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#-pressed about missing Sundays before since they’re extra prompt days but I would have liked to not miss TFC
fantasykiri5 · 21 days
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Day 6 of @hermitadaymay and it’s the one and only Sans Undertale!!
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hispeculiartreasure · 4 years
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All We’ve Got is Time - Chapter Seventeen | B.B.
Pairing: Bucky Barnes x Female Reader
AU: If They’d Survived/Post-War/Window Washer!Bucky Barnes
Rating: Teen
Word count: 9,636
Chapter 17/24
Warnings: PTSD, brief cursing, light discussion of a WW1 veteran’s amputation, mentions of war-related death. 
AN: Apparently, I needed time. Time to heal, time to think, time to gain perspective. This chapter is not at all what I had planned, but it’s exactly what it needs to be. Thank you for your patience. Hope you enjoy. ❤ 
I do not have a set posting schedule for this story.
Chapter Sixteen
‘All We’ve Got is Time’ Masterlist
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Bucky could not wrap his head around how bewitching you were in the autumnal twilight. The pink hue of the sun’s last rays set the skin of your arms in an alluring tone, made the color of your eyes even more pronounced. It wasn’t only your visage that was stunning, but your confidence behind the wheel of the cruiser. Freshly manicured fingers commanded the steering wheel with a grace that should not have taken him by surprise.
The 1941 Oldsmobile was a loan from Harvey. When you’d told him you were planning a visit home to Tarrytown he claimed he had a vehicle that needed test driving before it was detailed pending a sale. You and Bucky knew full well the car didn’t need any added travel time - Bucky being the mechanic who had repaired it in the first place. The train tickets had been easy enough to return, so the pair of you had taken the clandestine gift and reveled in the luxury of having a vehicle at your disposal.
With an ease that betrayed your years of experience, you navigated the road out of New York City and pointed the vehicle in the direction of your hometown. From his view sitting in the passenger seat, the thought crossed his mind that the woman seated next to him on the bench was a truly authentic you that his soul craved. No walls up, nothing to hide from the world - you behind the wheel cruising down the streets with a peaceful smile spreading to your cheeks. If Bucky had owned a camera he would’ve gladly spent a whole roll of film trying to capture this moment that was imprinting itself on his mind.
He could tell you knew he was watching you. Yet you didn’t shy away; didn’t admonish him for the way his eyes roved over you, nor the length of time they did. You merely continued to talk about your day like you would any other evening. Where you’d normally catch up over dinner and pie in a diner’s cozy booth, you did so in the comfort of the sedan as pavement moved steadily beneath you.
Bucky had expected you to be pleased earlier that evening when he picked you up from work in his Sunday-best; coveralls traded in for a dapper look after a long day working beneath the hood of this very vehicle. Instead, your eyebrows furrowed together, insisting he didn’t have to dress up to meet your parents. He’d waved off your protests with a cheeky “Can’t have your parents thinking I’m a hobo, right?”  He bit off a comment about how despite your overtures, you were impeccably dressed. Hair coiffed in perfection, not a speck of makeup out of place - your immaculate appearance didn’t ring true for a reason he couldn’t identify, so he kept the observation to himself.
You had quickly slid back into your rightful place snug in his heart when you’d overruled him by climbing into the driver’s seat.  Since he’d put in so much effort, you insisted he rest on the ride out to Tarrytown. Neither of you were fooled. You truly loved being at the helm of a car. With traffic to thank, the hour-long trip to Tarrytown was otherwise pleasant. When he wasn’t marveling at you, he admired the green fields of the rolling countryside.
A roadside advertisement for “Tarrytown’s Best Antique Shop - 2 miles ahead!” prompts Bucky to say -
“So, this is it, huh?”
You slant your eyes to his for a moment before they’re back on the road, a smirk gracing your lips. “Almost.”
Where a moment ago you had been the picture of serenity, an undertow of unease now laces your tense jaw. Try as you might, those eyes couldn’t hide from him.
Before he can ascertain the cause behind the shift, your hand comes down to his knee with an excited squeeze. “Well - this is Tarrytown!”
With the sparkling Hudson River visible in the west, a quaint village looms up to meet the Oldsmobile. All was exactly as he’d expected based on your stories. The place had the charm of another time with buildings betraying architecture from another century, a different kind of world. Towering dogwoods filled with red leaves greet the pair of you everywhere he turns. The road curves past the stately Tarrytown Village Hall, proudly on display in the center of the community.
He whistles appreciatively, eyes definitely not on the town. “She’s a beaut.”
“You’ve barely seen her,” you tease.
“Don’t have to, I know she’s a keeper.” He winks.
Your eyes roll with all the fondness in the world.
Not too much farther into town you take a turn, and another turn, and then another turn. Bucky’s sense of direction is lost in the maze of picturesque homes nestled in the hilly streets. He’s grateful one of you knows where you’re going; he’s grateful that it’s you.
Sooner than expected you bring the car to a slow stop; shifting the gear and pulling the emergency brake before killing the ignition, plunging the cab into a descending quiet as the engine settles.
You, however, are not settled. His attention is drawn to the way you twist the ring on your right hand as your eyes lose focus somewhere in the direction of what he assumes to be your childhood home.
The concept of you being nervous with a home-field advantage puzzled him. When he had brought you home he was fully confident in his sisters and mother making you feel welcome, truly taking a shine to you. To his joy, he’d been right. His father was another story, but that was an unfortunate surprise.
There wasn’t a bit of self-assurance in your shoulders as you gazed through the front windshield. The ring takes another spin around your finger.
He says your name as a question and you snap back to the present, eyes locking with his. You feign a grin and open the driver’s door before he can figure out how to word his question.
Following your lead, he opens the trunk and retrieves the bags, playfully refusing to let you carry yours. “And let your folks think I’m anything other than a gentleman? Come on, you’ve gotta give me something to show off.”
This only pulls a small smile from you before you’re checking your reflection in the side mirror. You wipe a bit of stray lipstick from the side of your mouth, rub at a dark spot beneath your eye. Slow steps lead you to the porch, where you pause again. The nippy breeze sends a flutter through your hair and Bucky takes the moment to really study your face.
Clearly there’s a mix between anticipation and unease. You’d been ecstatic at the prospect of bringing him home just a week ago when you’d made the final plans, so what had happened in the intervening time? Mentally flipping through his past observations he searches for a sign of what lays on the other side of the front door.
He had only heard you speak fondly of home, but in the seconds he reviews your statements they all land on the side of vague. Your hometown was big on traditions, so he assumed your parents would be of the same mindset. From what he’d gleaned you spoke with your mother on the phone fairly regularly, but any calls he’d been within earshot of had sounded almost. . . polite. He’d noticed letters from your father on your home desk and in your purse, sometimes reading a new one on the subway if you hadn’t had time the night before.
Based on his own time around Harvey, Bucky recalled several stories about you and your father. Your mother remained enigmatic, aside from the picture in your apartment of you nestled between your parents.
“You alright, sweetheart?”
You avoid his eyes, blink one too many times. “Of course.”
Before he has the chance to press you’ve twisted the doorknob and stepped across the threshold.
“Mom? Dad? Anybody home?” You call out into the sparse foyer.
Bucky can’t help the involuntary tremor of muscles at the sound of a crash from the kitchen, followed by a clamor of voices. When he pulls air back into his lungs, you're smiling an apology. A reassuring hand touches his cheek before fixing an errant lock of hair that had fallen from the strict hold of Brylcreem. He should’ve remembered that as clearly as he can see you, you can also see him.
You raise your voice a fraction, “Everybody okay? We’re home! You can set the bags down there, Buck.” With a motion to the side Bucky obediently deposits the luggage next to the door. It looks incredibly conspicuous in the tidy home, where everything seemingly had a place and stayed there. Some interesting artwork hung on the walls, a few he recognized from Steve’s art books. He’d have to ask who the art connoisseur of the house was.
A deep, soothing voice sounds from the doorway to the left. “Should have known you’d bring trouble the second you walked into the door!” The sentence hit Bucky’s ears a moment before your father, tall and lanky, rounded the corner, assisted by his two forearm crutches. “Hey, Sassafras!”
A giggle escapes you as you wrap arms around your father’s middle. “Hi, Dad. Missed you too.” He squeezes you with a little extra force, prompting an “oomph” out of you before turning to Bucky.
“Sorry about all the noise, we’re trying to get the pumpkins decorated for the contest tonight. We had a little mishap, but everything’s just fine. I assume you’re the young man we’ve heard about.” He worms his right hand out of the crutch and offers it, which Bucky takes amiably. “Glad you could make the trip out, son.”
You had mentioned your father’s service in the Great War that night in the diner when he’d finally told you of his own service. That conversation felt like a lifetime ago, especially when Bucky was faced with the reality of the injury in front of him. Below the knee of his right leg, his pants hang loose without the limb to support them. Nearly 30 years of practice could make anyone deft with crutches but the way he carried himself drew attention away from the injury and to the warmth in his presence.
“James Barnes. Nice to meet you, sir.”
“Do you prefer James?”
“Everyone who knows me calls me Bucky, but-”
Your father’s eyes shine with insight his tone belies. “Bucky it is, then. Come on in you two. Your mother is scrambling to get the last things together before the party, but we have a few minutes ‘til we need to leave.”
He tosses his head in the direction from which he came before offering an elbow to you. You tuck your hands into his elbow and kiss him on the cheek. Bucky trails behind the pair of you, noticing how you easily step in perfect time with each other.
“Your boss still giving you trouble?”
“Dad, it’s really okay,” Bucky hears you murmur.
In return you get a disapproving noise and he shifts to get a better look at you as they pass through the living room. “But if it’s not-“
Without an edge you state, “Not now, okay?”
“You’ll catch me up later?”
“Promise.” Crossing the threshold into the kitchen you quickly change the subject. “So how’s your pumpkin looking? What theme did you pick this year?”
Bucky isn’t sure he hears correctly when your father mentions something about dwarfs, but upon seeing the kitchen table he’s proven wrong.
Seven pumpkins sit in a row, each showing painted characteristics of Walt Disney’s cartoon variations of the fairytale dwarfs with background details carved to shine out from the candle burrowed in the pumpkin. The whole gang was there. Each pumpkin dwarf had its own colored hat; everyone’s beard a different shape and length.
A myriad of paints and brushes litter the table protected by a spare sheet that looks as if it had received much love over the years during arts and crafts time. Eyeing the paint stains on your father’s fingers, Bucky can make a fair wager as to who the artist in the house is.
Only one dwarf could have Grumpy’s sour expression, the one with the roses cheeks was not doubt Bashful; and who else could sport a grin that wide except for Happy?
A memory from 1939 surfaces fondly of Evelyn begging him to take her to the pictures to see it even though he told her he was too old. Her wide eyes eventually won him over and he dragged Steve along for the viewing.
Remnants of pumpkin entrails lay on the floor and the aforementioned mishap comes into focus. Bucky reaches for a rag to clean up the remaining spill but you snatch it first, quick to mop up and join your mother in the kitchen.
The most pristine-looking woman Bucky has ever seen in his life turns from the wastebasket in the corner, broom and dustpan in hand. Not a hair out of place, her pearl necklace looks as if it had just been polished.
“Oh,” the crease above her nose pinches, “I wish you hadn’t brought everyone back here, there’s so much clutter from this. . . project.”
“Dear, it’s just family.” Dad inclines his head toward Bucky. “Bucky, this is my lovely wife. Darling, this is Bucky.”
“Bucky? I’m so sorry, I was under the impression your name was James.”
“Oh, it is, Bucky is a childhood nickname that just stuck. But you can call me whatever is easiest for you.”
“Well, welcome to our home, James.”
“Thank you, ma’am.”
“I’m sorry the place is such a mess, it’s been a bit of a chaotic day.”
A few awkward beats pass before you approach your mother.
“Hello, dear,” her syrupy sweet voice contrasts the stiff kiss she leaves in the air above your cheek.
“Hi, Mom.”
“Have you been working long hours again?” She fixes a bobby pin that had begun to worm its way out of your hair. “Poor thing, the circles under your eyes are so dark, I knew this job would be hard on you. Have you been drinking enough water?”
You protest weakly, telling her it hasn’t been that bad and you must not have touched your makeup up good enough because you were resting just fine. Shoulders tighten slightly when she does a scan of you from head to toe - stopping to fix the collar of your dress that had crumpled when your father hugged you.
Some of the awkward tension breaks when your father clears his throat, drawing attention away from the mother-daughter reunion. “So what do you two think of the pumpkins?”
Immediately, your face softens. Joining your Dad to look over the assortment of pumpkins, you let out an appreciative whistle. “You’ve outdone yourself this year. Only one pumpkin required for entry and you bring six extra? The other contestants are going to hate you.”
“Probably,” your father replies with a chuckle. “Although the town already resents that I’ve won seven years in a row.”
“That’s quite an impressive reign.” Bucky runs a finger over the most prominent pumpkin, one that wasn't quite right. “But, I-uh, I think Doc is missing his glasses, sir.”
“Oh gosh, you’re right. He is supposed to have glasses. How did I miss that?” Leaning heavily into his crutches he groans. “And how do I get specs for a pumpkin on short notice?”
“You got a coupla paper clips around?”
With a puckered brow, your dad indicates to a drawer in the kitchen, from which you produce a handful of paper clips. After a minute or so of fiddling with the wire - using a glass to get a perfect round shape - he offers a pair of miniature spectacles fit for a gourd.
After examining the makeshift glasses your dad peers at Bucky, letting out a bark of laughter with a clap on his back to match. “Now we’re cooking with gas! Sweetheart, can you hand me some of that glue so I can pop these on?”
You proffer the pot of glue and help your father attach the glasses to Doc’s pumpkin.
The grandfather clock in the family room announcing the hour prompts your mother to sigh heavily. “Oh dear, we are running late. I told you we did not have time for these last minute additions. I warned you about leaving things until the last minute this year.”
“Ah, we all know they aren’t going to start without us, don't sweat it.” Dad waves a hand, not one to be rushed.
“You always think the best is going to happen.”
“And you always think the worst is going to happen.”
An unladylike humph passes from her lips before a bit of panic flashes across her eyes and she’s the picture of grace again. For a second, Bucky saw a shadow of you pass over her features. “Can you grab the boxes from the garage to help your father pack the pumpkins?”
A ‘yes ma’am’ rolls off your tongue before the sentence is finished, feet moving to carry out the request. Bucky lends a hand, following your dad’s instructions not to knock their hats askew.
As soon as your back is turned your mother slips in behind you, shifting a handful of the pumpkins you’d painstakingly placed. Despite her efforts, it doesn’t go unnoticed.
“I’m sorry to leave the place a mess, it’s a horrible first impression. I hope you can forgive us, James.” Your mother tugs on the strings of her apron, shaking it out before placing it on a designated peg.
“I don’t mind cleaning up, Mom.”
“Oh,” she shakes her head, patting you on the cheek, “don’t you worry about it. I’ll take care of it later. Do you two want to join us?”
You and Bucky each grab a box, following your parents to their vehicle to pack them in the trunk safely.
“No, we’re just going to take a walk around since we’ll be busy tomorrow night.”
Bucky casts a suspicious eye to you. “We’re busy tomorrow night?” he mutters under his breath.
“Mhmm,” you hum. “It’ll be fun, don’t worry about it.”
Again, your mother repeats her invitation.
Your dad exhales loudly after opening the passenger-side door. “Honey, let them be, no young couple wants to spend non-stop time with the parents. We’ll see them tomorrow.”
Mom huffs. “Well, there are enough leftovers from dinner for both of you. We really need to get going.”
Dad leaves an obnoxious smooch to your cheek. “So happy you’re home, sweetie.” Then he turns his head to face Bucky. “Really really glad you’re here. Looking forward to getting to know you.”
“You two have fun!” Bucky catches a moment between you and your mother. She shimmies her eyebrows up and down a few times as you close the driver’s door. With a wink she pulls the car out of the drive without any response from you.
Slightly miffed, you walk back into the house with Bucky on your heels.
It’s not until you start scrubbing the table Bucky speaks. “I thought your mom said she’d clean up?”
You snort, tossing a rag in the sink. “She said that because our cleaning standards have never seen eye-to-eye. Anyway.” With a deep breath you start digging in the cabinets, pulling down a few snacks. “You wanna grab that bag on the coat rack so we can head out?”
Once the food and a picnic blanket are stashed in the bag, Bucky slings it over his shoulder and accompanies you outside.
The neighborhood is homey, even sweet, Bucky thinks. Everywhere he looks he’s met with greenery and actual white picket fences. He hadn’t been convinced they existed in real life until this stroll through your old stomping grounds.
“Where exactly are we going?”
Nonchalantly slipping your hand in the crook of his elbow you answer. “Tomorrow my mother will insist on taking us on a horribly boring and irrelevant tour of the town, so tonight you’re getting my tour.”
Someone across the street calls your name, interrupting your conversation. An elderly woman beneath an oversized straw hat straightens up from her garden.
Your smile is instant and full of sunshine when you return the older woman’s greeting. “Mrs. Robbins!” Leading Bucky across the empty street you meet her on the other side of her gate.
Her eyes crinkle kindly as she takes your hand in hers. “Oh, Sassafras, it is so good to see you again!”
You laugh and shake your head. “Good to see you too, ma’am.”
She tuts her tongue a few times before patting your hand. “Darling you’re old enough to call me Fiona, please do. And who is this handsome young man?” Dark eyes examine Bucky, keener than her feeble posture would suggest.
“This is my boyfriend, Bucky. Bucky, Mrs.-” you stop herself at her sharp look. “This is Fiona. A dear family friend and Harvey’s sister.”
Brown skin wrinkles around her softening lips. “It’s nice to meet you, Bucky.”
“Nice to meet you too, ma’am. I work for your brother at the garage, he’s been more than kind to me.”
She titters at that, hand swiping through the air. “I should hope so! He better be payin’ it forward after he inherited the place from her grandfather. I’ve gotta warn you, kid. This one,” Fiona nods to you with no small amount of affection, “has always had moxie; done what she wants, what other people want be damned. She’s a brave girl. Sure you can keep up?”
Bucky beams down at you and you return it easily. “Probably be a step behind her most of the way, but I’m up for the chase.”
You bid her goodbye only after securing a promise to see her tomorrow night.
“And what exactly is tomorrow night?” Bucky’s question is drowned out by another neighbor exclaiming at your presence.
You seem to feel rather than see Bucky’s questioning gaze on you. “Babysat,” you nod to a young family pouring out of a vehicle and heading into their home who were waving at you like maniacs.
Next house down you offer another explanation. “Cat-sat.”
Ten more steps and you speak again. “Helped her tend her garden when her husband left for the war,” you wiggle your fingers at a pregnant woman checking her mailbox who was wearing a sparkling smile.
A car slows down to move alongside you; the mustachioed gentleman at the wheel asks, “You kids need a ride?”
Bending at the waist to make eye contact through the open window you say, “No, thank you, Mr. Quaid. We’re enjoying the evening walk.”
“Take care!” The car speeds up and is gone.
A little more solemnly you nod toward a couple sitting on their front porch, hands joined. “Their son was a few years younger than me, I tutored him in math. He ended up doing really well. . .” Your voice fades when you smile in their direction. Hand moving to grip his, you continue quieter, “He was drafted when he was 18. Died in the first battle he saw. They were devastated. I tried to visit and bring them food as often as I could.”
He squeezes your fingers, no words needed - the weight of loss heavy in his own heart. Seeking to lighten the mood, Bucky clears his throat. “You didn’t tell me you were a local celebrity.”
You scoff in a way your mother certainly would’ve labeled as undignified. “Oh, it’s just a few neighbors. Helps that I’ve got a dreamboat on my arm.”
Then it’s his turns to scoff. “Hardly. You’re the good-looking one of the pair, Sixth Floor.”
“Ah, but you’re the new one in town. The place will be buzzing with news of you by the time we’ve walked the neighborhood.”
Bucky isn’t quite sure how to feel about that, but before he can voice any concern you’ve arrived in the town square where volunteers were setting up decorations and festivities for the coming weekend.
He whistles at the splendor of the unfurled banners hanging above the streets, dozens of jack-o-lanterns hanging from light posts, and the fervor of the crowd orchestrating the perfect swoop of a swag of orange and black tinsel. “Man, you weren’t kidding about your town being into Halloween.”
“No, I was not,” you admit with a rueful laugh. “Everyone really got into it in an effort to lower kids’ interest in vandalism. What were your Halloweens like growing up?”
“Umm, usually pretty relaxed. The girls always dressed up; I put minimal effort into putting a costume together.”
“Party pooper.”
“I do remember this one Halloween when we were young. The ice cream store down the block would give you a free scoop if you showed up in a costume. It was more like a mob than a store, kids everywhere. The employees couldn’t keep up with how many cones to give out. Don’t think they ever did that again.”
“That is adorable, but I can’t blame the owner. I would’ve knocked down some doors for ice cream too.”
“I’m assuming your Halloweens were slightly more eventful than mine?”
“Slightly.”
“Yeah, that’s your lying tone.”
“I don’t have a lying tone!”
“That’s the same tone of voice you used when Steve and Peggy were arguing about which one of them was more likely to win a bear fight and you told them you didn’t have an opinion.”
You both chortle at the memory.
“Oh my god, how had I already forgotten about that? How could such a playful question escalate into them aggressively advocating for their individual tactical advantages over a bear?”
“Alcohol is one way. Stubbornness is the other. And they both had loads that night.”
“I thought you said Steve couldn’t get drunk.”
“Fine, pure stubbornness on his part. Either way, you’re lying to me.”
You continue your walk through the downtown neighborhood in the direction of the river.
“Okay, my Halloweens were plenty eventful. Lots of dances and parties and festivals. We don’t know how not to take Halloween seriously. Spooky is literally woven into the fabric of our town.”
“Right, right, I remember you talking about the Headless Horseman poem.”
“Yep. The author lived not too far from our house. Rumor has it Walt Disney is doing a cartoon based off of the story.”
“That what inspired your dad to go with the dwarfs for pumpkins this year?”
The sparkle in your eye proves his theory. “Has anyone told you you’re very astute, Sergeant Barnes? Anyway, we’ve got loads of other stories. The cemetery is haunted; some of the statues have been seen getting up and walking around, visiting graves. The British head of intelligence during the Revolutionary War, John Andre, was captured in Tarrytown after meeting with Benedict Arnold to negotiate his defection - he was killed several days later. People still report seeing Major Andre wander the woods, along with the Headless Horseman, obviously. The Flying Dutchman, the phantom ship, has been spotted offshore in the Hudson too.”
The look on his face must have betrayed his fear that his girlfriend believed in ghosts, because you snicker. “It’s mostly all in good fun, but the legends leave plenty of room for the local kids to terrify everyone.”
“Don’t suppose you were ever involved in any of those pranks?”
“Me? Oh gosh no.” Your intense tone of innocence has his lips curling in disbelief. “Well. . . one night some friends and I scared some tourists who were walking around the cemetery. It’s funny how from a distance, lit jack-o-lanterns can look so realistic when being swung from a stick.”
“You tricked people into thinking heads were floating around in the fields?”
“We were just carrying our jack-o-lanterns around, I don’t know what you’re talking about. . .” Oh, mischief was a good color on you.
You turn down a worn road and Bucky takes a moment to admire your silhouette in the eventide.
Over your shoulder you call, “You coming?”
“Depends, you taking me into the woods to scare me with floating heads?”
Beguiling eyes twinkle. “Not yet. I wanna show you something.”
He takes your outstretched hand and lets you lead the way; your feet carrying you as if you’d walked this trail a hundred times before. Turns out, you had.
Not too many steps later, the smell of the river and a cooler breeze greets the pair as a huge building looms in the distance. Beginning to block the view of the Hudson the closer you get, Bucky can just make out the sign affixed in bold letters across the side.
“This your old factory?”
Your silence prompts Bucky to glance down where he finds you nodding. As if the words had suddenly been snatched from your throat, like your faculties were stripped down to remembering how to breathe. He looks at you closer.
There’s. . . pain. Not the physical type. The type that was beneath the skin, underneath the beat of your heart. A type of pain uncomfortably familiar to him.
The affliction etched into your brow is too close to how he feels when recalling his time overseas. Countless hours you had spent asking about and listening to his stories, holding him close when the memories were so vivid he almost couldn’t distinguish them from reality.
But there were moments he found himself yearning for pieces of that life, he must admit. The camaraderie among his unit, the steady sense of duty, the sharing of stories around the fire when Dugan wouldn’t shut the hell up, sharing a dance with a Red Cross girl on a rare night off in London. Yes, there was inarguable tragedy, trauma, and sacrifice. He was left with scars and loss.
Selfishly, he realizes, he had not spent a moment thinking about what you had lost.
Your tone is unintentionally forlorn as you share the names of your crewmates, what your days were like, a few anecdotes of your time there. A sadness that seemed a cousin to the dissatisfaction you’d had when clocking out of the corporate office every day seeps through the tension in the hand tucked into his.
Buried under the facts, he senses a void that aches more in this moment than he’s ever witnessed. The quiet charm of your hometown dampened by the war factory up the river. Tension in your household when you told your mother of your career plans. Knowledge and skills you excelled in. The team of women in your charge who you loved deeply, felt a responsibility to. Childhood playmates that hadn’t returned from the European theater. A sense of purpose and pride ripped away after the last Axis power surrendered.
You’d never stared mortality in the face like he had, but you’d fought battles, risked a lot. The course of your life changed forever because of the war. The troops were celebrated, at least publicly, upon their return. There was a reverence reserved for the uniformed troops.
But you. . . you were thrust aside to make room for men like him. You, thousands of yous, were told you were no longer needed. You could go home and sit. You were meant for something softer, something more domestic. Your expertise and fortitude were no longer needed, could be put in a memory box and forgotten about.
The awareness that this is the first he’s seen this side of you unnerves him. Had he ignored it? Could you be that adept at hiding these inner struggles? Were you concealing this on purpose? Did guilt haunt you into silencing this wound? Sure, you’d alluded to how you’d been unhappy being pushed out of your job at the factory, that the office job was a consolation prize. Although, could it be called a prize when you’d forced the hand that had given it?
Shame washes over him as you blink tears away. Why hadn’t he asked? How hadn’t he caught this earlier? He wants to ask now, desperately wants to know and hold you, but he can read you well enough to see the sign your eyes hold that screams ‘do not cross into this territory’.
It dawns on him that he doesn’t know what to do. Helpless had never been a good fit for him.
Minutes of silence pass as he continues to watch you stumble through the visceral memories whirling about.
Then the answer hits him like a ball cracking against a bat.
Follow your example.
He can listen. He can respect boundaries. He can gently nudge. He can be present. He can offer perspective. He can provide backup when you face the scary depths of your mind. He can love.
Wordlessly you turn your back on the factory, unknowingly desperate to put space between you and a home that is too dear, too. . . no longer yours.
He can relate.
So he falls in step as you walk away, lost in thought. Trusting that you subconsciously know your next destination, that you’ll feel it when you arrive.
Every step away from that spot, you’re cast in a new light in the pitch black of night. One that paints you in braver, more hallowed strokes than before. A new admiration, a new respect. . . a new love blooms in him for you. And again, he finds himself thankful that he dropped into your life.
Releasing your hand, he pulls you closer to him with an arm around your shoulders and presses a vow to your head with his lips. A promise to watch closer, to always give you the respect you’ve earned, to care about the safety of your heart as you do for his.
In that moment, he decides that you deserve the world. And he’s going to do whatever he can to deliver it right to your feet.
You’ve walked a mile or so when you break out of your reverie and survey your surroundings, angling further toward a clearing free from artificial light or people. Finding a satisfactory spot - by what standards, he’s unsure - you pull the blanket from the bag he’s been carrying and settle it over the lush green grass. While you make yourself comfortable on the checked picnic blanket, he watches you with what he’s sure is an obvious adoration.
Looking up, what you were going to say dies on your tongue. “What?” you ask uncertainly, dragging out the vowel.
“Nothin’,” he shrugs. “Just enjoying the view.”
The cock of your head says you don’t believe him but you don’t press the matter.
“Well, c’mere.” You motion to the blanket next to you.
Feeling playful he shoves his hands into his pockets. “Answer one question.”
You hum inquisitively.
“Did you bring me to the middle of the woods to scare the bejesus outta me in the spirit of Halloween?”
Laughter has never sounded so sweet in his whole life. The mirth in your cheeks tugs a dopey grin upon his face as he plops down next to you, shoulder to shoulder.
“Alright, what’re we doing out here, Sixth Floor?”
“Well, you’re always complaining about how the city has too much light to really see the stars, so. . .” You turn your face to the heavens, Bucky following in kind.
He had been so wrapped up in you he’d failed to notice the mantle of twinkling lights above his head. A steadying breath is necessary as a peace washes over him at the beautiful sight.
“Now that’s a view.”
“Go ahead, talk my ear off about them.”
Growing up in New York City, the area was notorious for blackouts. Gradually growing bored during a summer filled with lightless evenings he found himself crawling onto the roof of his childhood home and examining the sky. He had been slow to fall in love with the sky but it had persisted throughout his childhood.
During a sleepless night on the cold ground in Italy, he realized the constellations he was looking up at were different from the ones back home. Peggy had surreptitiously smuggled him an astronomy book after Steve had rescued the 107th from Azzano and he’d carried it in his pack until he’d returned home. The same book rested permanently on his nightstand, a faithful companion when a different kind of sleepless night plagued him.
He settles in, throwing an arm around your shoulders, rubbing you for extra warmth.
“Ooh ooh, Jupiter is right there.” He points out the planet.
“Where?”
“Right there.” He wags his finger in emphasis.
“I. . . I just see stars.”
“Here, lay down.” Bucky falls to his back, feeling you drop next to him. He circles the planet again with a finger, hoping it’ll help guide your line of sight.
“Oh. . . yeah, absolutely, wow.”
“You still can’t see it can you?”
Your move to roll into his shoulder to muffle your giggles and embarrassment is futile; there’s no way he can pass up the opportunity to tease you about it.
In a torrent of words he finds himself helpless to stop, he tells you all about the skies above. He waxes poetic about the solar eclipse he’d seen over the summer, explains the draconid meteor shower that had graced the atmosphere earlier that month, and indicates several constellations.
He’s still not convinced you can actually make out the constellations; Ursa Major and Cassiopeia being his two favorites that evening. At one point you sit up and he shuffles to rest his head in your lap, legs crossed at his ankles.
Although he usually preferred to observe from the wings, he finds himself drawn to your audience. He could count on one hand the number of people he was at ease enough with to speak unbridled. Granted, you were an easy audience. Even if you were indulging him. there was refuge in your company.
Your digits twine into his hair, looping through the beginnings of a curl at the ends, undoing the efforts of the hair cream. A touch so gentle he could not bring himself to care. His eyes slide shut and he focuses only on the feeling of you playing with his hair, fingernails pleasantly scratching his scalp every so often.
Eventually, he runs out of things to say and you both keep your faces turned up to the blanket of stars. A thousand questions cross his mind yet he struggles to find his footing in this unfamiliar emotional territory.
“So, your mom seems a little. . .”
Your fingers falter for a moment before slowly resuming their perusing of his hair. “Obstinate?”
The bitterness surrounding that one word tells him all he needs to know.
“Invested?” He offers as an alternative.
You only hum.
“She cares enough to go along with your dad’s ideas. Like helping with the pumpkins, even if it seemed to stress her out.”
“Guess that’s love for you.” He detects a hint of strain in your voice, as if the unexpected emotions of your hometown arrival had drained you.
He’s hesitant to push further and his newfound courage fails him.
The stillness that falls is peaceful. A cozy bubble that’s just the two of you and the stars.
You eventually squint to see your watch in the dark and declare its time to head back before your mother calls the cavalry.
“She’d call the cops?”
“If it’s so late she thinks we’ve gone missing. And the Chief is my uncle, so. . .” A docile mirth meets him as you pull him up from the blanket to join you on two feet. “Do you want to explain to my mother's brother what we were doing in the wilderness at night in solitude?”
Bucky opens his mouth but you cover it with your hand.
“No innuendo-laced sass, sir.”
In a moment of impulsivity he kisses your fingers and is enamored by the embarrassment you hide by looking away, clear desire visible in the starlight.
“Let’s go before you give us a reason to really be in trouble, Sergeant.”
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Unsurprisingly, he finds himself awake well before the sun. Given the unfamiliar environment and his mind turning the events of last night over and over, he was already pacing the guest bedroom’s floor. After debating internally whether or not it was rude to make coffee in someone else’s kitchen, he settles for scrawling a few passages in the journal you’d gifted to settle his mind.
He opens the door to leave the bathroom in fresh clothes and a shaved face, only to come face-to-face with sleep-rumpled you; in your pajama set with a robe thrown over it. Your bare feet brush against his - per usual, your toes are freezing.
“Good morning,” he hums.
“G’morning,” you return, burying your face in his chest, arms securing around his middle.
Unable to contain his grin, he scratches the back of your neck with one hand, smoothing circles on your back with the other. “You sure are cute in the morning.” He catches something vaguely resembling a ‘stoooooop’. “I’m telling you, you look your best right after you’ve woken up.”
“Shhh, stop talking,” you slur into his shirt, seemingly attempting to rub the sleep from your eyes.
“I mean,” he half-shrugs, “we have spent a night together.”
Your hand presses firmly over his mouth before he could finish his sentence. “James Buchanan, if you utter another word about that you and I will be banned from this house for the rest of our lives.”
He tugs your wrist down to kiss your knuckles. “We literally just fell asleep on the same couch, babydoll.” If asked he would blame the morning hour, not the overwhelming sensation of having you close, responsible for the deep rasp of his voice.
“I promise my mother will not listen to that story long enough before she disowns me.”
Releasing you, he steps out of the bathroom to let you in. Nodding, he turns around to watch as you shuffle to the sink. “Rest of our lives, huh?” He tosses a smug grin which you volley with a scowl.
“Shut up and make me coffee.”
He knows you miss the wistful glance accompanying his laugh as you shut the door in his face. Not that he minds.
When you do emerge for your lovingly-prepared beverage you are dressed to the nines. A new dress, coordinated stockings, and hair in perfect rolls. . . Bucky was more than a little taken aback. Saturdays were when he was treated to your out-of-the-office look; the bare face, your overalls, the unmitigated sass. This was. . . different.
“What?” You eye him from beneath your heavy eye-liner, taking a cautious sip out of your mug.
“N-. . . nothing, doll. You look nice.”
Your rigid smile gives him pause, but it’s one of the only pauses he has for the day.
The rest of the morning and afternoon don’t leave him much time to mull over all he’s learned about you in the last 24 hours; your mother kept the four of you quite busy with her town tour. Bucky can practically feel you cringing from your place next to him on the backseat bench of your parents’ car as your mother drags you all over town.
He doesn’t completely understand the point of most of the stops. She makes sure to drive by the newly built gazebo, the lovely park adjacent to downtown where there was plenty of space for kids to run, and a new boutique that had opened that spring. The tour included lunch with the mayor and his family, tea and coffee with the neighbors, and a quick stroll around the block where your mother pointed out several wonderful houses for sale.
However, he did notice how quiet you were. Your commentary was nil in comparison to the night before. Choosing to listen to your mother rather than add on to her narration struck him as slightly odd. Was it born from weariness or a reluctance to start an argument?
As the day progressed, Bucky clocked a growing agitation in you. Without so much as a minute alone with you since that morning he couldn’t put a finger on the source of your turmoil. He ached to fix it for you. Since he didn’t know what was broken, he settled for grabbing your hand and squeezing it three times.
Squeeze.  I.  Squeeze. Love. Squeeze. You.
The scowl you were wearing diminishes slightly when you redirect your gaze from outside the window to him. You squeeze back:
I. Love. You. Too.
The time for supper approached quicker than your mother anticipated, landing you, your father, and Bucky in the family room while she prepared the meal alone. After your lackluster attempt at offering help, which was quickly denied, you plop down onto the couch next to Bucky. He draws comfort from the way you nuzzle into his side, the way you rest your head on his shoulder for a few minutes. Your breathing evens out enough for Bucky to table his concern for a later time.
It isn’t until your dad shares a story about the time 10-year-old you had insisted a bead you were using to make necklaces was small enough to fit in your ear. It turns out you were correct, it was small enough to fit in your ear. After spending five hours at the doctor’s office with your father, the bead fell out the second the nurse had called your name to be seen by the doctor. It’s the first time that day Bucky hears you give a genuine laugh.
When the group sits down for dinner he can’t help but compare his family table to yours. Unlike being crowded into each other’s space in Brooklyn, he felt a world away from you at the formal dining table.
In between demure bites, your mother asks: “So James, we’ve been told you served, but haven’t heard many details.”
“For 1943 I served as a Sergeant with the 107th Infantry. I then became a part of a special operations combat unit.”
“Is it true you served with Captain America?”
“Mom.” If your mother could feel the waves of fury rolling off of you, she didn’t show it.
Feigning surprise, her shoulders raise in a shrug. “It’s a harmless question.”
Seeking to quell the simmer of anger bubbling in you, Bucky swoops in. “Yes ma’am, I did. Alongside a group of strong, fearless men.”
“And what was that like?”
“We dealt with a lot of classified information, so unfortunately I’m not at liberty to discuss much of it.”
A parroted line given to him by the SSR the moment he’d landed on American soil; a line that had saved him from this exact conversation a hundred times before.
Undeterred, your mother pats her lips daintily with her napkin. “Well, what is Captain America like? Have you met him, dear?”
After chewing on a forkful of the meal for a touch longer than necessary, you respond. “I’ve only known him as Bucky’s friend Steve. And he’s very kind, intelligent, thoughtful. He’s an artist, Dad. I’m sure you two would find a lot to talk about.”
“Well, James, thank you very much for your service. It’s an honor to have you at our table.”
“It was nothing, ma’am. I only did what other able-bodied men were willing to do, except I had the blessing of coming home.”
As if to stop whatever retort burning hot on your tongue, your father clears his throat. “We all do what needs to be done in times of war. Think all of us here can relate to that.”
“Oh yes,” your mother hums. “During the Great War, my husband, brother, and father were all off fighting. I took care of the household while everyone was gone instead of trying to find work. I felt that creating a stable home would be the most comforting for returning soldiers.”
Bucky does his best not to sputter around the food in his mouth, eyes going as wide as his dinner plate.
Your comeback to the obvious jab was a lifted chin and pursed lips. The line in your shoulders speaking to the countless times this conversation had happened before.
Without a rejoinder from you, the matriarch sighs. “But so many young people had a fervor for a more hands-on approach to war, as they are wont to do.”
“No need to mince words, Mom, we all know you weren’t a big fan of my factory work.”
“Thank goodness,” Bucky says amiably “or I wouldn’t have a job or career path. Your daughter has really steered me down a road where I feel a sense of purpose again, and I won’t ever be able to convey what that really means to me.”
The smile does not extend beyond your mouth - not when you catch how starry-eyed your mother looks. Undercurrents he doesn’t totally understand emanate from both women at the table. What he does catch is your father’s eyes flitting back and forth between the most prominent ladies in his life, measuring the same current Bucky feels.
The man opposite him shakes his head at his wife, who tsks quietly and pushes her food around her plate for another moment.
Head tilting toward you, your mother asks, “Will you help me clear the table and wash the dishes?”
“I don’t mind helping out, ma’am. Dinner was delicious and-” Before Bucky had fully risen out of his chair your mother was shaking her head.
“Oh no no no, you boys just relax while the two of us clean up.”
Probably a little heavier than intended, Bucky drops back into his seat. Discomfort knocks in his knee bouncing under the table as he watches you pile your arms full of dishware before joining your mother in the kitchen.
The fingers of his left hand fidget with the tablecloth. It had been several years since he’d been forced to sit unbusy for this long a stretch of time. Unsettled hands often led to unsettled thoughts. If he wasn’t careful-
A muffled grunt at his right jerks Bucky from his thoughts.
“You okay, sir?”
Jaw clenched, your father nods as he shifts in pain, taking a few deep breaths.
Blue eyes flit down to the older man’s right leg where he’s gripping what Bucky would guess to be the site of the amputation. It passes seconds later, the WWI vet relaxing once again. The moment didn’t appear to worry him; in fact, it seemed to be a regular occurrence.
“Has Sassafras told you about how I lost my leg?” The deep voice prompts Bucky’s eyes back up to your father’s face, one that is watching him thoughtfully. A pang of guilt twitches in his chest at his outright perusal of the man’s injury. But he didn’t seem embarrassed or self-conscious. Just a soldier asking a question of a fellow GI.
“No, sir. She’s only mentioned it in passing. I didn’t want to overstep.”
“Ah,” your father waves a hand dismissively. “I was in the hospital recovering longer than I saw combat. Bullet hit just wrong enough in Saint-Miheil. I don’t remember it happening, but I can recall the ambulance ride to the field hospital. Once the surgeons did their work,” he nods to his leg, “I only had to wait to become stable enough to get shipped back here. The hospitals were crowded wall-to-wall. Staff was in a rush to move those of us who were deemed unfit for service to make room for more casualties.”
“Did you ever get a prosthetic?”
“I did, I did. Sure was an uncomfortable thing, though. We were rushed out of the amputee specialty hospital too. None of us were taught how to use them properly. I tried to make it work. Eventually, it wasn’t worth it. Only caused pain on top of pain. The limb found much better use as a makeshift shovel for a certain daughter of mine.”
Both men chuckle at the image of you shrunken down as a toddler, digging a hole in the backyard to bury your treasure with a wooden prosthetic.
“After a while, I stopped trying to get the pain treated. Spasms like what you just saw will come along every once in a while, but it’s manageable. I’m just thankful I got to come home.” His features mellow as he watches his wife and daughter moving in the kitchen in tandem.
Bucky observes the scene as well with a slightly more scrutinous eye. Your mother maintains a steady stream of chatter without any response from you. Eyes fixed on the plates you were lathering with soap, movements mechanical. Something unidentifiable has shifted.
Having caught a vulnerable glimpse of you the previous evening, a tide of protectiveness nearly moves him to his feet. To do what, he wasn’t sure.
Once again, your father’s voice pulls Bucky back to reality. “While not having part of my leg is a pain, tons of soldiers suffer from deeper wounds. My brother-in-law, for example, is still dealing with his shell shock.”
The hair on Bucky’s arms stands up, his blood chills. Briefly he reflects upon his first date with you - the episode he’d had when the busboy had dropped a tray of glassware. He wonders if you’d shared that with your father. If he knew.
As if he could read Bucky’s demeanor, he continues unprompted. “When he arrived home after the Treaty, he lived with us for a few years. I did everything I could for him. Through all my efforts, the most powerful was simply being present. Reassuring him that I was there, I was listening, that he was safe.
“Really, all I did was talk to him like he was human. Which is surprisingly rare with shell shock. Even my wife struggled not to treat him like he was breakable.” Again, the elder’s gaze shifts to where you’re now drying dishes. A wisp of sentiment curls his lips. “What never failed to make his day was his baby niece fearlessly crawling into his lap. She always brought a smile to his face with her kindness, her innocence. . . her belief that her uncle was just that. Not a fighter. Not damaged goods. Just her uncle.”
Ah. So that’s where you’d gotten the extra dose of tenderness.
“Time passed. He healed. Got back on his feet. Found a job in town that suited him; settled down, had a family. Every once in a while he gets that thousand-yard-stare that tells me he’s still fighting battles.”
The scars on Bucky’s chest and back from his time spent with captors in Azzano itch incessantly; he exercises all his self-control to stay still. A bead of sweat rolls down his back.
“In all the chaos and gore, I think the hardest thing to watch was the way men were treated differently in the hospitals. Those of us with life-altering injuries were treated with compassion. But the men with shell shock; the ones shaking uncontrollably, staring into the distance, screaming in their sleep. . . medical staff were unkind to them. Almost like my physical wound protected me from judgement or impatience.
“People who haven’t seen a second of action seem to think physical trauma is the only excuse for mental trauma. Like that can’t exist by itself. I never saw that at all. I know you and I both have seen our fair share of shit. The biggest difference? I was discharged. The shell-shocked were often sent right back into battle. The experts, doctors, nurses - it was obvious they believed treating the mind was an acknowledgement that there was a problem in the first place. Because they didn’t have a solution, they turned it into the soldier’s own problem. He was weak. Needed to buck up and get the job done.”
Frozen to the spot, Bucky regards your father as he takes a deep breath. Shifting forward ever-so-slightly he locks eyes with Bucky. Through all the combat the younger veteran had seen, he’d never felt more exposed than in this moment.
Fingers rubbing at his chin, the older veteran begins again. “The things all those doctors say, that certain men’s minds are fragile or it’s an excuse to go home. . . there’s no reason for someone to continue the behavior once they make it home. When you’re in a room by yourself and wake up from a nightmare and find trouble breathing - what audience benefits from that act? That’s not something anyone wishes for.”
Somehow sensing the trepidation across the table, he leans back in a relaxed, yet calculated posture. Gives a sheepish chuckle while Bucky tries to catch his breath.
“Not to prattle on like an old geezer, but all that to say; I’ve had first-hand experience with wounds that aren’t visible. Every man is different. Time moves differently for every one. There’s not a set recovery time. As long as a man has a support system and is honest with them, he’s going to be okay.”
A long pause stretches out, Bucky’s mind ticking as his knee bounces slower eventually stilling.
One whispered phrase floats across the table. “You’re going to be okay, son.”
Voice thick, every muscle straining to suppress a display of emotion, Bucky manages a, “Th. . . Thank you, sir.”
“Anytime.”
That one word, filled with a copious amount of conviction, did more to convince Bucky of his value than almost anything else he’d heard in the last year of his life.
Movement from the kitchen catches his eye again and momentarily, you glance over your shoulder and catch him looking. Bucky smiles, remembering a similar moment in his mother’s kitchen the night you’d all had dinner together. Instead of returning his grin you whirl back to the sink, spine tight.
He can’t imagine what has you so tense, what could have changed so drastically from the night before.
His only course of action is to hope you’ll shed light on it when he can steal a moment alone with you.
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Chapter Eighteen
Lovely dividers by @firefly-graphics!
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maariarogers · 3 years
Text
i’ll love you long
Summary: Jugyeong comes home bearing a request from home.  Timeline: Future-fic. Can be placed in Webtoon or K-Drama. Can also be a continuity of my short they’re adults and in love series (part 1, part 2), but it can be read separately.
READ IT ON AO3 TOO
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“Mom wants you to come over for dinner this Saturday.”
Jugyeong is splayed across the couch. It should look unseemly: her make-up’s faded, which means she’d been too tired by the end of the day to properly touch it up, and her hair takes over the expanse of the sofa where she’s resting her head against. She isn’t sitting well, too; half lying down, and mostly draping over it, still in her work attire.
She shouldn’t look that attractive, but Suho stills feels a little jump, a little shiver, crawling up his stomach at the sight of her like this.
She’s still adorable, pouting on the couch. He brings over the apple he’s just cut in small rabbit-like pieces — the way his mom used to do it — and puts it on the coffee table as he joins her.
“Your mom?” He asks almost senselessly, just to confirm.
Jugyeong makes a noise, something between a hum and a whine, and it’s - so cute, Suho can’t help smiling. She’s so adorable. He picks up the fork and pierces an apple, brings it over to feed her. Jugyeong opens her mouth without question, chewing.
“Have you had dinner?” He asks this time - not because he’s eager to change the subject, but because he’s curious.
Jugyeong’s pout hasn’t exactly left her mouth, but her eyes round into a more questioning look, as if she hadn’t expected the query. She shakes her head quickly enough though, answering, “No. You cooked, right?”
“Hm,” he hums, confirming. “It’s pasta aglio olio tonight.”
“Is it the one with the chicken?”
“No,” He answers truthfully. “Prawns.”
The pout somehow becomes more prominent. He smiles again, because he doesn’t think he can ever get over the expression, and pierces another apple. “I made it extra spicy for you, though.”
Instead of a smile, Jugyeong turns and — it seems that whatever expression she’s holding before, it worsens. She looks half-like she’s about to cry, but Suho’s known the signs by now. This isn’t a — I-made-a-mistake-and-now-I’m-screwed crying, or I’m-sorry-I-shouldn’t-have-been-that-mad crying. No, Suho thinks, calming his heart down. This is only his girlfriend frowning hard, eyes saddened.
There are no tears. Yet.
“You’re so good to me,” she exclaims, like it’s a bad thing.
Suho feeds her the apple to her. She opens her mouth automatically, not denying the food. Watching her chew carefully, he prods, “What’s wrong?”
“Mom wants you to cook this Saturday too.”
Oh? His eyebrows are raised, not unkindly.
Jugyeong, in the meantime, looks defeated. She sighs loudly, kicking her feet in the air, barely missing the coffee table. “Aish, she’s too much sometimes! How could she ask you to do so much when she’s the one who wanted you over.”
“I mean,” Suho tries to defend, “We did promise a family meal once a month, right? Since your parents allowed you to, uh - live here too?”
It’s - still a little embarrassing, admitting it aloud a few times. Especially if the sentence somehow circles back to acknowledging Jugyeong’s parents in the matter, but only because Suho’s recalling the time when he and Jugyeong had knelt at the living room of the Lim’s family house and ask for the proper permission.
Jugyeong’s father had been fuming, but Jugyeong’s mother didn’t seem to mind that much, if only the deal was that Jugyeong must still sleep over at theirs a few times.
“I knooow,” Jugyeong’s voice pulls him back, and the pout there on her face is extraordinary. Suho wants to kiss it. “But just because you’re taking all those cooking classes doesn’t mean she should treat you like a personal worker! Ah, she’s so frustrating...”
“I don’t mind,” Suho says, biting half an apple for himself before he brings it dutifully to her mouth again; watches as she observes his movement, and chomps on the fruit when it’s near. She’s adorable.
“No fair,” she scoots closer now. Suho puts the fork down, cradles her laps close to his chest, pulling her closer. Jugyeong rests her head against his chest then, arms going around above his shoulders. Like this, Suho can smell the faint scent of her perfume — the one that smells like the ocean. This must be the one Sua got for her recently.
“You even drove Dad to the hospital for his back pains, and you play internet games with Juyeong all the time.”
Not all the time. Every other Sunday, whenever he’s free.
“Seojun plays with us, too.”
“Aish, that man.” Jugyeong comments, and Suho could already tell that she’s making a face. He smiles, brushes her hair back. “He’s an international idol, and he still has time for games with a kid? Ah, he must need some stress-relief. Poor Han Seojun.”
Suho steers the conversation back, “What does your mom have in plan for me to cook?”
“Ugh,” Jugyeong groans, now pressing her face against his shirt. He wonders, briefly, if the make-up she has now will leave a stain. She would always feel bad over it, no matter if it happened way too many times by now and he’s used to it. It’s just her face, contorted in guilt, that he can’t stand. “You don’t have to.”
Her voice, when it comes out, is muffled.
Suho leaves out a breath that could almost be a form of laughter, and holds her close. In return, Jugyeong stays still; as if she, too, caught in the moment, decides to bask in it. The whole world is quiet.
And then, “I want to.”
He takes a hold of her face then, just one palm; the other arm lays steadily to support the weight of her in his embrace still. His thumb runs over a cheek gently, and Suho feels something in him thrums happily when she looks at him back: all dow brown eyes, and pleasant curiosity. She’s so lovely.
“If it means I can be with you, I want to,” he confesses - like he’s that high school boy shying away from her affection, yet seemingly wanting so desperately of her attention all at the same time, going most of his life without by then. He feels coy, a romantic waiting to be ridiculed all of a sudden.
Jugyeong just giggles. The plump of her cheeks stand out, and she’s so - she’s so heartbreakingly beautiful, smiling at this, just at him.
She seems happy.
Her own hands — dainty, lean fingers — go over to ghost across his cheekbones. It’s electrifying. Suho closes his eyes, lets it energise him. “You’re so good to me,” this time, she says it like it’s a recent happy discovery.
“Only because you’re the best to me,” he kisses her palm.
She giggles again.
“I don’t mind,” he reassures her again, this time leaning his forehead right against hers.
“Okay,” she whispers. “Only if Mr. Han is also helping you in the kitchen. Our brother-in-law is not just gonna sit still. I won’t let him!”
Suho beams, laughing a little, “Deal.”
send in a prompt (a word + pairing) if you want!
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adotblog · 6 years
Text
The One Who Always Made The Grade-Chapter 3
Pairing: LMM x Reader
Warnings: None. Again. What have I become?!
Words: 1644
Notes: Apparently I write slow burn.
Tags: @judesnavi @alexanderusnavilindelahamilton @sunnyandtwisty @starrynerd @countessofkrolock
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“Hey, Y/N...are you free sometime next week? I wondered if you want to grab a drink?”
You had been interrupted by Lin’s director at that point. Lin had given you an awkward hug and promised to text you, then you’d left. Now you’re walking home and wondering if that really happened.
As far as you’d been aware, Lin had just viewed you as a colleague. This was a real surprise. You’d only just got around to realising you like him, now you’re going on a date?
The first text comes just as you’re brushing your teeth (and thinking about him on stage, his cute butt criminally swamped by those baggy jeans…).
Lin: Hey, sorry we got interrupted! So I was thinking maybe we could meet up on Sunday?
Y/N: Sure, where do you want to go?
Lin: Well, I thought we’d go somewhere in the Heights, seems appropriate!
You laugh at that and agree a meeting time and place. Then you decide to be bold.
Y/N: I was so surprised when you asked me out, wasn’t expecting that…
Lin: What can I say, I guess I missed you ;)
Y/N: I missed you too :)
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He texts you the next day when he sees something on tv that he thinks you’ll like. You text him later when you remember something from the show that you had a question about. As you chat back and forth, it’s a little like being back in the rehearsal room again.
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Lin suggests getting a drink at a little neighbourhood place just around the corner from where you’ve met. “It’s quiet, nothing fancy, but their chilli fries are the bomb.”, Lin says. “That sounds great.”, you say-relieved to be going somewhere relaxed-you’re a little nervous. You’ve barely seen Lin outside of work, never mind on a date. It’s a couple of blocks to the bar and you spend most of the walk gushing about Lin’s musical-the first chance you’ve had since you saw it.
You stop at a wide awning and Lin pushes the door open, holding it as you go through. The place is cosy-all red booths and low lighting-an old-fashioned place, and it puts you at ease. Lin grabs a booth at the back and the waitress is there even before you’ve sat down. You both order beer and start to look through the menu. Lin reads through everything but then insists he has to get the chilli fries because they’re so good. You order fries with a list of toppings that’s nearly as long as the menu.
“So how’s work?”, asks Lin once your order has been taken. “Meh”, you shrug. “It’s kinda boring. I’m the TA for a geology professor and I just...rocks...I can’t get enthused.”, you joke. “Bet there are no karaoke coffee breaks”, says Lin with a wink. “God no, no late nights in the rehearsal room either.”, you say with a laugh. “Ahh that’s gotta be a relief though-your evenings are your own again!”, Lin says. “I...actually I miss it…”, you say, feeling a little shy. Lin leans closer to you and lowers his voice to a stage whisper. “Nah, you missed me”, he says with a cheeky grin.
You shake your head and laugh. But he’s not wrong, you really have missed him. And now that he’s made you laugh, you feel the nervousness start to slip away. Once you stop focusing on the fact that this is a date, being with him again feels familiar and reassuring. You fall back into old rhythms and are reminded of the many reasons you like him.
Within half an hour of being back in his company, any nerves have totally evaporated. When he scooches closer to you as he’s talking, it feels completely natural. When his hand touches your knee as he speaks, you stare at it, thinking again about how you started out the week as his ex-TA and now you’re on a date and his hand is on your knee and you’re wondering what it’s like to kiss him.
He starts to take his hand away, interpreting your staring as discomfort. You hurriedly grab it and interlace your fingers. He grins and squeezes your hand, knee touching yours as he turns towards you, sitting sideways in the booth, waxing lyrical about his friend Chris, who you met on Friday.
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“Life is too short to be all ‘ooooh just a salad for me’”, Lin says as he shovels the last of his chilli into his mouth. “I totally agree”, you say. “I know, I’ve seen you in charge of a bag of gummy bears!”, he teases. You go to make a snappy retort but laugh and concede “That’s fair”. Lin laughs. The waitress comes to clear the table and you order more drinks.
“Do you think you’ll be coming back to our campus anytime soon?”, you ask. Lin shrugs “I really don’t know. At the workshop next week, we’re hosting some producers...so, if that goes well…”, he tails off as your new drinks arrive. “Well, selfishly, I’m sad-I enjoyed working with you”, you say when the waitress is gone. “Then we’ll just have to spend more time together...not working.”, he says. You respond with a smile and lift your beer bottle to clink with his.
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You could listen to him talk about anything, you decide. He is so enthusiastic, so animated-always talking with his hands. And his eyes are so expressive.
When you talk about your family, he runs his thumb over your knuckles, eyes never leaving your face as he listens intently. It’s the only part of being with him that is unfamiliar-this new physicality. Over the months you worked together, you had actually laughed and cried in front of one another but professional boundaries meant you rarely touched. The novelty of this intimacy is making something as small as holding hands kind of thrilling.
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When you drink the last of your third beer, you reluctantly suggest that it’s time to go-there are only four of you left in the whole place and it’s pretty late. Lin puts down money for the check and slides out of the booth. “Yeah, we really should get you home.”, he says. “Uhh, why’s that?”, you ask, confused. He holds out a hand to help you up. “Duh”, he says, “because the sooner we say goodnight, the sooner I get to kiss you goodnight”.
You burst out laughing as he pulls you up. “That’s very presumptuous...!”, you say, causing him to look worried for a second. “What if I was gonna kiss you goodnight?”, you tease.
——————————————————
It’s only 10 blocks to your place, but it takes a long time to get there. You dawdle, strolling along holding hands, chatting about everything and nothing. At the crosswalks, sometimes he slips his arm around your waist.
“This didn’t feel weird.”, Lin says as you get near to your place. “I was worried it would.”. “I was nervous at first,”, you admit. “but then we were talking and laughing and it felt just like every other time we’d been together...except you were holding my hand”, you grin. He smiles.
“It’s like with seeing In The Heights”, you say. “I’d heard some of your songs before and I’ve heard you sing a lot, and seeing you perform the whole thing is just adding an extra layer.”
“Although...oh this is me”, you indicate your building and steer him towards the steps.”Although?”, he prompts as you stop in front of the door. “Although I wasn’t prepared for how I’d feel seeing you on stage.”, you answer. Lin looks confused “How’s that?”, he asks.
You look him in the eye. “The way you...shine, how you control an audience. The confidence you exude and just your talent...It’s sexy as hell.”.
Lin raises his eyebrows. “Really?”. He moves closer, placing his hands on your hips. You nod as you look him in the eye. “Looking at you a whole new way now”, you say in a soft voice. He pulls your waist against his. “Good…”, he says as his lips meet yours. Your tummy flips as his mouth moves with yours, and again when his hand goes into your hair. Your own hands go to his face as you open your mouth and let his tongue touch yours-causing another jolt in your tummy...and lower.
When Lin breaks away, you can’t keep the grin from your face. “Well. That’s new.”, you say with a little laugh, your hands now resting against his chest. “Uh huh”, he says, his voice husky. He isn’t laughing. He runs his thumb over your cheek to give you just a second’s pause before he kisses you again.
You link your arms around his neck, leaning into the kiss. Yes it’s new, but it feels like things should always have been this way between you. You step backwards, pulling him with you until your back is against one of the concrete pillars that flank your doorway. He stumbles a little in surprise but quickly regains his composure to press your body into the stone, his hands moving up to the sides of your face as he kisses you more intensely.
You return his kisses with equal fervour and gently but firmly grip the back of his head as you push your tongue into his mouth. When eventually you break apart, you’re both flushed and a little shorter of breath.
“I had a great time”, you say, still holding on to him. “Me too”, Lin grins and gives you a final kiss. “Maybe I’ll call you tomorrow?”, he says. “Sure. G’night, Lin.”, you say as you untangle yourself from his arms and let yourself into the lobby.
Ten minutes later, your phone rings.
“I couldn’t wait until tomorrow. About our second date…”
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moonbeambucky · 7 years
Text
Crazy in Love
Pairing: Bucky Barnes x Reader Word Count: 2757 Warnings: Fluff, slight angst
Summary: You're injured on a mission, taking a bullet for your best friend Bucky, but your relationship is on rocky waters after you confessed your feelings for him and he did not respond.
A/N: This is my submission for @just-some-drabbles 4k follower Rom-Com Challenge. Congrats JSD 💖 My prompt was “People do crazy things when they’re in love.”  Reblogs, comments and likes are always appreciated! gif source (x)
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Sunday is your favorite day of the week. It’s the only day Steve isn’t on everyone’s case to wake up early and train and you take full advantage of that by sleeping in. When your body woke up at a reasonable time you loved to roll over again and throw the blankets over your head to sleep some more. Your bed was comfortable and inviting. It was so inviting that a certain team member had found his way into your bed more than once.
You recall the first time Bucky had shared your bed those long months ago. It was the middle of the night and you woke up with a mouth feeling drier than the desert. Making your way into the kitchen for a glass of water you gasped, not expecting to run into anybody. Bucky picked his head up from the cool granite countertop, looking up at you with swollen red eyes. Immediately you were at his side, brushing the hair off of his sweaty forehead and pulling him into your tight embrace.
He clung to your body, sobbing into your chest and your heart broke for him. You offered him comfort, gently stroking one hand through his dark brown locks while the other rubbed his back.
“You don’t have to talk about it if you don’t want to Bucky,” you said gently, as he looked up at your kind eyes and soft smile. “Can I get you anything?”
He shook his head and with the faintest voice cried out, “I’m so tired Y/N.”
You didn’t have to ask what he meant, Bucky was your best friend and so you were well aware of the nightmares that plagued his mind. It shocked the entire team that Bucky opened up to you so quickly; he was friendly with all of them but kept himself emotionally distant, save for Steve. You didn’t expect to become this close with him but you clicked right away forming your tight-knit friendship.
You offered him your room so he could sleep, knowing that a change of scenery might help quiet his mind. Bucky climbed into your bed, his large frame sinking into the plush mattress. You were ready to trade places and sleep in his room before he stopped you, begging with a fragile voice for you to stay. You laid back as he curled himself next to you, resting his heavy head on your chest while you wrapped your arms around him. You weren’t comfortable by any means but you didn’t care, Bucky was finally asleep and putting his demons to rest for the night.
The routine continued and you looked forward to every night that you shared your bed with Bucky. Your friendship continued to grow as well as you spent most of your time together. You trained together, challenging each other in different types of combat; you bonded, forming inside jokes that made you burst out with fits of laughter. Bucky even helped you plant lilacs in the garden behind the compound. They were your favorite, their pleasant scent made you feel calm and at peace. You kept fresh clippings on your nightstand, hoping the aroma would calm Bucky as well.
On the days you had off Bucky asked you to help catch him up on movies he missed. Sometimes other members of the team would join in when they caught a glimpse of what was playing on the screen.
“Die Hard is a Christmas movie,” Sam argued.
Natasha gave a hard roll of her eyes, “Just because it takes place during Christmas Eve doesn’t make it a Christmas movie!”
You shushed them both not caring about who won the argument. All that mattered was Die Hard is a movie Bucky wanted to see and if they didn’t shut up he never would.
Some nights Bucky came into your room early, and it was there he asked to watch musicals, preferring something lighter before he drifted to sleep beside you. Pillows were propped up against the headboard as you and Bucky sat back to watch Mary Poppins, turning your head every now and then to see Bucky watching in awe as Julie Andrews flew in with her umbrella.
Your cheeks hurt from smiling so much as you observed Bucky, the sparkle of joy in his eyes, the wide smile. Everything about him made you feel lighter than air, and that was the first time you acknowledged your feelings.
It happened naturally and looking back you wondered why you hadn’t come to this realization sooner. You spent every day together, every meal, every night. Bucky was so much more than a friend in your mind except that was the problem, you were just a friend and it would be selfish to force your feelings onto him.
Bucky trusted you, he valued your friendship and you knew how much he needed you as a friend and no more. These were your feelings, your problem and you thought it wasn’t fair to Bucky to put this on him. You thought about the team as well, you were such a great group, a family; you didn’t want to jeopardize any of this and so you pushed your thoughts down.
It was hard spending so much time with Bucky. Going out on missions with him was even worse. You were at a safe house one night and your cruel mind thought of several scenarios as to how you could spend your time alone but Bucky never showed any signs that he thought of you as more than a friend. He curled up against you like he always did as you hoped to calm the wild beating of your heart.
You continued to keep your feelings to yourself until one night Natasha confronted you and there was no point in trying to hide them from her.
“You’re basically dating,” she said, “Just without the intimacy… or the acknowledgement that you’re ‘official’, so maybe it’s time to change that,” she suggested.
“Nat, it’s not that simple. He’s my friend, I can’t put this on him,” you sighed.
“I think you should talk to him. It’s not good to harbor these feelings, it’s not fair to either of you.”
As time went by your feelings for Bucky continued to grow. He asked you to go to Coney Island with him and it was incredible. It was the perfect date, except for it being an actual date, although you noticed he kept a picture he took from that day of the two of you on his dresser. Could he possibly have feelings too? He slept in your bed every night despite not having nightmares anymore. Is he not looking to label whatever it is you have?
One night Bucky was being extra affectionate with his hugs and deep glances and you couldn’t take it anymore. You told him everything you felt, pouring your heart out to him, admitting that you loved him. That was the day that everything changed, the day your heart shattered into a million pieces after he left your room without responding to your confession.
After everything how could he not even manage to say one word to you? You spent the rest of the night crying, your stomach was in knots as your face was drenched with the tears of your unrequited love. Your heavy head hit your pillow, soaking the fabric as you sobbed, straining your tired eyes. Running your hands along the empty space on your mattress where Bucky’s warm body should have been, you regretting ever speaking up. You fell asleep on your comfortable mattress, feeling anything but comfort.
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It was Sunday and it was early, too early to be awake but you were, watching the orange glow of sunrise breaking over the tops of the trees. Your comfortable bed was empty as you lay in the medical bay of the compound, tossing and turning on the cement board they call a bed. Note to self, tell Tony to invest in better mattresses.
You glance at the monitor beside your bed, watching your vitals remain unchanged while the constant beeping of the machines has caused your left eye to twitch. You’re so exhausted you just want to rest. Trying to find a comfortable position you shift around again feeling a twinge of pain on your left side. Note to self, people who’ve had a chunk of their skin blown off should not rest their entire body weight that side. Uncomfortable and laying flat again, you shut your eyes hoping that somehow you will fall asleep out of pure exhaustion.
A knock at the door pulls you out of the short nap you managed to take. Your eyes focus on Bucky standing at the foot of the bed. Normally you could read him like a book, but ever since your confession he’s been distant, wearing a constant poker face with no signs of faltering. Nevertheless you were glad to see him.
“Hey Bucky,” you said, curving one side of your mouth upwards into a lopsided smile.
He scans your body, from the gauze on your temple to the broken blood vessel in your right eye that made his blood boil at the sight of it. He can’t see the stitches on your waist but he knows they’re there. You were unconscious after you were shot but he was there, watching the blood spill from your body as he frantically tried to put pressure on the gaping wound until you were brought back to the compound. His silent stares cause you to feel uncomfortable, you wish he would just speak.
“Bucky?”
“What were you thinking Y/N?!” he shouts.
The sudden rush of queasiness washes over you as he stands there and scolds you. “You should have called for backup. You shouldn’t have taken him on alone. Y-you could have died!”
You feel the sting of tears collect in your eyes prompting you to shut them quickly to prevent them from dropping.
“Why Y/N? Why did you do that?” his strained voice asked.
You swallowed the lump in your throat and steadied your voice before speaking, “You know why,” you said firmly, directing your gaze at Bucky’s storm colored eyes.
His lips are pressed together into a tense line as he stares at you not responding. He leaves the room without saying anything and only after you’re sure he isn’t coming back you let your guard drop along with your tears. Again! How can he do this again?
Shortly after Natasha visits you, casually strutting in as she makes her way towards your bed, gently sitting next to you. “How’re ya holding up?” she asked, rubbing her thumb across the top of your hand.
“Remember when I said I wanted to lose a few inches? Well, this isn’t how I wanted to do it,” you joked as the red head laughed.
“I saw Bucky before, he didn’t look too happy.”
“Well he came in to yell at me so…” you began to say.
“What you did was pretty stupid, crazy even but I get it,” she said, squeezing your hand in solidarity.
Natasha leaves you to rest, if only you actually could. Your mind doesn’t stop, instead bringing your thoughts back to yesterday’s mission. The team was raiding a Hydra base, everything was going smoothly up until you encountered a lot more opposition than expected.
Hydra had newly designed weapons with bullets that explode upon contact. You were outnumbered, fighting a losing battle until Tony called in the Iron Legion. The droids helped even the playing field and things were looking up until you saw a Hydra agent aiming his weapon at Bucky who was too busy fighting off a group to notice.
You ran over to the significantly larger man, throwing a strong fist to his hard jaw. He turned towards you, laughing as he smacked you down with his weapon, opening a gash on the side of your face. You used every move you learned with Bucky in training, trying desperately to knock the weapon from his hands. You pressed your thumbs into your enemy’s eyes as he screamed out in pain. Your hold was broken as he kneed your gut. The man wildly threw his head back and down again towards your face, head butting you with all of his force centered on your right eye.
You fell to the ground in pain, dizzy and groaning. Blinking a few times to clear your vision, you saw the man take aim at Bucky. In that moment all you could think about is your love for Bucky, your love for the man who became your best friend, and wanting nothing to harm him ever again. He endured so much in his life and you’d be damned if you let him experience any more pain.
You screamed his name to grab his attention as you jumped in front of the man. His finger dislodged from the trigger, the bullet piercing your side with a searing burn. You fell to the ground, groaning in agony with a faded memory of Bucky attacking the man that shot you.
Not realizing you had fallen asleep again, you woke up a few hours later, this time to the sweet fragrant smell that was permeating throughout your room. Opening your eyes you see lilacs, everywhere. The windowsill is covered with several vases of fresh cut lilacs in various colors, white, violet and periwinkle. There are several large urns filled with smaller lilac bushes, varying from pink to purple.
Your eyes find Bucky, planted on the chair beside your bed. His head is tilted down but he looks up when he heard you stirring. His beautiful blue eyes were staring back at you, this time without any anger.
“Bucky! What are you—”
“I’m sorry Y/N, I’m so sorry, for everything.” Running his hands through his hair he exhaled deeply. You stared at him, confused and intrigued, waiting for him to continue.
“When you told me how you felt about me, that you loved me, I, wow I couldn’t believe it.” He paused to smile at you, his eyes catching your skeptical face. “I’m sorry I ran out of there, I didn’t mean to, I…”
You had to interrupt him. “Didn’t mean to? Bucky I told you that I loved you and you ran away. Do you know how that felt?” The quickened sound of beeping on the monitor matched your pounding heart.
“I was scared because I, I feel the same way Y/N.” Your gaze softened at his admission, your mouth hung open, waiting to hear more. “I wasn’t sure that you thought of me like that but then you did and I panicked. It became real and then I worried about everything, about losing you or pushing you away somehow, so I left to talk to Steve but then you didn’t want to see me anymore.”
His expression dropped, taking a deep breath he spoke again, “When you got hurt, when you took that shot aimed for me it felt like the world stopped spinning. I’m crazy about you Y/N. I love you Y/N and I never want to let you go.”
You leaned forward, groaning slightly, to cup his cheek in your hand. He pressed into your touch and curved his lips up into a smile. “I love you Bucky.”
Slowly he leaned forward until his forehead was pressing against yours. The tip of your nose lightly grazed his skin as you tilted your head, pushing forward to connect your lips with his in a soft and tender kiss.
You smiled, relieved at his reciprocated feelings. Bucky pulled the chair closer, wishing he could be laying beside you once more but this time holding you against him. For now, his hands find yours as he rubs his fingers along your warm skin.
The sweet scent of the lilacs wafts through your nostrils as you breathe deeply. “Hey Bucky, what’s with all of the flowers?” you asked chuckling.
“What? They’re your favorites.” You heard the smile in his voice.
“Bucky it’s too much! This is crazy!”
“People do crazy things when they’re in love,” he replied, looking at you with a loving gaze.
He leaned in again, light stubble scratched your cheeks as Bucky’s soft lips captured yours. The monitor beside you began to beep again as you lost yourselves in a passionate kiss. Pulling away to catch your breath you sat back staring with adoration at the man you were crazy about, lacing your fingers with his knowing he was crazy in love with you too.
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