Entry tags:
CA: The Fingerprints On Me From You
Fandom: Captain America (2011)
Main characters: Steve, Bucky
Referenced characters: N/a
Pairings: Steve/Bucky
Contains: Not very politically correct ways of referring to gay relationships
Rating: PG13
Summary: Bucky's worried that everything's going to change. Set during the movie, when Steve liberates everyone from the Hydra base.
Notes: For
feywood, to start off her morning well. I'm going to tag this as both 'Captain America' and 'Avengers' because of the shared characters. Title from Suzanne Vega's 'Marlene on the Wall', because it keeps going through my head when I think about Bucky.
When they set off back to join the rest of the army, Bucky can barely walk. But there's Steve, so somehow, he manages it -- even if Steve carries him half the time. "I guess," he mumbles into Steve's shoulder, when he stumbles for the eightieth time, "I guess this means you get to be on top now."
Steve makes this little scandalised sound that lets Bucky hope that nothing's changed at all. He grins and straightens up, manages to sling his arm around Steve's shoulders in an approximation of normality.
"I can still fuck you if you want, Steve," he offers, with the grin that always gets Steve into trouble; he's not entirely sure that the others didn't hear, but he figures nobody's going to care anyway. Steve's quiet, though, and Bucky wonders what that's supposed to mean -- if it hasn't just changed between them, but maybe it's over; not the friendship, because Steve did come for him after all, but the other thing, the thing they've always kept in the dark before.
"Didn't know if you'd want to," Steve says, at last, and Bucky wants to punch him, except he'd probably just end up breaking his own hand.
"Don't be stupid."
"Things have changed."
"Not that much," Bucky says, though he isn't at all sure, really. He just knows that Steve can't change, that the thing between them can't change, or he's going to go and find himself a mine to walk on or something, because Steve -- god, he doesn't even want to think this in so many words, but it's true: Steve is everything that's good in the world, Steve is everything that he was ready to lay down his life for. There were girls, and there was America, and there was his pride and all of that, but more than that, there was Steve. He clears his throat. "But you don't have to be the girl all the time, if you don't want."
"I do want," Steve says, low, and something about his tone heats Bucky up like a good slug of whisky. He grins at Steve.
"Sometimes I think we ought to try it the other way, find out what I'm missing."
"We can do that," Steve says, and his smile could light the whole world up, Bucky swears.
Main characters: Steve, Bucky
Referenced characters: N/a
Pairings: Steve/Bucky
Contains: Not very politically correct ways of referring to gay relationships
Rating: PG13
Summary: Bucky's worried that everything's going to change. Set during the movie, when Steve liberates everyone from the Hydra base.
Notes: For
When they set off back to join the rest of the army, Bucky can barely walk. But there's Steve, so somehow, he manages it -- even if Steve carries him half the time. "I guess," he mumbles into Steve's shoulder, when he stumbles for the eightieth time, "I guess this means you get to be on top now."
Steve makes this little scandalised sound that lets Bucky hope that nothing's changed at all. He grins and straightens up, manages to sling his arm around Steve's shoulders in an approximation of normality.
"I can still fuck you if you want, Steve," he offers, with the grin that always gets Steve into trouble; he's not entirely sure that the others didn't hear, but he figures nobody's going to care anyway. Steve's quiet, though, and Bucky wonders what that's supposed to mean -- if it hasn't just changed between them, but maybe it's over; not the friendship, because Steve did come for him after all, but the other thing, the thing they've always kept in the dark before.
"Didn't know if you'd want to," Steve says, at last, and Bucky wants to punch him, except he'd probably just end up breaking his own hand.
"Don't be stupid."
"Things have changed."
"Not that much," Bucky says, though he isn't at all sure, really. He just knows that Steve can't change, that the thing between them can't change, or he's going to go and find himself a mine to walk on or something, because Steve -- god, he doesn't even want to think this in so many words, but it's true: Steve is everything that's good in the world, Steve is everything that he was ready to lay down his life for. There were girls, and there was America, and there was his pride and all of that, but more than that, there was Steve. He clears his throat. "But you don't have to be the girl all the time, if you don't want."
"I do want," Steve says, low, and something about his tone heats Bucky up like a good slug of whisky. He grins at Steve.
"Sometimes I think we ought to try it the other way, find out what I'm missing."
"We can do that," Steve says, and his smile could light the whole world up, Bucky swears.
