Part 1
"There's a customer here that wants to speak to a manager," said Lynette, the clerk at the customer service desk, sticking her head in the door of the office. She had a big smirk on her face. "I'm just warning you to be careful."I pulled my glasses off to glare at her as I really didn't have time to deal with a grumpy customer. She shrugged.
"That's why you get paid the big bucks."
I followed her out and turned the corner where the most beautiful man I had ever seen leaned on the counter, someone I knew well and hadn't expected to ever see again. Tall, broad-shouldered, with soft dark brown hair, rugged good looks, and a pair of blue eyes that pierced me as sharp as a knife. He had a smirk on his face as if he knew exactly the effect he had on me.
"Good afternoon, sir," I said, trying to modulate my voice so that I didn't give away that I knew him. "How can I be of assistance?"
He looked at me in surprise. I was going to be like that was I? Well, two could play that game.
"I would like to return these work boots," he said, in a manner that indicated he wasn't going to take no for an answer. "They fell apart the first time I used them at work."
There was a black garbage bag on the counter that I assumed held the boots in question. Before I looked in it, I looked at him, trying to gauge if he was going to be one of those customers to me, in front of a witness. You know the type, someone who buys something to replace the worn-out ones he already has, then tries to pass the worn-out ones off as the newer model in order to get his money back. It's a scam, and I could always pick out the type of person who would do that, which he wasn't but it would be just like him to push the boundaries, trying to make me react to his being there. Internally I really hoped he wouldn't go this far to punish me for ending it with him but his manner, although brusque, had none of the tells of someone who was trying to make life hard for me.
"Do you have your original receipt, sir?" I asked politely.
He nodded, pulled his wallet out of his jeans and opened it, revealing a carefully folded receipt that he handed to me, from his gloved hand. Lynette noticed the glove but stifled her reaction to it, except I could tell he noticed, as his eyes narrowed slightly, as if he was a little bothered. Briefly, his eyes flickered to mine. Had I not told anyone about us?
Swallowing, I opened the bag and looked inside at a pair of boots that had definitely seen better days. Although the top portion of them and the tread looked fairly new it was obvious that whatever mission he used them for was too much for the boots to handle. In several places the top part of the boot had pulled away from the sole. The stitching had also split in several of the stress points. I could only imagine what he went through that had caused this much damage to the boots. It was one of the reasons we broke up; nights of imagining the mission, wondering if he was alright but not hearing from him, not until he walked through the door all bruised and battered, sometimes still bleeding because he didn't want to bother the medical staff. Meaning that I had to patch him up and deal with the stoic suffering he inflicted on himself by not believing he was worth being looked after.
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Faces of Bucky Barnes - More One Shots
FanfictionMostly short one shots covering Bucky Barnes in different situations and AUs, from the 1940s to the present. Some will be soft, some dark, and some hopefully humorous. Previously published on Tumblr. All MCU characters are the intellectual prope...