May. 9th, 2014 06:44 pm
To spy my shadow in the sun;
Rogers is not as good at this game as Romanoff. He is a man who lives the whole of his life in the open and has little knowledge of shadows, little use for subterfuge. Sometimes, his attention will find the right spot a moment too late. More often, Rogers doesn't know to look at all.
This should not be admirable, yet it is.
Nearly three weeks he's been trailing Rogers, quietly watching him, trying to find the footing he so thoroughly lost in Washington. He's less secure than he wants to be, the very sight of the man a perpetual punch to the gut, but curiosity eats at him, fed by an emotion beneath that he can't give a name to.
(lovelovelovelove)
In the long, late afternoon shadows of the gardens, he waits. Watches the figure jog through stands of trees, hurdling effortlessly over bushes, a distant smear of white on green growing rapidly closer. Predictable. Easily avoided.
This isn't how he intended this to go. He hadn't intended anything at all. Yet his right hand pulls the hood down from the stringy mess of his hair, and he takes one deliberate step from behind the pale and spindly trunk of a birch. Not line of sight, just on the periphery.
It'll be enough.
He doesn't realize he's holding his breath.
This should not be admirable, yet it is.
Nearly three weeks he's been trailing Rogers, quietly watching him, trying to find the footing he so thoroughly lost in Washington. He's less secure than he wants to be, the very sight of the man a perpetual punch to the gut, but curiosity eats at him, fed by an emotion beneath that he can't give a name to.
(lovelovelovelove)
In the long, late afternoon shadows of the gardens, he waits. Watches the figure jog through stands of trees, hurdling effortlessly over bushes, a distant smear of white on green growing rapidly closer. Predictable. Easily avoided.
This isn't how he intended this to go. He hadn't intended anything at all. Yet his right hand pulls the hood down from the stringy mess of his hair, and he takes one deliberate step from behind the pale and spindly trunk of a birch. Not line of sight, just on the periphery.
It'll be enough.
He doesn't realize he's holding his breath.
no subject
It was difficult not to become frustrated as the days passed and he felt no closer to seeing Bucky face to face once more. That he had spent a week and change in a shape that had not been his own had made his failure no less stark, each day torn between the desire to tear the hotel apart in the search for his friend and the understanding that he needed to patient and perhaps let the other man come to him.
The attempt to channel his frustration into a thing more productive by running did little to drive his old friend from his thoughts. It did instead remind him of those long ago lessons in boxing, running and swimming when he had been so dead-set on enlisting, no matter how many attempts it had required. Bucky had never given up on him then, had pushed him to the extent of his ability and had pulled him back where he could have hurt himself or gone into an asthma attack. No one had ever known him better than Buck. Maybe no one ever would.
The movement out of the corner of his eye had him turning to chase the sight of it, only to pull up hard as the man he had been looking everywhere for stood right in front of him.
The emotion that welled up within him choking off whatever he might have immediately said, leaving him uncertain and having to swallow back the block in his throat in favor of finally saying, “Buck?”
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"Don't call me that," he says, low but firm, and then swallows hard, jaw flexing. "I'm not him."
This is something he needs to make clear right from the start, despite the undeniable way his body reacts to this man, the way his mind leaps entirely sideways and smears warmth and happiness across his murky memories at the mere sight of him now. He hates it. He loves it. He doesn't know if he can bear it, this resilient echo of James Buchanan Barnes.
Weeks he's been contemplating this moment, and now that he's in it, he has no idea of what else to possibly say, and so stands there silent beneath the birch, breeze ruffling his hair. He was made for many things, but talking was not one of them.
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He remembered the roiling nausea that had filled him as he had read through the file Natasha had given him, of the details it had been filled with regarding what had been done to his friend. It held him still where he ached to step forward and reach out to the man who had been with him every step of the way since they had been so young. He could not help but want that old reunion of trading insults and a hug that near about but never completely knocked the wind out of him when he had been smaller.
When he had been no one but Steve Rogers and he had been no one but Bucky Barnes.
He swallowed heavily, wanting to make something of it right or at the very least see the moment out without Bucky fleeing or attacking him again. In all honesty, he might have gratefully taken the latter as long as it was something from his best friend he had thought lost so long ago. He could not accept that he was still lost to him. “What can I call you, then?” As much as he tried not to sound as desperate as he felt, to keep himself steady, he never could lie to Buck. Of all people, never him. “I won’t call you that” he said, in regards to the dubious honor of being called the Winter Soldier, “But I’ll call you something else, if you’d like.”
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Hesitating, the internal deliberation clear in his pinched expression, his gaze darts quickly away and then returns to Rogers with a frown.
"Nothing," he says, knowing no other option.
(Jerk.
Punk.)
"Don't worry about it," he adds, reflexively, although he isn't sure why.
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“I have to call you something,” he told him, voice strengthening with the determination to see his friend returned to at least the knowledge of himself and all they had experienced together. “I’m not going anywhere. I’m not giving up.”
I’m with you ‘til the end of the line. The words hang between them, unspoken then but anything but unfelt.
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"I don't care what you call me, as long as it isn't that," he adds, more softly, an intentional echo of Rogers' own words. "I'm only here for information," he says, knowing he's fooling no one, not even himself.
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“You’ve been following me for weeks, only for information?” he repeated, his disbelief clear, though he threw open his arms and lifted his chin. “Okay, then. Ask me anything.”
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"I've been following you because you're the only person still alive who knew—" His voice abruptly halts, teeth grinding hard against the name to keep it passing his lips. Even now, he isn't certain why it's so difficult to verbally acknowledge the person he used to be, but the reaction is instinctive and visceral—His body won't allow him to say the name.
"You're the only person with any real answers," he says when his throat finally relents, his lips pursing in frustration. He still doesn't know what to ask, and he hates that, hates the vulnerability innate to each time he so much as looks at Rogers. He swallows it down, his gaze darting briefly aside, shaken.
"I don't know what to ask," he quietly admits, brow knitting.
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The fact that the man who had been made into the Winter Soldier had come out of the shadows to speak to him, that he had come to meet him face to face to speak to him was a great leap forward from the nothingness he had been told time and time again that the two of them were fated toward. He wanted to celebrate that fact even as he understood it was just the first small step in what would have to be a long, arduous process. Everything he had read in that damned file, seen in Bucky’s eyes on that street, that helicarrier, told him he could expect no less.
The patience he was supposed to have felt frayed and hard to grasp then, though he struggled to keep a hold of himself in an attempt to give Bucky time to say what he needs to say. The fear that grips him whenever his thoughts stray to a scenario of pushing too hard when it wasn’t all laid on the line in fire and blood and being left alone again seemed to be then all that helped him keep his cool.
“I know,” he said finally, one side of his mouth curling up in an old habit as he looked at the man who had been his friend with soft eyes. Letting the moment pass, he then asked “What if I told you how we met?" And, as much as it hurt, "Or how we lost you?"
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"Just…" He trails off, his face going pinched. Part of him is desperate to know who James Buchanan Barnes was when the cameras weren't rolling, would give anything to understand even an inkling of the bond he shared with Rogers, or how he could always seem to be so easy with people, so happy.
If he's ever been happy, he doesn't remember it.
Another part of him sharply balks at this, however, elbowing out his tender curiosity with fear. Maybe it's what they put in his brain, or maybe it's just natural self-preservation, but one thing he knows for sure is that finding out all of the ways he's unlike Barnes will hurt.
"Austria," he finally settles on, lifting his chin, confident now that he's chosen something sufficiently neutral. "You rescued him. What did they do to him there?"
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He struggled with it then, staring at the man who had been carved out of his old friend and holding himself still despite all that screamed for him to go nearer. As much as he wanted to tell him then everything, to try to cauterize his own agony over the situation in gripping his friend's shoulders and attempting to bring him back that way, Steve knew enough to know he could not be so selfish.
His jaw tightens at the question, but he nodded stiffly all the same. "At the time I only knew Zola had been taking soldiers away from the rest of everyone they had captured. That those who were dragged off did not return." More than seventy years later and the fear that had shot through him at being told Bucky was one of that number had not faded in the least from memory. No more than the remembered determination to find his friend, to destroy the base and all the horrors it made. Old memories had been flushed out by the detailed notes in the Winter Soldier file, suspicions made gruesome and as vivid as if he had seen it done before his own eyes in reading of the trials Zola had put Bucky and the others through. Of how the others had died.
"Zola was trying to recreate the Serum and used soldiers as lab rats. You were the only one to survive."
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In every word, every movement, those blue eyes see only Bucky Barnes.
"I didn't pull you from the Potomac because of him," he says now instead, veering the conversation right back in the direction he'd so adamantly diverted it from with his bullshit posturing about Austria. He isn't sharp or threatening now, but he means it deeply and his eyes are intense when they suddenly lock on Rogers. "That was me, not him. I made that choice."
He doesn't know why it matters now, only that it's everything. He hadn't understood that before.
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His world had been too emptied of Bucky to be able to hide the edge of desperation that brittled his voice, his body steeled in place in fighting the urge to reach out and be able to curl his fingers at Bucky’s shoulders once more.
The man who was at once Bucky and not Bucky spoke and Steve had to work not to flinch. Not for the defiant sharpness of his eyes or the pronouncement that he had made the first choice he had been capable of perhaps since the moment Steve had lost him in Switzerland. For the second time in his life he had fallen, untethered that second time from a ship or a reason to be lost. For the second time he had tasted defeat and accepted in the last moments before consciousness had slipped away, long before he hit the water, the certainty of his own death.
He had not expected to wake a second time.
The memory bled sluggishly from him, a wound still scabbing over, and he was left looking ahead at the man who had dragged him out of the river. “I understand,” he said, instead of all that roiled within him. “I-” he broke off before starting again, "I'm glad."
no subject
What assaults him then are more impressions than actual memories: Blurred snapshots of straw-colored hair; of pale, earnest eyes; of stick-skinny limbs dangling off of fire escapes. Beneath it all there is an emotion so immovable, so undeniable, that the shock of finding it within himself makes him falter backward half a step with a visible wince.
(NO, NOT WITHOUT YOU!)
It's entirely too much.
Stunned, he looks to Rogers again, only to find that it hurts in a way he is completely unequipped to quantify. He will never be that man again, and all at once, it feels as if it's killing him.
Knowing no other way to respond, he does the only thing he can: He turns, wordless, and walks away.