Bob, shifting awkwardly and clutching a bouquet that looked like it had been stolen from a funeral arrangement, Ava hovering beside him with a look of cautious relief, and John leaning just far enough into the room to smirk.
“Look who decided to rejoin the land of the living,” Walker called, voice light but eyes sharp. “Don’t do that again. It’s bad for team morale.”
Bucky hadn’t moved far from your bedside, just enough to make room, to stop Alexei from inadvertently crushing a vein or breaking an already-bruised rib. He was still watching you, eyes flicking between your face and your vitals monitor like he couldn’t help himself.
Alexei finally released you with a thud and an affectionate slap to the shoulder that nearly dislocated something. You blinked hard through the swirl of motion, coughing once as your lungs protested the sudden influx of people and oxygen.
“Careful,” Bucky muttered again, more to himself than anyone else.
But you caught his wrist before he could move back.
Just a small touch. Nothing demanding. Just enough.
He didn’t say anything. Didn’t need to.
The others kept talking—Yelena launching into a commentary about how ugly the paper cranes were before realizing Bob made them and immediately changing the subject, Ava threatening to install a lock on the medbay door, Bob quietly asking if you wanted him to adjust the light overhead, Walker declaring he’d brought “real food” and pulling a suspicious-looking bag from behind his back that Yelena immediately swatted out of his hands.
It was chaos. Loud and jagged and human.
But you didn’t look at them.
You looked at Bucky.
And he looked at you.
And in that small, quiet moment—under the hum of machines, under the curtain pulled halfway back, under the noise and the mess and the aching throb in your chest—you felt it settle. All of it. The tension. The fear. The distance you’d both kept because you didn’t know what would happen if you crossed it.
He stayed exactly where you needed him. Elbow resting on the frame of your bed, hand lax in your grip, eyes never leaving yours even when someone bumped the curtain again or when Yelena started swearing in Russian under her breath because she had opened the bag Walker had and apparently it smelled.
You didn’t speak.
Neither did he.
But your fingers stayed curled around his wrist, weak and unsteady, still trembling from the cold that still lived somewhere in your bones, and he didn’t pull away.
Didn’t shift.
Didn’t give you some line about rest or recovery or needing to take a break from all this noise.
He just stayed.
Not because you asked.
But because that’s what he did.
What he’d always done, quietly, behind the chaos.
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lllostgirlll · 1 month ago
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i’m creating art again and i feel like i’ve recovered a piece of my soul
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lllostgirlll · 1 month ago
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one thing i’d change is that HE LIVES!!! IDC IF ITS HISTORICALLY ACCURATE OR NOT!!! HE LIVES AND SEES UHTRED RETAKE BEBBANBURG!!! *I scream as they force me into a straightjacket and drag me away into a padded cell*
alfred for the character ask :D
Yayyy!!!!!
How I feel about this character: I like him!! A lot of the fandom (outside Tumblr) shits on him, because he is "mean to Uhtred" and honestly he should have been meaner. He gave that man too much leeway and grace just so Uhtred could turn around and join the Danes every 5 minutes. Uhtred changed allegiances like underwear, and honestly I don't think Alfred was harsh enough on him. Alfred was a KING, of a kingdom during a time of great tension and upheaval, and he was doing his best to make sure his people and his kingdom did not get swallowed into Danelaw and I respect him for that. It meant he had to make tough decisions but that is part of being a ruler; you can't be everyone's friend. Honestly he was too kind in my opinion. He allowed Aethelwold to scheme unchecked, and gave too much leniency to the Danes when he should have been more aggressive.
All the people I ship romantically with this character: Aelswith, of course
My non-romantic OTP for this character: Uhtred, Beocca
My unpopular opinion about this character: I guess I respect him as a ruler during a violent time in history, trying to uphold Christian principles while also protecting his people. I guess a lot of people in the fandom don't respect that for some reason.
One thing I wish would happen / had happened with this character in canon. I mean, nothing? I wouldn't change a thing. David was the perfect Alfred and he embodied him heart and soul, and he really portrayed him as the badass yet kind, intelligent and crafty, noble leader he was. I think his portrayal was perfect.
GIVE ME A CHARACTER ASKS
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lllostgirlll · 2 months ago
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Tumblr media Tumblr media
alfred + 2x01
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lllostgirlll · 2 months ago
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@eru-vande @lord-aldhelm @solinarimoon IM NOT GETTING ANY NOTIFICATIONS FOR ASKS?!?! I’m so sorry I haven’t seen the lil things y’all sent me like last year 😭
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lllostgirlll · 2 months ago
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send this to all your favourite moots and grow a garden! KEEP THE GARDEN GROWING!🌼💚🌱💚🌻 🌳🪻🌼🍒🌹
ten billion years late but ILY 🫶🏻
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