Steven G. Rogers (
thekidfrombrooklyn) wrote2014-08-18 11:16 am
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Winter Soldier - "Even when I had nothing, I had Bucky."
"SHIELD, HYDRA--it all goes."
Battle plans formed, Steve stands on the dam, watching the sun come up. This early, and this far out of the capitol, the world is quiet. Peaceful.
Somewhere, a church bell is ringing, carrying through the stillness.
It gives a man time to think.
To remember.
Steve is eighteen the year his mother dies. He'd just been accepted at Cooper Union and would start there in the fall, and he thanks God that the school would cover his tuition because what little money they'd managed to save went to pay for Sarah's funeral instead.
He knows she'd want him to go to school, Steve thinks as he walks home. He knows she'd want him to carry on with his plans, pursue that career in comics that he dreamed of. He knows that like most immigrant parents, she wanted nothing more for him than a better life.
He has no idea how he'll manage now. They'd survived on her nurse's wages and what he made doing odd jobs or working as a paperboy, but the rent is already late and he has nothing in his pockets.
He has nothing at all, if he's being perfectly honest with himself.
And he is always honest.
Battle plans formed, Steve stands on the dam, watching the sun come up. This early, and this far out of the capitol, the world is quiet. Peaceful.
Somewhere, a church bell is ringing, carrying through the stillness.
It gives a man time to think.
To remember.
Steve is eighteen the year his mother dies. He'd just been accepted at Cooper Union and would start there in the fall, and he thanks God that the school would cover his tuition because what little money they'd managed to save went to pay for Sarah's funeral instead.
He knows she'd want him to go to school, Steve thinks as he walks home. He knows she'd want him to carry on with his plans, pursue that career in comics that he dreamed of. He knows that like most immigrant parents, she wanted nothing more for him than a better life.
He has no idea how he'll manage now. They'd survived on her nurse's wages and what he made doing odd jobs or working as a paperboy, but the rent is already late and he has nothing in his pockets.
He has nothing at all, if he's being perfectly honest with himself.
And he is always honest.
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Bucky follows his best friend across the yard to the steps. Steve may have ditched him after the church, but he's not going to give up that easily.
"My folks wanted to give you a ride to the cemetery."
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It's been him and Sarah, on their own, for so long.
Now it's just him.
He'd better get used to it.
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Stupid, he chides himself, trudging upward one step at a time. You dummy. How do you think it was? Could you be any more of an idiot?
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He barely has to look where he's going, the path to his door is so familiar.
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"You know," he starts, a little awkwardly, "I was gonna ask--"
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It's just his key isn't in his usual pocket.
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"It'll be fun. All you've gotta do is shine my shoes, maybe take out the trash once in a while."
As Steve half-turns, searching his pockets, Bucky kicks aside the brick by the railing and picks up the spare key, then holds it out to him.
"Come on," he says, quietly. "What d'ya say?"
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Bucky taking care of him, just like always.
"Thank you, Buck." He inhales. Bucky's making a simple offer now, but as the days pass and he realizes how much Steve will have to depend on him, he'll regret it.
Steve would rather not reach that point.
"But I can get by on my own."
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Of course Steve would say that. Of course he would.
"I know you can. The thing is, you don't have to."
Bucky reaches out and clasps Steve's right shoulder, holding on to him as best he can.
"I'm with you to the end of the line, pal."
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Because pride aside, worry aside, Steve knows.
He knows.
So he doesn't say anything.
He just smiles.
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"Come on. Let's go get you settled in."
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Funny how Bucky's arm is never too heavy.
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He tries a quick grin.
"Just consider me your pack mule."
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He makes quick work of packing. He has few belongings--faded photographs of his grandparents and Joseph and Sarah, changes of clothes, books, and every precious stub of pencil and piece of paper--and they fit into his knapsack easily.
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There's not much, truth be told, not that it's a surprise. He finds a locket of Sarah's, tucked away deep in a drawer, and collects that. She'd had a couple of pictures of Steve, too, and he gets those as well, then heads back to join Steve.
"Here."
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He cradles the locket in his palm a moment, then tucks it away.
"I'm ready."
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He reaches for Steve's knapsack.
"I'll carry this, and that way you can lock the door."
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He lets Bucky go out first, and makes one final, visual sweep of the rooms.
Well.
That's that, then.
He closes the door and locks it.
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He keeps quiet until the lock clicks, then moves back to Steve's side.
"Come on. Let's go."
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He starts down the stairs and, aside from a quick glance to be sure Bucky is joining him, doesn't look back.
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"He's going to be there, you know?"
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"I know."
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"Look," He says, glancing up at the sky, checking the weather. A good day for flying. "Whoever he used to be, the guy he is now, I don't think he's the kind you save. He's the kind you stop."
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He knows that, too. If it were anyone else, there would be no question. As it is--
It's Bucky.
"I don't know if I can do that."
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"He may not give you a choice."
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He thinks, Bucky always did what he had to do to save me. I can't do any less.
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"He doesn't even know you."
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"He will."
Captain America has always been a symbol of hope. Sometime he's even that symbol to Steve.
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He nods once to Steve's conviction and says, "For what it's worth, I'm sorry. I'm here for whatever you need."
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(When all of this is over, there's a multi-dimensional bar Steve wants to introduce Sam to. It's the least he can do.)
"Gear up," he says simply. "It's time."
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And he knows just what uniform he needs to wear today.
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Instead he calls back, "I'll let everyone know you're going shopping, then."