#thunderbolts out of context
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Thunderbolts* Spoilers Without Context








#spoilers without context#thunderbolts out of context#thunderbolts*#thunderbolts#the new avengers#new avengers#bucky barnes#yelena belova#john walker#ava starr#antonia dreykov#bob#robert raynolds#alexei shostakov#winter soldier#white wolf#white widow#us agent#ghost#taskmaster#red guardian#sentry#marvel#mcu
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Lewis Pullman absolutely killed it as Sentry. However, I would have loved to see the alternate universe where Steven Yuen played Sentry specifically for the one moment where Bob goes "Is the blonde hair okay? I thought I liked it but now I'm having second thoughts."
A dark-haired guy being convinced to dye his hair bright blonde "for the publicity" is already wild, but an Asian guy being convinced to dye his hair blonde because it "looks more heroic" would have been on an entirely different level.
#thunderbolts#thunderbolts spoilers#bob reynolds#marvel#mcu#for context: Steven Yuen was the first choice for Sentry before he dropped out due to scheduling conflicts#I can't really imagine what his version would have been like#Lewis Pullman was great#guy who is already blonde dying his hair a slightly different shade of blonde#edit: this post originally had Bob as dark blond#but he is a brunette#as someone pointed out in the comments#thunderbolts*#bob thunderbolts#robert reynolds#please tell me that if they dyed Steven's hair blond they at least reverted him to non-blond for all other scenes#his hair was only dyed until he became Void#twilight-zoned-out
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Out of Context Thunderbolts* Spoilers






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Out of context Thunderbolts* spoilers:
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Thunderbolts* spoilers out of context (saw it last night with my parents, I give it an 8/10):





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Done with the digital mockup... and it's now bedtime. Might paint it after I wake up.
#funny thing#I did a bunch of work getting the drapery of the sleeves right#(even wearing a sweater for reference in a 78-degree room)#and you can't really see it#lol#anyway#thunderbolts#thunderbolts bob#not REALLY a spoiler?#out of context spoiler maybe#eh#I'll tag it#thunderbolts spoilers
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So I saw thunderbolts on Friday and I loved it!! Here’s out of context thunderbolts spoilers







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Thunderbolts Spoilers out of Context:










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okay honest thunderbolts review because i feel like it (extremely vague spoilers):
it's really good, it's just... kinda flat? the whole 2+ hours i was sitting there waiting for the Big Thing™ to happen, for the climax to, yk, climax. it just never came, which is a shame because it's an otherwise excellent movie. good characters, great acting, great screenplay and really great concept. The Void is one of the best villain concepts i've seen in a long, long while. overall, it keeps you hooked but mostly just because you constantly feel like you're being edged. 2 hours of edging, if you will.
it works well as an introduction to the thunderbolts as a team, but it doesn't feel like a movie on it's own. more like a first episode of a show, yk? but everything else was great so i would really recommend it. themes of mental health, guilt, and loneliness were treated very well, the sfx is surprisingly good (we're so back), the dialogue is excellent. i can definitely see this becoming a good comfort movie. not enough bucky but a whole lot of yelena (SHE LOOKS SO GOODDDDDDD) so it's okay. bob is the best thing to happen to the mcu. that's all. go watch thunderbolts.
oh and also, presented with no context: SAMBUCKY DIVORCE ERA 🗣️🗣️ (idk if it happened already in ca:bnw i haven't watched it)
#mcu#marvel#thunderbolts*#thunderbolts#no context but#tma fans go watch thunderbolts i think you'll like it#heavier spoilers in the next tags!!!#this movie made me like john walker 😭😭😭😭😭😭 bye 😭😭😭😭😭😭#the amount of scenes each character has felt a little unbalanced tbh#lots of yelena. very little bucky and ava. average amount of john alexei and bob.#also a lot of things in this movie reminded me of other things???#the val and sentry moment in the tower gave me huge stillwell and homelander vibes#the void reminded me of the corrupted souls feom rusty lake#and the shadow thing it does reminds me a lot of the eyepocalypse in tma#which was cool#i also have no idea how the fuck i could've watched this because it comes out on the 2nd of may but they were playing it today so??? slay#local italian cinema gets marvel movie before the whole usa country. go figure
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If Sambucky divorce is real then I'll make an animatic with the song "The Bird Song" by Noah Floersch.
Trust me bro
#I will always make light out of darkness#Sambucky#thunderbolts spoilers#Technicallly its not a spoiler if you don't know the context#But I'm also not gonna be that guy so#Also do you see my vision#The killer is Bucky#The giver is Sam#DO YOU SEE IT
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secret starter call - @ladyohdeath
❝ ... Look, Lady... You scare me a lot, but I kind of on a whole mission here, so you wanna go bug someone else? ❞ He says, with a hiss, as if he hadn't already gotten himself damned to much worse. Hellstorm's certain that Bobbi's soul was down here and he had to get her out of Hell, at least. Hopefully, the both of them alive, and whatever this woman was... he knows she's Death, but he can't back down. Already planned to tell the Devil to go fuck himself. ❝ There's gotta be like a million others. ❞
#you know what. here's the context.#so in the 90s run of thunderbolts. clint is tricked into going to hell by daimon hellstorm because he's lead to believe that bobbi#bobbi morse his somewhat ex wife is down there (except due to a retcon we know that; bobbi didn't actually die was replaced by skrulls)#and clint ends up literally in hell. and facing down mephistos.. and going through a lot of deadly nightmare encounters down there#and clint ends up finding patsy walker aka hellcat and brings her back from hell/the dead... because well that's why daimon hellstorm#tricker him into going to hell. to go get patsy (by saying it was bobbi) which leads patsy to being angry with daimon.#ANYWAYS. ALL I AM SAYING. (mostly cause ill be real i do not watch the mcu but i support writers who come out w/ characters from it)#(and i know lady death from 616 as deadpool and thanos ex gf)#BUT ANYWAYS.#Rio and Clint meet in hell while Clint's on a misguided mission to save his wife (who isn't dead or in hell; but he thinks she is dead caus#cause bobbi kind of did die and then RETCON her as swapped by a skrull so the skrull died. THIS IS LONG WINDED.#but ANYWYAS. I THINK THIS WOULD BE INTRERSTING. and lets you lead into all yoru lore made up for rio / death :3#[ in character ]#[ verse ; thunderbolts era ]#[ verse ; alt 616 ]#ladyohdeath
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notes: y'all i am so sorry this stupid mf (lovingly, mostly) has me in a chokehold, and its so bad. idk what thunderbolts did to me. i used to be a hater, and now i'm kicking my feet and giggling over him making me breakfast.
it's not uncommon for john to make breakfast for the team. he likes making pancakes, eggs, coffee, and anything else he learns they like. it's something he misses doing for people he cares about (though he is loathe to admit that he really cares for the thunderbolts), and after what happened after he became captain america when olivia-
“you’re a fool, walker,” yelena says over her coffee, having treaded into the room so quietly he couldn't hear her over the sizzling of bacon in the pan.
john is startled first, and offended second. “the hell did i do?”
“you know what you’re doing,” she replies, no further context added.
only half a moment later, you walk into the kitchen. "you are a saint, john," you say with a tired grin. in one smooth movement, you pull a mug from the cabinet and fill it with coffee. john watches you reach for it and only has half the mind not to grab it for you. "don't tell bob i told you this, but your coffee is amazing."
john snorts. "yeah, will do."
"you make any waffles or is it all pancakes today?" you take a seat at the counter, stirring in sugar and creamer to your coffee. there's a stack of pancakes for the team in front of you that you're looking at skeptically.
he immediately perks up, and before you know it, there's a plate of waffles sitting in front of you. "made them just for you," he says with a soft smile, "i know you prefer them, so..." he trails off, pointedly ignoring yelena's raised eyebrow.
"like i said, a saint, john, a saint."
you and yelena talk while john takes the time to clean up, scrubbing the fat out of pans methodically. by the time he's done, you've already run off to train with bucky, and john pretends not to be bothered by that. pretends it doesn't get under his skin in the worst way that you train night and day with bucky instead of him.
yelena sits at the counter with a smug grin on her face. "a saint, my ass," she laughs, "you are a fool, walker."
#john walker x reader#john walker headcanons#thunderbolts x reader#thunderbolts headcanons#marvel x reader#marvel headcanons#— valentine writes; marvel
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psyche (1)
— synopsis. After the catastrophe in New York-when the Void tore through the city-the Thunderbolts know it can't happen again. Bob Reynolds doesn't need another collar or containment spell. He needs help. Enter her: a psychiatrist with an unusual gift, capable of stepping into the mind itself. No one expected her to reach him-least of all, him. "You're just going to leave me the moment it gets too hard, aren't you?" he says. She meets his gaze, steady and unshaken. "I've walked through nightmares to get to you. I won't walk away now."
— pairing. robert reynolds (sentry/the void) x reader
— warning/s. mentions of trauma, mental illness, depression
— word count. 5.1k
⋆˙⟡
“Strange called,” Christine Palmer said, not looking up from her tablet.
You glanced in her direction but didn’t respond. You felt like there isn't anything worth saying. Instead, you focused on the soft, familiar sounds around you—the quiet clatter of metal instruments being cleaned at the nearby sterilization station, the steady shuffle of footsteps on polished hospital floors. A monitor beeped somewhere down the hall, keeping time in the way only machines could. The hum of fluorescent lights overhead, that you never really noticed, added to the background noise.
In the corner, a few patients sat hunched in plastic chairs, wrapped in hospital blankets that offered more symbolism than warmth. Their faces were drawn, tired, a mix of exhaustion and quiet anxiety. Some waited for scans, others for pain relief, a few just for answers that might never come tonight. They all shared the same energy, that tension that lived in the bones of everyone who passed through the ER after dark. You knew it well.
You were supposed to have clocked out an hour ago—your shift technically ended at midnight—but no one really left on time in this place. The ER didn’t care about schedules. It held you in its grip until it was ready to let go, and sometimes, not even then. Not when a life could still slip through the cracks—because of a missed bleed, a bad stitch, or the wrong word spoken at the worst possible time.
Christine tapped her screen a few times, then added, “Apparently, Bucky Barnes asked him to help find a psychiatrist.”
That made you pause, your fingers hesitating on the chart you were holding. Still, you didn’t look up. The case wasn’t serious—just a minor injury with a straightforward treatment plan. You met Christine’s gaze briefly, then looked back down, eyes scanning through lines of notes more out of habit than need.
“You know I’m not practicing anymore,” you muttered. “Psychiatry, I mean.”
Christine leaned a hip against the counter beside you, folding her arms. “Since when? You’re double-boarded. And don’t give me the ‘I’m just a surgeon now’ line. I’ve heard it too many times to believe it.”
“It’s not a line. It’s a preference,” you said, your voice flat. “Organs are a lot simpler than people's minds.”
“Sure,” she said, the sarcasm thin but present. “You can cut them open, take out what’s broken, sew them back up, and call it a day. But that’s not why you switched.”
Your hands stilled mid-note. The chart blurred for a moment, your pen hovering above the page.
“Tell Barnes to find someone else.”
“Actually, he didn’t call,” Christine said quietly. “Strange didn’t either.”
You looked up, and she turned the tablet toward you.
“They just sent me this.”
Your name was there in bold, black text at the top of the screen—accompanied by layers of encrypted clearance codes, redacted fields, and a formal request for psychiatric consultation. It wasn’t just a note. It was government-level. Serious. Sealed. No fluff. No context. No diagnosis.
Just one name buried in the lines of classified language.
Robert Reynolds.
You stared at it. The name carved through you like a scalpel—sharp, precise, and deep. Your chest went tight. Not with fear exactly, though it wasn’t far off. Christine watched you too carefully now.
You said the name aloud, almost to yourself. “Reynolds. Sentry? The Void? The man who turned Manhattan into literal shadows?”
Christine’s voice softened. “He’ll could probably eat you alive,” she said. “Whoever it is. You know that.”
You didn’t answer. You glanced at the clock hanging on the wall beside you. You reached for the gloves on your hands, peeled them off one by one, and tossed them into the biohazard bin beside the counter. The silence between you stretched.
“You’re not going to do it,” Christine said, trying for a steadier voice. “Right?”
But you were already moving. You grabbed your coat, your badge, and turned toward the hallway that led to the staff exit.
“Right?!” Christine repeated, this time louder. You only waved her off by raising one hand as you continued to walk.
Christine sighed under her breath, watching you go.
“Oh, she’s in trouble,” she mumbled, more to herself than anyone else.
⋆˙⟡
The city didn’t feel real when you stepped outside.
Maybe it was the late hour. Or the way the streetlights buzzed overhead, casting everything in a dim, unnatural gold. The sidewalk gleamed with recent rain, and the night air clung to your skin—cool, damp, electric. Maybe it was just the words still echoing in your mind.
Bob Reynolds.
You heard that name before—not whispered behind closed doors, not even in passing. People avoided it deliberately, like saying it out loud might stir something sleeping. Might invite the dark back in.
He doesn’t need containment. He needs healing.
That was what the message had said.
But you knew what it really meant. You could read between the encrypted lines. Reynolds wasn’t just unstable—he was a ticking bomb they didn’t know how to disarm. He wasn’t a patient; he was a problem no one wanted to admit they couldn’t fix.
They were looking for someone to step into the fire and hope they didn’t burn.
You had no intention of being that someone.
Not anymore.
It was just past two in the morning when the elevator doors slid open on the surgical floor. Most of the hospital was asleep or pretending to be. You were still on your feet—finishing post-op notes in the nurses’ station, trying to tether yourself to something routine. The soft tap of keys, the faint smell of coffee gone cold, the distant echo of an intercom down the corridor. These were the things that kept you grounded when your hands weren’t cutting. When your mind threatened to drift.
The hallway was quiet. Empty.
And then, something shifted.
You didn’t hear him at first. You felt him. A subtle change in pressure. A ripple through the air, like the building itself had gone tense.
You looked up.
There he was.
Bucky Barnes. Standing in the middle of the hallway like a ghost. Dressed in black, that metal arm catching the flickering light overhead. Expression unreadable. Posture coiled.
Your fingers hovered over the tablet.
“Subtle,” you said dryly.
He didn’t smile.
“I’m not here to make a scene.”
“You’re five seconds from getting tackled by security.”
“I turned off the cameras on this floor.”
Of course he did.
You sighed and slid the tablet aside. “You could’ve sent a message.”
“You would’ve ignored it.”
He wasn’t wrong.
You stood, slowly. Kept a polite amount of distance between you. “You want a consult.”
“No,” he said. “I want you.”
That gave you pause. He saw it.
“I read your work,” he continued. “The old stuff. Before you scrubbed it. Neural pathway immersion. Psychogenic structure mapping. Entering the subconscious. Rewriting trauma loops from the inside.”
You kept your expression still. “That research was never meant for clinical application.”
“It saved people.”
“No, it delayed their collapse. That’s not the same thing.”
He took a step closer. “You walked into the mind of a patient mid-psychotic break and helped him walk back out.”
“That patient relapsed two weeks later. Nearly took out his care team with him.”
“But he lived,” Bucky said. “That’s more than Reynolds has right now.”
Your chest tightened, but you didn’t let it show. Not much, anyway.
“So let me get this straight,” you said, voice cool. “You want me to crawl into the mind of the most powerful bipolar the world’s ever known? A man who once turned half of Manhattan into literal shadows? You want me to walk into that and—what? Talk him down?”
“He’s not just the Void.”
“No. But the Void is part of him. You don’t separate the two.”
Bucky’s jaw clenched. His voice dropped.
“He’s trying, okay? He’s lucid. Or close to it. He’s afraid of what he’s done. He wants to be better—but no one can reach him. They’ve all stopped trying. Except me.”
You studied him then. Not just his words, but everything else—the tight set of his shoulders, the wear in his eyes, the quiet tremor under all that steel. This wasn’t just a mission for him.
“You care about him.”
His breath hitched. “I know what it’s like to be controlled by something inside you. Something you didn’t choose. Something you hate.” His voice cracked just a little. “So yeah. I care.”
You looked away. The floor felt suddenly distant under your feet.
“I’m not a miracle worker, Barnes. I’m not some psychic surgeon. I can’t promise I won’t make things worse.”
He hesitated. “Would you try… if he asked you himself?”
That stopped you.
Your throat went dry.
“You think he wants me?”
“I think he’s afraid of you,” Bucky said. “Which is exactly why I think he needs you the most.”
You exhaled slowly. The kind of breath that emptied your lungs and still didn’t feel like enough.
The name echoed again in your mind like a wound reopening.
Robert Reynolds.
You crossed your arms instinctively, bracing against the words. Against everything they meant. You weren’t ready to say yes—but you couldn’t walk away yet. Not when the puzzle Bucky had thrown at you was already rattling around in your mind like a loose coin.
"Tell me more about him," you said, before you could second-guess yourself.
Bucky blinked, clearly expecting you to brush him off, maybe even shut him down. But you hadn’t done that. Not yet.
He stepped a little closer, lowering his voice as if the air itself might carry his words further than he wanted. "Bob... he's not what you think."
You could feel the weight in the silence between you, the hum of fluorescent lights and distant beeping from another part of the Tower, but it felt miles away. The shift in Bucky’s voice wasn’t a demand. It was a plea—one you weren’t sure you could ignore.
"He's always been complicated," you said, trying to keep your tone neutral. "Sentry and the Void aren’t easy to separate."
Bucky nodded slowly. “I know. But right now? He’s more fractured than ever. The Void doesn’t just come out and take over anymore. It’s... it’s slipping into him, little pieces at a time. He doesn’t know where the man ends and the monster begins.”
You stared at him, thinking of everything you’d heard about Bob over the past few months—the whispers, the rumors, the stories that came with living in a world of meta-humans. The Sentry, a hero with the power of a god, the man who’d nearly torn apart the world itself in a breakdown. The Void, a primal force of destruction that had no regard for morality or life.
But hearing the weight of that confusion in Bucky’s voice was new. And it unsettled you more than it should have.
"Where is he?" you asked, voice quieter now.
"He’s here, in New York," Bucky said, his eyes flicking away. "Living on the same floor as the rest of the Thunderbolts— or the new Avengers. We’re all on the top level of Avengers Tower, trying to keep him from... from himself."
You blinked. Here? With the Thunderbolts? In Avengers Tower? That was... an entirely new layer to the situation. You weren’t sure what was more surreal: the fact that Bob Reynolds was living under the same roof as some of the most dangerous people on the planet or the fact that you’d just been asked to walk into his mind.
“How is that even... manageable?” You asked the question, but you weren’t sure if you were asking Bucky or yourself.
Bucky’s jaw clenched. "We try to keep him grounded. When he’s not... when he’s lucid, he’s like any other person. He talks about everything—sports, movies, some of the stuff that made him happy before everything broke down." He exhaled sharply, clearly frustrated. "But the minute he starts spiraling, it all goes wrong. The Void starts leaking through the cracks. And it’s not just him anymore. He reflects everyone else’s fears. He mirrors them. It’s like we’re all living in his nightmare when that happens."
The implications hit you like a truck. A man who could turn his fear into destructive power was now having his own breakdown while everyone around him became collateral damage.
You closed your eyes for a moment, feeling the weight of Bucky’s words settle deep in your chest. “Is anyone else in danger?”
Bucky hesitated. “Not unless we provoke him. But... it’s getting harder to contain. We don’t know what he might do when he finally snaps, and we can’t keep him isolated forever. Not without breaking him completely.”
You shook your head, barely processing the words. Living with the Thunderbolts? This wasn’t just a clinical case anymore. This was a man in desperate need of help who could bring the whole team down with him if things went sideways. And you were being asked to wade into the heart of it.
“I don’t even know where to begin,” you muttered, more to yourself than to Bucky. “You want me to just walk into his mind, face whatever twisted version of reality he’s experiencing, and fix it? I’m not a magician.”
“You’re the only one who’s ever been able to do something like that,” Bucky pressed, voice low but insistent. “You helped people when it seemed like no one else could. Even when it wasn’t perfect, they stayed alive. And you’re the only person who can actually get in there, see it from the inside. No one else has that ability. No one else can.”
You pressed your palms against your face, exhaling sharply. Your mind spun. This wasn’t just about fixing someone. This was about getting close to a raw, broken mind—an unstable mind that could tear apart everything around it if pushed too far. You’d been in this position before. You’d seen minds crumble and break. You’d been the one to pull them back—but not without a price.
“Why me, Bucky?” you said, the question finally spilling out. “You know this isn’t going to be easy. I’m not some miracle worker. I can’t promise I won’t make it worse.”
Bucky’s expression softened. “Because you’re the one who never gave up on the people everyone else walked away from. You see them. Really see them—without the fear, without the labels. You don’t treat people like they’re lost causes. You treat them like they’re still worth saving.”
You took a step back, your chest tightening. You’d made it clear years ago that you wouldn’t practice psychiatry anymore. You weren’t the kind of person who specialized in people’s mental health, not when it carried so much emotional weight, not when the cost was too high.
"He's afraid of himself," Bucky said, almost as if he were reading your thoughts. "He’s terrified that he’s going to lose himself again, that the Void is going to take him completely. But there’s still some part of Bob in there. He wants to be better. He wants to make it stop. I know he does."
You swallowed. “So where does that leave me?”
Bucky stepped closer again, lowering his voice. “I need you to help him. Not fix him. Just help him understand he’s still in control—if he is. If there’s still a way to reach him before it’s too late.”
You closed your eyes again, the pressure in your chest rising. But when you opened them, Bucky was still there, his gaze steady, waiting for something.
And you knew, despite everything, you were already halfway in. Even if you didn’t want to be.
⋆˙⟡
The Avengers Tower loomed like a monument against the night sky, its gleaming windows reflecting the city lights below. As you stepped inside, the difference hit you immediately. It wasn’t the usual cold, sterile atmosphere of hospitals or military facilities. No, this place was warmer—not in temperature, but in feel. It had a kind of lived-in quality you weren’t expecting. The faint smell of coffee lingered in the air, mixed with the scent of old books and worn leather furniture. Shoes were scattered by the door, someone’s guitar leaned against the wall in the corner, and someone had scratched “Yelena was here, losers” into the corner of the counter.
"This is the Thunderbolts' floor," Bucky said as he swiped the access panel, letting you both pass through. There was a strange undertone to his voice, a quiet sort of pride—or maybe wariness. "It’s... a work in progress."
You raised an eyebrow. “A rehab wing for ticking time bombs?”
Bucky gave a small, tight smile. “Something like that.”
The elevator doors opened to a wide living area that was surprisingly quiet, dimly lit. The hum of music thudded faintly from another room, but the space itself was calm—almost peaceful. You noticed how the walls weren’t bare and cold like the rest of the building had been. Bookshelves lined the walls, mismatched furniture sat comfortably in corners, and discarded snack wrappers sat on the coffee table. It didn’t feel like a headquarters for elite soldiers and heroes; it felt more like... home.
Before you could take it all in, a voice rang out, piercing through the quiet.
“Bucky!” The voice was sharp, teasing. “Who’s the new blood?”
You turned to see Yelena Belova striding toward you. Barefoot, dressed in sweatpants, her braid half undone, and a crooked grin on her face, she looked like she didn’t have a care in the world. She took a long look at you, her grin widening.
“She’s not mine,” Bucky said quickly, as if almost to assure you—or himself.
Yelena shot him a knowing glance. "Pity," she said, her grin only growing wider. Then, her eyes shifted to you. “I’m guessing you’re here to meet Bob?”
Bob. That nickname.
You nodded, but you could feel the weight of Yelena’s gaze. Her expression shifted slightly, and you didn’t miss the subtle change. It wasn’t fear, but something much more calculated—like someone who knew the danger that came with being in close proximity to a ticking time bomb, and what could happen if that bomb ever went off. There was wariness in her eyes now, something you hadn’t expected after the teasing remark.
Bucky didn’t miss it either. “I’m bringing her to meet him.”
At the mention of Bob Reynolds, Yelena’s expression changed again. Her playful smile slipped just a fraction, and the playful tone in her voice dimmed. She didn’t say anything for a moment, just looked at you with a kind of guarded understanding, before finally speaking.
“Be careful,” she said, her tone softer now, though still carrying an edge. “He’s a bit sweet. Until he’s not.”
You paused, the weight of her words sinking in. Sweet. Until he’s not. That one sentence sent a chill down your spine. You’d heard the name Bob Reynolds before, the Sentry, the Void—the rumors about his mind and his power were legendary. But this? This was a whole different level of complication. Sweet until he’s not. You couldn’t ignore the warning, not when you were about to walk into that very storm.
Bucky stepped forward, breaking the moment of quiet tension. His voice was quiet but firm. “I’ll be with you. You’re not going in alone.”
You didn’t say anything right away, your mind already racing. You weren’t sure if you were relieved or more uneasy now that you had confirmation Bucky would be there. It didn’t make it less dangerous.
“Thanks,” you finally said, though you weren’t entirely sure what you were thanking him for yet. Maybe it was just for getting you this far.
Yelena took a step back, a small smirk still tugging at the corner of her lips. “I’m just saying,” she added casually, “you don’t have to rush in. No one will blame you if you need a minute to run.”
You chuckled lightly, though the humor didn’t quite reach your eyes. “Right,” you said, your voice tight, “I’m sure that’ll be helpful.”
Bucky didn’t linger, turning toward a door at the far end of the room. It was heavy, imposing. You could tell this wasn’t just any door; it was the kind that kept the more... unpredictable things behind it. Bob Reynolds, the man who had lived through the collapse of his own mind, who carried the weight of the Void in him. You had an idea of what kind of danger he represented, but standing in this place, it felt much closer than you had ever imagined.
“Ready?” Bucky asked, looking over his shoulder. There was a glimmer of something in his eyes—maybe it was concern, maybe it was just routine. Either way, it didn’t settle your nerves.
You took a deep breath. “As I’ll ever be,” you said, but even as the words left your mouth, you felt the truth of them slip through your fingers. This wasn’t about being ready. This was about what you could handle when everything fell apart. You didn’t have any illusions about how this might go.
With a quiet hum, Bucky led the way to the door. You followed, feeling a kind of coldness creep into your limbs despite the warmth of the room around you. Whatever was waiting behind that door wasn’t just about Bob Reynolds. It was about everything that had led him to this moment. The Sentry. The Void. The man who had been both savior and destroyer. And now you were about to walk into that darkness.
The door to Bob’s room was slightly ajar when you arrived, and Bucky didn’t hesitate. He knocked once, then pushed the door open.
Inside, Bob sat at the edge of the bed, his posture tense, hands clasped tightly between his knees. His blonde hair was a little too long, and his shirt was wrinkled, like he hadn’t bothered to care about his appearance in the last few hours—or days. He was staring at the floor as though it might somehow provide answers to whatever was going on in his head.
When you stepped inside, his eyes flickered up to you. The movement was slow, almost as if it took him effort to pull himself away from whatever was haunting him in the depths of his mind. And then—he blinked.
“Oh,” he said, the word soft and distant, like it didn’t quite belong to him.
Bucky stepped forward, giving you a glance before offering the introduction. “This is her,” he said, his voice gentle but firm. “The one we talked about.”
Bob stood, his movements awkward, like he wasn’t sure what to do with himself. He was tall—broad in the shoulders, built like a man who could break cities—but he moved like someone terrified of knocking something over, of breaking something fragile.
“You’re… the mind walker,” he said quietly, his voice low, tentative.
You nodded, crossing the room slowly to close the distance. “And you’re the man with the monster inside him.”
Bob’s lips twitched—a ghost of a smile, fleeting and uncertain. “Guess we both come with warnings,” he muttered, the humor in his voice strained but there all the same.
The air in the room felt thicker now, the weight of his words hanging in the space between you. You studied him for a moment longer, the tension building like an unspoken agreement that neither of you could escape. You stepped closer. Without saying anything more, you both sank into the floor, sitting cross-legged across from each other. The distance between you was minimal, just your knees nearly brushing. But it was enough to feel the tension crackling in the air between you.
“I need your permission,” you said softly. “To go in.”
Bob didn’t hesitate, though his eyes were dark with uncertainty. He nodded once, the smallest motion.
You closed your eyes.
At first, there was nothing. Calm. His mind opened before you like a gate, as if it was letting you in—but something was wrong. Behind that gate, you could feel a storm building, growing, ready to unleash.
And then—
You were in.
It was worse than you had expected. The space around you was dark, twisting. The architecture was impossible—floating staircases, walls that screamed, mirrors that bled shadows. It felt like a mind split in two: one side terrified, the other hunting. The chaos was dizzying, the sensation of being swallowed whole by something far larger than you.
And then you felt it.
Something massive, coiling around the core of his mind. It was there, lurking. Watching you.
The Void.
It turned its head, and you felt its eyes on you—it smiled.
“You’re not supposed to be here,” it whispered, its voice like shards of glass scraping against your skull.
Pain bloomed instantly. A searing throb behind your eyes. Your nose started to bleed, the pressure inside your head unbearable.
“Get out,” Bob’s voice said, faint, distant—not the Void’s. “Get out now!”
And before you could even process the command, your body snapped back. Your eyes flew open, and you gasped for air, choking on it as blood dripped from your nose. You blinked, disoriented, and found yourself back in the room with Bob.
He stumbled backward, pale, his breath ragged, eyes wide with fear. “You saw it,” he said, his voice trembling.
You wiped the blood from your face and sat back, trying to catch your breath. “I felt it,” you said quietly, the weight of the experience still heavy in your chest.
Bob’s eyes searched your face, his expression torn. “Did it… did it touch you?”
You shook your head slowly. “No. But it came close. Too close.”
He let out a shaky breath, running a hand through his hair. “I’m sorry,” he whispered. “I didn’t know it would go after you.”
You exhaled, trying to shake off the lingering feeling of the Void’s presence. “We’re not ready,” you said, your voice a little steadier now. “We need to know each other first. Establish a connection before diving into something like that.”
Bob didn’t say anything for a long moment. He just stared at you, like you had said something that didn’t quite register in his mind. His expression was still unreadable, but there was something there—a glimmer of hope, perhaps, that you could give him something he’d lost. Something he didn’t think he could ever get back.
“Okay,” he said softly, as if testing the words. “We can… get coffee or something.”
You gave him a small, understanding smile. “Let’s start with daylight.”
Later, back in the common room, you nursed a pounding headache and a steaming cup of tea. Yelena was sprawled across the couch, her feet resting on the armrest, eyes half-closed. Her gaze flickered over to Bob, who lingered just inside the doorway, watching you like he was afraid you’d vanish if he looked away.
Yelena’s lips curled into a mischievous smile. She lowered her voice, but you could still hear the teasing note in it. “Someone’s got a crush.”
Bob’s face flushed instantly, his eyes widening in embarrassment. “I do not,” he muttered, like a kid caught in the act.
Yelena raised an eyebrow, her smirk turning smug.
For the first time all day, you couldn’t help but laugh. It was the kind of lightheartedness you hadn’t felt since stepping into this mess, and it felt like a small, precious thing in the middle of all the chaos.
You finished your tea, Yelena stretched across the couch like she owned the place, eyes flicking between you and Bob with far too much interest. Bob hovered by the doorway, visibly trying to gather the nerve to speak, shifting his weight from one foot to the other like a schoolboy.
You stood, brushing off your hands. The day had been long, and you were more than ready to go.
Just as you stepped toward the elevator, Bob moved quickly, blurting, “Uh—wait!”
You turned to him, surprised.
He looked like he instantly regretted speaking so loud. “I just—uh, I think we should talk again. Tomorrow. If you want. About… you know. Everything.”
You raised an eyebrow. “Alright. Where?”
Bob blinked. “I—uh, I don’t actually know where you work…”
You let out a breath. “Metro-General Hospital”
His eyes lit with recognition. “Right, yeah. That makes sense. I’ll be there. I’ll wait until your shift’s over.”
You studied him for a second. He was tall and intimidating by most standards, but right now he looked like someone nervously asking their crush to prom.
“Okay,” you said, biting back a smile. “I’ll see you then.”
Bob nodded too many times. “Cool. Good. Great. Okay.”
You stepped into the elevator. As the doors started to slide shut, you heard Yelena’s voice behind you—lazy and far too entertained.
“She said yes, Romeo,” she drawled. “You can breathe now.”
Bob muttered something unintelligible.
Yelena’s laughter echoed down the hall just before the elevator doors closed. You shook your head, grinning to yourself.
Tomorrow was going to be something.
⋆˙⟡
The Sanctum-like glow of protective wards hummed low along the ceiling as Stephen Strange poured tea into two mismatched cups. The room they were in wasn’t grand — no spell-casting library or mystical relic chamber — just a quiet observation lounge. It had a clear view of the city below, and right now, the skyline looked distant and unbothered by the storm they were preparing for.
Wanda Maximoff stood by the window, arms crossed. Her reflection in the glass looked tired.
“You didn’t tell them everything,” she said without looking back.
Strange let out a quiet sigh as he set the teapot down. “I told them what they needed to hear.”
“No,” she said, turning slowly. “You told them just enough to believe this was still safe.”
Strange didn’t flinch under her stare. He simply raised his cup and sipped.
“She’s walking into a fractured mind with something ancient wrapped around its spine. The Void doesn’t just destroy—he consumes. She’s not just risking injury. She’s risking... unmaking.”
He nodded, gently. “I know.”
Wanda stepped closer. “So why send her?”
“She’s not like us,” Strange said.
Wanda frowned. “That’s not a reason.”
He looked up at her, finally setting the cup down. “It is. You, me, even Charles—we bring power, force, structure. She brings something else. She listens. She understands how to walk with someone in their madness, not just force them out of it.”
Wanda studied him for a moment, then said, quieter, “What’s the best-case scenario?”
“She reaches Reynolds. Helps him stabilize. Creates a bridge between him and the monster he’s trying to cage. If she succeeds… the Void stays dormant.”
“And the worst?”
Strange was quiet for a long moment.
“If the Void latches onto her,” he said finally, “we lose both of them.”
Wanda looked down.
“She doesn’t know how dangerous she really is, does she?” she asked.
Strange gave a faint, unreadable smile.
⋆˙⟡
A/N: Let us all pretend Wanda is very alive for the sake of this fic! Part 2 will most likely be posted this weekend (or later, i have work during weekdays). Comment or dm me if u wanna be included in the taglist for part 2 <3
#bob reynolds x y/n#robert reynolds x reader#robert reynolds#thunderbolts au#thunderbolts x reader#bob reynolds#bob thunderbolts#sentry x y/n#sentry x reader#lewis pullman#bob reynolds x reader#thunderbolts fanfic#thunderbolts imagine#mcu fanfic#mcu au#mcu oc#mcu x reader#yelena belova#bucky barnes
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Okay so I have now seen thunderbolts* and, despite being spoilt of basically everything, I really really enjoyed it
SPOILERS ⚠️
My favourite things, in no particular order, and with very little context:
Alexei carrying injured Bucky over his shoulder like a Santa sack
“I WAS ON METH 😡😡😡”
Ava and Yelena bullying John for the entirety of the first act
John’s wife leaving him is icon behaviour like yes get it girl
“Mister soldier”
Mel is a mood
The looks at the end of the film 👌👌👌
Shout out to the man say two seats down from me who started screaming when the F4 rocket appeared
“Yes those concerning things are very concerning and worrying and I am worried about those worrying things” or whatever Bucky said <—— me everyday about everything
Actually I just love how bad Bucky is at interacting with people in general, it’s very relatable
Group cuddle to save the world >>>
Them walking through the barricade directly into the press was very funny
Why are Sam and Bucky fighting what happened
Did Bucky finally sleep with Sarah and tip Sam over the edge
I need answers asap please marvel
I did want more Bucky bc he’s my favourite BUT I am very glad to see a female led ensemble film, Yelena deserves it so so much
EDIT BC I FORGOT — Bucky doing the shield with the car door thing like Steve did in TFA had me SOBBING
I can’t think of any more right now because I’ve only seen it once, but in short, I adored this film and am so hyped for the next now
#marvel#mcu#thunderbolts#bucky barnes#winter soldier#yelena belova#black widow#alexei shostakov#red guardian#john walker#us agent#ava starr#ghost#bob reynolds#sentry#the new avengers#🔥🔥🔥#thunderbolts spoilers#mcu spoilers#marvel spoilers#spoilers
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For emotional depth :) reader is really powerful. Like REALLY powerful (maybe part Celestial through some sort of serum/experiments? Or even a prophecy) and she was in the OG avengers but was really young (maybe not all that idk) but basically the Thunderbolts keep her around because she’s one of the only people who could stop Sentry. And he’s like “how do you stay so calm? You make this look easy?” And they like bond (maybe they’re already tg) over the weight of being that powerful
‘cause it feels like cpr
pairing. robert “bob” reynolds x avengers!reader
genre. fluff, angst, slightly hurt/comfort, mutual pining, eventual friends to lovers
warnings. very little backstory/context, which will be remedied in a 2nd part, kinda dialogue heavy
author’s notes. ok avengers!reader yay i had to do the math for this all to make sense though lol so reader got blippity blip blipped when they were like in their early twenties and is now ~thirty. i’m splitting this request into two parts (sorry) cause this ending feels like the most natural breaking point to me
part two. masterlist.
“How can be you so calm?” He huffs, scratching the sole of his black converse against the concrete. “You make it all look so easy.”
You crack a slight smile at that. “Takes a lot of work to make this look easy, but I’m flattered you think so. And calm is not a choice for me—it’s either that or wipe out an entire city by accident. Which one would you rather pick?”
Bob stays silent at that, and you stand up from the ledge you were sat on.
“It’s all patience and discipline, but I shouldn’t have to tell you that.” You walk on the ledge of the building, stepping one foot in front of the other, shoulders shrugging. “That’s all basic, but it’s hard. Usually it’s the most foundational things that are like that. Simple, but it’s the consistency that makes them difficult.”
And then you’re letting yourself free fall off the side of the Avengers tower, much to Bob’s horror. He’s rushing to the edge of the building despite his extreme aversion to heights to see where you’ve gone, only to feel the air blow past his curls as you spring up in flight.
Smiling sheepishly, you apologize, “Sorry, I always love doing that to people. Bruce, um, the Hulk freaked the first time I did that to him. Almost went all Hulk to try and catch me. It was kind of sweet.” His cheeks go all rosy when you fly up to him, still in the air but with your crossed arms laid on the ledge of the tower. You lay your head down on your forearm, finding his bright blue eyes once more. “I think you might like this once you get the hang of things. And it makes you look super cool.” You grin, tilting your head to the other side. “Not that you need to look any cooler.”
Bob’s mouth dries a little at your flirtatious remark, not at all expecting it. You’re just trying to soothe his anxiety, and he really does appreciate it. What he doesn’t appreciate is how his cheeks get even hotter at your words.
“Thanks,” he says quietly.
Thanks? Groaning internally at himself, he is almost considering walking off the side of the tower. Not that it’d even put a scratch on him. Actually, it might just be even more embarrassing because you’d almost certainly dive after him. This is why he lets you do most of the talking (totally not ‘cause your voice sounds so nice).
“No prob, Bob. Wow, I’ve never gotten to say that to an actual Bob before.” You wince. “Sorry, we’re totally getting sidetracked here. I don’t wanna waste your time.”
“No, it’s okay! I don’t mind… really. I usually have nothing better to do, so this is a big step up for me.”
“Me lecturing you?” You mock wince. “Jeez, you should get out more ‘cause this being a highlight of your day isn’t exactly ideal, I’d say.”
His head shakes quickly. “No, seriously. I’m alright with this. I don’t mind spending time with you.”
Well, you weren’t expecting that. “Thanks. That’s kind of you—alright, let’s continue. You’ve told me you don’t like using your abilities because of the Void. What makes you believe you don’t have control over that part of yourself?”
“When the Void took over, a lot of people got hurt because of me… I guess I’m scared that I won’t be able to contain it, and that the city will get swallowed by darkness again. And I can’t be the Sentry without the other half…”
You frown, thinking for a moment before a bulb lights up over your head. “But what if that’s it? They’re two sides of the same coin, you, and they must balance the other out. Being the Sentry made you feel great, didn’t it? Like you were in complete control of everything, and there were no variables you couldn’t face. Perhaps—and this is just a total guess, but maybe it’s the Void who keeps you grounded? The Void shows people’s deepest regrets and the stuff we like to keep tucked away, but we need those things. We need them to be better, y’know? It’s a kinda tricky ground since it can easily overwhelm you too, consuming you into the darkness like it did before. But also, you have to learn to control it, or else you might actually end up losing control just as you fear.”
He chews his lower lip, a thoughtful expression now taking over his face. “I never really thought about it like that…”
“Well, that’s why you guys keep me around, isn’t it?” You tease him, holding your hand out as an offering. ”You don’t gotta fly yet if you’re not up for it, Bob, but just let me show you how fun it is. And if you fall, I’ll catch you.”
The sweet smile on your face is one that deserves to be returned, so Bob finds himself with a matching one as he accepts your hand. When you take his other one too, you carefully begin guiding him off the edge of the tower. Even with his fear of heights still bubbling in his stomach, there is something about you that eases it. You make everything look easy, he thinks to himself this time, even flight.
Honestly, he’s more nervous about the fact that he’s holding your hands than he is about being hundreds of feet in the air above New York traffic. But you lead him high enough, protecting his head through the freezing clouds, to where the streets and even the skyscrapers are no longer visible. It’s actually kind of peaceful up here if keeps his gaze pointed around and not down. His eyes return to you, and you’re watching him curiously and with a childlike hope.
“It’s not so bad, is it?” you ask quietly, less confident than you were before.
He smiles at you, shaking his head with certainty. “Not at all.” Thankfully, Bob is able to blame his reddened cheeks on the cold air and not you. “It is pretty cool.”
“You wanna look down?”
“No,” he quickly answers with a swallow, his grip on your hands tightening just slightly.
You chuckle. “The first time I ever flew this high, I wanted to be brave and took a peek down below. I was scared, but I felt such an exhilarating rush that I wanted to do it anyway. I couldn’t even see people—the cars were just tiny moving dots. Even skyscrapers looked small from up there. It’s weird… I think more people focus on what it looks like above, but I think looking back down at the planet is just as beautiful.” You glance up at the dark night sky, twinkling lights surrounding the two of you. “I like staring at the stars as much as anyone else, but we have our own back on Earth too.”
But Bob believes that the only sight worth looking at right now is you.
#bob reynolds x reader#bob reynolds imagine#robert reynolds x reader#robert reynolds imagine#sentry x reader#sentry imagine#thunderbolts x reader#thunderbolts imagine
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Re: [spoiler]
I mean, Taskmaster DID bring a knife to a gun fight...
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