She's tiny. That's the only thing he can think for the first couple hours. She is so damn tiny and fragile and soft and he doesn't know how to be around a human that tiny and fragile and soft. Maybe it's worse because he has to keep this tiny human alive. He hasn't had to do that before— all the other tiny people in his life have been perfectly capable of keeping themselves alive. Even Steve all those years ago, when he only came up to his shoulder—barely— would have fought tooth and nail to stay alive. Even then it always felt like Bucky was just there in case. Maybe that was just Steve though.
He blinks— he doesn't want to think about the man right now. He can't afford to get lost in his head. Gods only know if he starts thinking about those days— the 'good' old days— he won't stop. Maybe not for days. Maybe because they'll remind him that he's not supposed to be here— that he isn't made to keep tiny, gentle, grilled cheese cooking, question asking things alive. Usually he's the one hindering people from being alive— hindering life itself. Usually it doesn't bug him this much but he can't help but equate the girl in the Caltech hoodie with life—
"Is what they say about New York pizza true?"
— And himself with death.
"S'alright— Chicago is better."
He watches as she flips through a book that she had picked up off the coffee table a few minutes ago. The Big Book of Dogs. Is he supposed to laugh at that? She is— giggling and flipping through pages upon pages of puppies. It isn't aimed at him, her musical, soft sounds. She isn't laughing at him. It only feels like she is. He's learned to separate the difference these days— it's just in his head. Still, he has to turn away from her, using the guise— his job— of being a bodyguard to keep his gaze moving.
From the corner of his eye he watches as she lowers the book, peaking over at him from behind a peppy looking Alaskan Malamute— yes, he knows his dogs. He is one, after all.
"You know, I think there are quite a few people who disagree with you on that one."
Bucky pretends to ignore the way she quirks a brow at him, her eyes drifting back to the page. He also ignores the way his heart spikes at the little movement. Snap out of it, Barnes. He stands, stalking to the living room window and pulling back the heavy green curtain. Nobody is out there— he didn't expect there would be someone, he just needed to move. How many more hours?
"Thought you were asking me." He quips, staring out towards the bayou where the water has turned grey and choppy.
He watches as the rain pours down the window pane, tap tap tapping in front of his nose as the sunlight surrenders to the misty storm clouds. As much as he hates to admit it, Wilson was right— the rainy season's rolling in on the dot. Even he is starting to feel the effects, his bones beginning to leaden.
As if on cue, she yawns, setting down The Big Book of Dogs and curling her legs into her chest, hiding them beneath the mountain of fabric she wears. "I was gauging. Consider it a test."
Bucky huffs— not sure if he's annoyed because of her questioning or because of how, despite the tension still laced through his shoulder blades like sailors knots, he isn't that bothered by it. Annoyed because he isn't annoyed— that's a first. He lets the curtain drop again and turns to the TV where Netflix lays open but unused, blocking out one mind numbing haze for another. What would they even watch together?
"Oh yeah? Did I pass?"
Maybe some cheesy sit-com. That feels harmless enough and he's been catching up on a few of them. Some of them even make him laugh. Maybe that's in poor taste though. He's never had to deal with someone else's grief before— he rarely deals with his own as is.
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Persephone's Symphony
FanfictionIn which he is the bad one- the dangerous one, the clunky one, the one who only knows how to break things- and she is the good one- the fragile one, the soft one, the one who knows how to put things back together- and he has to keep her alive long e...