When you find it, let me know đ (Lol)
Thank you for reading!!! âĄ
Summary: You, a regular person with no powers, become a quiet, comforting presence in Steveâs and Buckyâs lives. They slowly form a deep, romantic bond with you built on quiet moments, mutual care, and unspoken understanding. (Steve Rogers x reader x Bucky Barnes)
Word Count: 700+
Main Masterlist
You werenât part of their world, not really. Not in the way most people defined it. No powers, no enhanced serum in your blood, no combat training etched into your muscles. You didnât fly, or punch through walls, or wear a suit of armor. But somehow, youâd become just as necessary as any shield or weapon.
You met Steve first years ago, back when everything still felt a little raw after one of his missions. You were a barista then, tucked into a cozy corner cafĂ© just off one of the quieter streets of the city. He came in looking like the ghost of a time long gone, polite to a fault, his smile more habit than warmth. You served him chamomile the first time he walked in and a honeyed espresso the second. By the third visit, he remembered your name. By the fifth, he asked if he could sit near the back, away from the windows. He said it was for the quiet. You didnât press.
Then came Bucky.
Rough edges and distant eyes. The first time he walked into the cafĂ©, Steve stood up instinctively like a soldier ready to meet a comrade in arms. You noticed the way Buckyâs eyes flicked over every exit, every reflective surface. The way his hands, always gloved, never truly relaxed. You didnât say much that day, just placed his coffee on the table with a gentle, âNo charge. First oneâs always free.â You caught the twitch of his lips. Almost a smile. Almost.
They started coming together after that. Sometimes theyâd stay until closing, long after the last customer left, helping you clean tables or fix the flickering light in the storeroom. You never asked them for anything. Maybe that was why they kept coming back.
You didnât mean to become their safe place.
It started in little moments. Steve would bring you books he thought youâd like. Bucky would fix your broken sink without asking. Youâd find yourself cooking too much food and pretending you hadnât expected them to show up. When the nights grew long and cold, they stayed longer. When the world felt too loud, too harsh, too damn fast, they found themselves in your apartment above the cafĂ©, Bucky curled into the corner of your couch like he was hiding from the world, Steve softly reading aloud from whatever book he could find on your shelves. You never minded.
You became a routine. A quiet rhythm. The world outside buzzed with chaos, but here, in your apartment lit by mismatched lamps and warmed by the scent of cinnamon and dust, everything stilled. There were nights when neither of them said a word, and yet none of you wanted to leave. Just the soft click of a record player, your hand brushing against Steveâs when you passed him a cup of tea, the way Buckyâs posture would finally relax when he fell asleep on the couch.
You didnât know when it changed.
Maybe it was the night you found Bucky asleep in your bed, not because heâd planned to be there, but because youâd offered, gently, when he couldnât stop shaking. Maybe it was the way Steve held your hand after you fell asleep watching an old film, fingers laced like heâd been waiting a lifetime to touch you. Or maybe it was the morning you woke up wedged between both of them on your too-small couch, their heartbeats steady, anchoring you to something real and lasting.
One night, you found yourself dancing in the kitchen. No music, no occasion. Just soft light, leftover pasta cooling on the stove, and Steveâs hand in yours. Bucky leaned against the counter, watching with a fondness he didnât bother to hide. When he stepped in to join, Steve only smiled, and you felt something shift in the air, like all three of you had silently agreed on something unspoken. Something fragile and deeply needed.
âI never thought peace would look like this,â Steve whispered, forehead resting against yours.
âI didnât think I deserved it,â Bucky added, his voice quiet from behind you as his arm slid around your waist.
But he did. All three of you did.
And in that tiny kitchen, warm with heart and memory, you realized something simple but powerful: they didnât come to you because they needed saving.
They came to you because, with you, they were already home.
She for real is!!! I love her energy and nonsensical reasons for doing things, so much fun to write. Thank you for reading!!!
Summary: You, a dangerously chaotic genius with the common sense of a soggy spoon, somehow captures the heart of Bucky Barnes. Despite the constant emotional whiplash, raccoon-related injuries, and deeply cursed inventions, Bucky finds himself falling hard⊠somewhere between a Capri Sun intervention robot and a vent-related rescue. (Bucky Barnes x Avengers!reader)
Disclaimer: This was based on this post I came across from @ghouljams earlier. Please let me know if you want me to remove any of the information you listed here.
Word Count: 3.4k+
A/N: I had a blast writing this and I am begging on my hands and knees that other people like this as well so I can write more of unhinged reader. Happy reading!
Main Masterlist | Sequel | Extra
Bucky didnât mean to get attached. In fact, he very specifically meant not to get attached to you.
You, with your wide smile and increasingly concerning decision-making skills. You, who walked into a briefing ten minutes late with a Slurpee, claimed you got âtime-displaced,â and then flawlessly identified the year, model, and VIN of a car from a blurry photo Tony handed out. âThatâs a 1972 Chevelle SS,â Youâd said casually. âBut the rims are from a later model. 1976, I think.â
He stared at you. Everyone did.
You slurped. âWhat?â
Later, Bucky watched you put your phone in the fridge, forget about it, then ask him if heâd âseen a text from 7-Eleven recently.â You didnât even seem high. That was the worst part. You just⊠existed like that. All the time.
A living contradiction. A walking cosmic joke. The human version of a browser with 72 tabs open, one playing music, none labeled, and all of them about wildly different topics ranging from âtheoretical wormhole stabilityâ to âcan ducks feel shame.â
And the worst part? You were insanely good at your job.
When it came to the field, you moved like youâd choreographed every punch in advance. Like your brain hit a switch and rerouted all the loose marbles into sheer precision.
But outside of that? Absolute chaos.
One time you asked if the word âcolonelâ was a typo because youâd only ever read it.
"Why is it spelled like 'colon-el'?â Youâd asked Bucky, eating popcorn with a throwing knife for apparently no reason. âLike. Youâre telling me we all just agreed to ignore the 'L'?â
He blinked slowly. âYes.â
âSounds fake but okay.â
He wanted to strangle you. He wanted to kiss you. He wanted to wrap you in a blanket and take you to a doctor because no one should eat four bananas and not know why their stomach hurts. (âI thought they were like⊠natureâs snack bars!â Youâd wailed from the floor. âWhy does nature lie?â)
Still, there was something undeniably magnetic about you. Something that made Bucky keep finding excuses to be around you. Something that made him bite back a smile when you declared, with utter confidence, that âCitizen Kaneâ was a manâs full name and you âfelt bad for him growing up with that.â
Sam had to leave the room. Steve looked like he aged five years. Bucky? He just leaned back in his chair and muttered, âYouâre so lucky youâre pretty.â
You beamed. âI know, right?â
And that was just the beginning.
-
Bucky knew it the moment you turned to him in the middle of a high-stakes infiltration and whispered:
âHey. Do you think raccoons ever get embarrassed?â
He froze mid-step, crouched beside you behind a cluster of storage crates, both of you watching a Hydra compound patrol pace along the wall ahead. Guns primed. Comms live. Two minutes to breach.
You blinked at him, eyes wide and totally serious about the question in the entirely inappropriate setting.
âWhat?â He hissed.
You frowned thoughtfully, like he was the weird one. âThey have those little hands, right? Like⊠what if one drops its snack in front of another raccoon. Is that, like, raccoon shame? Do they feel judged?â
Bucky stared. He wasnât sure if he was hallucinating. It had been a long week after all.
Then you added, âAnyway, two guards approaching. Theyâll pass each other in about four seconds. I can take the left. You want the one with the scar?â
You didnât even wait for an answer. Your body vanished into the shadows, clean and calculated. Three seconds later, both guards were unconscious and being gently rolled into the bushes like unwanted pizza boxes.
Bucky just stood there, breathing. You terrified him but not in the way enemies did. No, that would be too simple. Because he could fight Hydra, take a bullet, disarm a bomb, but you?
You were something else. A walking contradiction.
You once tripped over your own shoelaces while explaining quantum theory, then beat four highly trained operatives unconscious with a clipboard. You called a Glock a âgrippy lilâ pew stickâ but recited the Geneva Convention word-for-word because you âliked bedtime reading.â
And tonight was no different.
By the time the mission was done, the intel recovered, and the building cleared, Bucky was sore, bruised, and fully convinced that he was doomed. Because somewhere between the absurd commentary, the flawless fighting, and the way you wiped blood from your brow and grinned at him like you werenât covered in chaos, he felt it.
That thing. The awful, nauseating, heart-clutching feeling.
Affection.
It hit him in the middle of your post-mission debrief, which mostly consisted of you sitting on the quinjet floor, drinking chocolate milk out of a thermos and recounting the entire op like it was a cute story you were telling children.
âAnd then I was like, Bam! right to the neck, and he just went down like a sack of sad potatoes. Did you see that? You saw that, right, Buck? I did the thing with the kick!â
He didnât answer. He was looking at you like youâd grown a second head or like how you were the only thing stuck in his head these days. God, you were awful.
You had blood on your elbow and half your gear undone. You were sprawled out on the floor like a sleep-deprived gremlin, and when you looked up at him and smiled, like he was the only person in the world who mattered⊠He was done. Gone.
âYou okay there, Grumpypants?â You asked.
âI think I might hate you,â He muttered, sitting down beside you.
You grinned, bumping his shoulder with yours. âThatâs fair. Iâm an acquired taste. Like oysters. Or war crimes.â
He barked a laugh before he could stop it. You looked so proud.
âIâm serious,â He said, sobering. âYouâre gonna get yourself killed one day. You donât take anything seriously.â
You just stared at him for a moment, and then, quietly, you said, âI take you seriously.â
The jet went quiet.
And Bucky sat very, very still because somehow, that hit harder than any mission ever had.
You werenât just funny. Or weird. Or brilliant in a way that made his head hurt.
You were kind. Kind in a way he hadnât felt in years. Like you saw through the Winter Soldier and the scowl and the kill count, and you still chose to sit beside him, sipping chocolate milk and talking about raccoon shame.
And Bucky Barnes, world-weary assassin, trauma-laden super-soldier, turned to you and realized:
He was fucked.
In love with a person who once confidently said âquinoaâ was pronounced âkin-oh-ahâ and didnât believe him when he corrected you.
You looked up from your thermos. âYouâre doing the staring thing again. Am I bleeding from the ear?â
âNo,â Bucky said, voice low. âYouâre justâŠâ
âSexy?â You offered helpfully.
ââŠTerrifying.â
You winked. âSame difference.â
And Bucky Barnes, against all logic, reason, and survival instinct, knew he was already in too deep.
-
The next mission had gone off without a hitch⊠at least, for everyone except Bucky.
A few cuts here, a couple of bruises there, but nothing too serious. At least, thatâs what he told himself as he sat on the edge of the quinjet, feeling the burn in his shoulder from a bullet graze. But the moment you walked into the medbay with a roll of bandages in your hand, it was like everything inside him twisted in a way he couldnât explain.
âOkay, Bucky. Time to let the master do her magic,â you said, flashing that grin of yours, the one that always made his heart do weird, involuntary things.
Bucky blinked, trying to shake the disoriented feeling. âYouâre the one who got shot today. Why am I the one getting patched up?â
âBecause Iâm immortal,â You said matter-of-factly. âAlso, Iâm not bleeding anywhere you can see, so thatâs a bonus.â
Bucky raised an eyebrow. âYouâre immortal?â
You sat down beside him, rolling your sleeves up. âNo, but I like to pretend I am. You know, like a cooler superhero.â
He winced slightly as you poked at his side. âThatâs what Iâm dealing with, huh?â
âYou love it,â You teased, squeezing out some antiseptic onto a cotton pad.
âYouâre lucky I havenât thrown you out of a plane for this,â Bucky muttered, though he couldnât stop the faint grin from tugging at his lips.
âNot gonna lie, Iâd be mad if you did,â You admitted, gently dabbing at his side. âAlso, Iâd haunt you. I know how to haunt people. Iâve read a lot of books about ghosts.â
He chuckled, despite himself. âOf course you have.â
âOh, absolutely. I even have a theory about why the Titanic sank, and itâs completely different from the official one. But Iâm telling you right now, itâs not what they say.â
Bucky glanced over at you, eyebrow raised. âThis I gotta hear.â
You leaned closer, lowering your voice dramatically as if revealing state secrets. âOkay, so. It wasnât an iceberg that caused the sinking. It was actually the government trying to erase all evidence of the giant squid they were experimenting on, and they blamed it on the iceberg to cover up the real cause.â
Bucky blinked, unsure whether you were serious or not. âWait, what?â He asked slowly.
You looked at him deadpan. âYou didnât hear the rumors? They found footage, you know. The squid was huge. It even had tentacles.â
He stared at you, speechless.
"Anyway," You continued, as if you hadnât just suggested the worldâs greatest conspiracy, "What we do know is that my bandage technique is flawless. See this?" You lifted a corner of the bandage to show him a perfect wrap around his side.
Bucky blinked. "Did you just distract me with a giant squid theory while you patched me up?"
âAbsolutely.â You beamed at him. âWorks every time. Just donât tell anyone youâre in love with me because Iâm not responsible for any heart attacks.â
Bucky froze, his heartbeat suddenly in his throat.
You were still so nonchalant. Still so you, so damn confident and so sure of yourself. It took everything in him not to lean in and kiss you right there.
But then, you looked up at him, and for the briefest moment, that smile of yours softened. âYouâre good, Bucky,â You said quietly. âYouâve been through more shit than any of us. But youâre still here. Thatâs something, you know?â
His chest tightened.
âAnd you know what?â You continued, your voice so much softer now, like a quiet reassurance. âYou donât have to be a soldier all the time. Sometimes, you can just be Bucky.â
He swallowed, looking at you. âAnd what about you?â
âOh, me? Iâm a mess,â You shrugged, finally looking away, as if it was no big deal. âIâm just here to make the chaos look cute.â
Your eyes flicked back to him, that familiar teasing glint in them. âThatâs my secret. You like it.â
Bucky chuckled, but it didnât reach his eyes. He wanted to say something, wanted to admit something. That little voice in his head kept screaming at him to just say it already, but he was scared. He was scared of how deep you had burrowed under his skin, of how easy it was to forget everything else when you were around.
Instead, he just leaned forward and cupped your face, his thumb gently brushing your cheek. âYouâre⊠something else, you know that?â
You blinked at him in surprise, your lips parted, as if trying to process the sudden shift in the air. For a moment, there was a palpable tension between the two of you, like the universe was holding its breath, waiting for one of you to do something.
But then, in your usual way, you broke it, shrugging with a grin. âI know. Youâre welcome.â
Buckyâs heart did a weird flip, and for the first time in what felt like forever, he allowed himself to truly relax, just a little. He didnât want to admit it. Not yet. Not even to himself.
But as you leaned in to finish wrapping his side, your hand brushing his skin lightly, he knew he was already in way too deep.
-
The next incident started with a toaster. Not even a cool toaster. Just a boring, silver Stark-issued kitchen appliance that you were suspiciously proud of. I Youâd taken it apart and rebuilt it but âbetter.â No one asked you to. No one gave you permission. You just did it.
âNow it sings the SpongeBob theme when your toast is done,â You explained, beaming as you held up a slice of whole wheat like it was a golden ticket.
Bucky stared at you. âYou tampered with government property.â
âEnhanced.â You corrected. âAnd before you ask, no, I will not apologize. This is the future.â
Then it sang. âWho lives in a pineapple under the sea?â BWEEEEEP - Toast done.
Bucky looked like he was praying for divine intervention. âYouâre gonna get us all court-martialed over this.â
Two hours later, you were banned from the kitchen, which didnât stop you from relocating to the common area with your newest project: building what you claimed was a âmousetrap but for anxiety.â
It was made of pipe cleaners, glow sticks, and what mightâve been a dismantled Roomba.
âI call her Deborah,â You said, gently stroking it. âShe senses emotional instability and gives you a juice box.â
As if on cue, it whirred over to Bucky, bumped into his leg, and slowly offered him a Capri Sun.
He didnât know whether to laugh or cry. âIâm not drinking that.â
âThen she thinks youâre too far gone. Sheâs very wise.â
Steve walked in, surveyed the scene, and simply turned around without speaking. He didnât even ask anymore.
Later that night, Bucky caught you in the hallway attempting to climb into the ceiling with a flashlight between your teeth and a jar of pickles under your arm.
âDo I want to know?â He asked, exhausted.
You paused halfway into a vent, dropping the flashlight briefly. âDepends. Do you believe in ceiling gremlins?â
âNo.â
âThen Iâm doing taxes.â
He rubbed his eyes. âPlease. Iâm begging you. Come down.â
You stared at him for a long moment, then slowly slid back out like a raccoon emerging from a trash can. âOkay. But only because you asked nicely and not because I got stuck.â
You had absolutely gotten stuck. And the worst part? He was smitten.
Every time you did something completely absurd, which was always, he found himself watching you a little too long, smiling a little too much, wondering what the hell you were going to do next and why it made his chest ache in a weirdly pleasant way.
Even now, covered in ceiling dust and holding a pickle jar, you looked up at him with that infuriatingly endearing grin.
âYouâre in love with me,â You stated confidently.
Bucky blinked. âExcuse me?â
âYou heard me.â You popped a pickle in your mouth. âYouâve got that look. Like a grumpy cat who accidentally cuddled someone and doesnât want to admit it.â
âI do not look like-â
âIt's okay. You donât have to say it.â You patted his chest affectionately. âYour body language screams âemotionally unavailable man finds chaotic cryptid and feels things.ââ
âI am not emotionally unavailable.â
âYou have a go bag, Bucky.â
ââŠThatâs standard protocol.â
âYour toothbrush is still in the packaging.â
He opened his mouth, then closed it again. Youâd won. Again.
âYouâre gonna kiss me one day,â You said as you walked past him, pickle jar under one arm, flashlight in your other hand. âAnd when you do, Iâm gonna be so smug youâll try to throw yourself off the building.â
Bucky stood there in the hall, alone, heart doing its dumb little thudding thing. He hated you. He adored you. And he was never getting that toothbrush insult out of his head.
-
When the big moment happened, It wasnât a big mission. It wasnât even a real mission. It was just supposed to be recon.
And yet somehow, you were sitting on the floor of a dusty, abandoned warehouse with a concussion, holding a broken walkie-talkie like it personally betrayed you.
âOkay, but in my defense,â You slurred slightly, âI didnât know the raccoon had a knife.â
Bucky stared at you, expression unreadable, as blood dripped slowly from your temple.
âYou ran into an unmarked building alone, set off three alarms, fell through a skylight, and got jumped by wildlife.â
You held up a finger. âArmed wildlife.â
He ran a hand down his face.
âI swear to God, you are one poorly timed pun away from getting locked in a broom closet until the end of time.â
You blinked up at him. âKinky.â
He turned away so fast you could almost hear his brain blue-screen. âJesus Christ.â
But when he looked back at you: your lip bloodied, eyes dazed, hair full of insulation from where youâd crashed through the ceiling like a chaotic Christmas angel, something in his chest snapped.
You were always like this. Impossible. Endearing. Brilliant in the most horrifying ways. A human Wikipedia article with a death wish and a spark in your eyes that made him forget, just for a second, that the world was awful.
And that spark was flickering. Just a little. And he hated it.
âYou canât keep doing this,â He began, voice tight. âYou canât keep treating your life like itâs expendable.â
You blinked slowly. âThat sounds fake. Iâm clearly immortal.â
âIâm serious.â He crouched in front of you, fists clenched. âYou run into every situation like youâre bulletproof, and youâre not. One day, Iâm not gonna be there to drag your dumbass out of a flaming building or disarm a guy who has a bazooka made of forks or- or whatever the hell today was!â
âIt was a raccoon with a grudge.â
âThatâs not a thing!â
You stared at him in silence for a beat, then said, very softly, âYouâre worried about me.â
He froze.
âIâm always worried about you,â He said, almost too quiet to hear. âYou think I wake up every day wondering what country Iâll have to fly to because you thought jumping off a roof would âprobably be fineâ if you landed in a bush?!â
You tilted your head. âIt was a very fluffy bush.â
âI love you, you absolute menace!â
Silence. You blinked. Then he blinked. Somewhere in the warehouse, a raccoon chittered menacingly.
ââŠYou love me?â You echoed, like heâd just said he wanted to marry a zucchini.
Bucky looked like he might actually combust. âI didnât mean to say it like that.â
âSay it like what?â
âLike I love you. Which I do. But I was gonna do it after, like⊠dinner. Or when you werenât bleeding.â
âIs this why you made me tea every time I electrocuted myself?â
âYes!â
âAnd why you punched that guy who called me a liability?â
âAlso yes!â
âAnd why you didnât kill me when I installed motion sensors in the hallway and forgot to tell anyone?â
âI almost killed you.â
You were quiet for a long moment. Then: âOkay.â
He blinked. âOkay?â
You nodded, still loopy but smiling now. âOkay. I love you too.â
He stared. âYou do?â
âYeah. I mean, why else would I let you eat the last cookie that one time? Or give Deborah full permission to follow you around and scan your emotional damage like a clingy Roomba?â
He laughed, just once, short and stunned.
You leaned forward and poked his chest with one finger. âAlso, I have a very deep fondness for emotionally repressed war criminals. Itâs kind of my thing.â
Bucky groaned. âYouâre insufferable.â
âAnd yet. Youâre in love with me.â
âIâm regretting it deeply.â
âNo youâre not.â You smiled that crooked, chaotic smile that had ruined his life in the best way.
And despite everything, the dust, the blood, the deeply traumatized raccoon now watching you both from the shadows, he leaned in and kissed you.
It was gentle. Just for a second. As if to say, Yes. Youâre chaos incarnate. But youâre mine.
When he pulled back, it was silent for a moment. Both of you looking in each otherâs eyes before you whispered, âDid you just kiss me in front of a knife raccoon?â
Bucky exhaled slowly, already regretting all his life choices. âGod help me. I did.â
With all Bucky has had to deal with, he definitely earned chaos privileges and should get his own medal lol. Thank you for reading!!! âĄ
Summary: Overtime, your questionable tendencies and unpredictable phrases have rubbed off onto your boyfriend. The team reacts by trying their best to un-corrupt the supersoldier. (Bucky Barnes x Avengers!reader)
Word Count: 1.2k+
A/N: Thank you to @ozwriterchick for the idea. Enjoy and Happy reading!
Main Masterlist | Earthâs Mightiest Headache Masterlist
There was a debriefing. The usual boring, long, and necessary meeting. Everyone sat around the conference table looking various degrees of irritated.
You were leaning back in your chair, chewing gum, spinning a pen between your fingers, and mentally ranking everyoneâs haircuts from âtragicâ to âgod-tier.â (Sam had climbed two spots today.)
Steve was talking, bless him, but honestly, your brain had already turned into a screensaver.
â-and next time, we need tighter communication. Nat, cover the north entrance. Sam, recon from above. And you two,â He gestured at you and Bucky. âTry not to burn the entire building down next time.â
You opened your mouth, probably to say something deeply unhelpful and not at all relevant but then it happened.
Bucky got there first.
Deadpan, casual, and not even glancing up from his notepad, he muttered:
âI donât control the fire. The fire controls me.â
The room went silent.
Sam slowly turned his head. âWhat.â
Nat blinked. âIâm sorry- Did Barnes just say that?â
Steve dropped his tablet. You were staring at him like heâd just told you he was pregnant with a spider-dog hybrid.
Bucky glanced up with a shrug. âWhat? Itâs true.â
âNo, no, no, back up.â You stood, pointing at him. âThatâs my level of chaos. You donât get to say things like that with a straight face. Thatâs my thing.â
âPretty sure Iâve earned chaos privileges by now,â He said in an even tone, biting into an apple.
Nat coughed. âWhat else have you been saying lately?â
You whirled on Bucky. âYou didnât even flinch. You said it like a man who has absolutely Googled whether rats can legally vote.â
Bucky smirked. âI have due to our last date. They canât yet.â
Sam slid down in his chair. âOh god, thereâs two of them now.â
Tony, who had joined the meeting late with a coffee and zero patience, looked between you and Bucky. âI always knew one of you was a bad influence. I just didnât expect it to be her.â
âI resent that,â You said.
âI expected more from you, Barnes,â Tony replied.
Steve looked like he was having a mild stroke. âI spent a decade dragging him out of assassin mode and youâŠyou-â He pointed at you with all the drama of a soap opera actor. âYou corrupted him.â
You crossed your arms. âExcuse me, I elevated him. You think heâd even know what a possum rave is without me?â
âWait,â Bucky said, serious again. âThatâs real?â
âUnfortunately,â Sam muttered.
Bucky turned to you. âDo you think we could-â
âNo,â Steve and Sam said in unison.
Later that night, you and Bucky were sitting on the roof, feet dangling over the ledge, and watching the stars while splitting a packet of strawberry Pop-Tarts.
You nudged him with your shoulder. âYou really said it, huh?â
He smirked. âIt just came out.â
âAnd the fire controls you?â
He looked at you with something soft and proud in his eyes. âMaybe Iâve just been spending too much time with my favorite disaster.â
You grinned and leaned into his side. âNext step: getting you to name a pigeon.â
âAlready done. His nameâs Charles. He watched us fight three agents yesterday.â
You gasped. âYouâre perfect.â
âI know,â Bucky said. âYou trained me well.â
-
As time passed, Bucky was the problem now.
At first, the team found it endearing. The grumpy super soldier smiling at dumb jokes, randomly throwing out facts about duck mating rituals, or muttering âvibe check failedâ after knocking someone out. In some strange way, it was charming. Odd, but charming.
But then he named a second pigeon. And that was the last straw.
âWe need to intervene,â Natasha said, deadly serious with her arms folded as she stood at the head of the war room table.
âWhy?â Bucky asked, mid-bite of a toaster strudel. âCharles Junior likes me.â
âExactly,â Tony said, pointing dramatically. âThe fact that youâre calling it Charles Junior is the problem.â
âI donât see the issue,â You said from your seat next to Bucky, proudly wearing your â#1 Chaos Heroâ necklace again. âItâs genetic. Charles Prime had strong leader energy.â
Steve looked between you both like he was watching two people fall off a moral cliff in slow motion. âYou used to be a soldier.â
âHe is a soldier,â You said. âHe just also knows five ways to make banana bread â
Bucky nodded solemnly. âJust donât over-mix the batter.â
Tony facepalmed. âNope. This is a brain rot virus, and youâre patient zero.â
You smiled sweetly. âThank you.â
âI wasnât complimenting you.â
âStill taking it that way.â
Natasha, still painfully calm, pulled out a folder labeled âOPERATION: WINTER DETOX.â
âOh no,â Bucky muttered.
âYes,â She said. âWe're deprogramming the chaos out of you. We're doing it for the safety of the building, and also the pigeons.â
-
During phase one, you were banned from interacting with Bucky for 48 hours. No comms. No breakfast together. No late-night feral cuddling where you told him shark facts until he passed out.
You broke the rule in 6 minutes.
Literally. You broke into the vent system and dropped into his room from the ceiling like some kind of gremlin god.
âDid you know octopuses have nine brains?â
Bucky looked up from his book, deadpan. âI do now.â
When Sam burst in to yell at you, he found Bucky trying to braid your hair while you explained the 36 reasons flamingos are both cursed and divine.
Sam left with his soul cracked in half.
Phase two didnât end much better either. They tried re-soldiering him. Military documentaries. Physical training drills. A six-hour silent stare-off with Steve.
You showed up with a whiteboard that said âTodayâs Mission: Turn Bucky Into a Lizard.â
Steve had to lock you out of the room and block your contact from Buckyâs phone for two hours.
By phase three, the team tried pairing Bucky with other Avengers. Nat. Rhodey. Bruce.
Each one ended up slightly more unhinged than when they started.
Bruce now exclusively drinks out of a cup shaped like a frog. Nat started saying âmoodâ unironically. Rhodey got a ferret and named it âMini War Machine.â
âDo you see what youâve done?â Steve begged one night as you and Bucky made soup in the communal kitchen while retelling an episode of River Monsters using only metaphors and curse words.
âI made the team fun,â You said, stabbing a ladle toward him.
Bucky beamed. âThey laugh more now. And I havenât threatened to murder anyone in two weeks.â
Tony nodded slowly. âHeâs not wrong. Still terrifying, but now itâs⊠unpredictable terrifying.â
The breaking point came the next morning. Bucky walked into the briefing room wearing a shirt that said: âEmotionally Stable is a Strong Wordâ
You wore one that said: âI Know the Assignment. I Am Choosing to Ignore It.â
Steve stood then walked out muttering something about moving to Wakanda.
The team officially gave up trying to fix Bucky Barnes.
-
Later that night, Bucky was lying beside you, watching the stars again as the city hummed below.
âThey really think Iâm broken now,â He said.
You shrugged, twirling a glow stick between your fingers. âThey just donât know how to handle dual-wielding emotional repression and chaotic brilliance.â
He turned to you, smiling. âYou really think itâs brilliance?â
You kissed his cheek. âObviously. I donât waste my time on mediocrity. Now help me build a pigeon obstacle course on the balcony.â
He nodded. âItâs what Charles Prime wouldâve wanted.â
Same! Theyâre so whimsical and outrageous, itâs so entertaining. Thank you for reading!!! âĄ
Summary: You, a dangerously chaotic genius with the common sense of a soggy spoon, somehow captures the heart of Bucky Barnes. Despite the constant emotional whiplash, raccoon-related injuries, and deeply cursed inventions, Bucky finds himself falling hard⊠somewhere between a Capri Sun intervention robot and a vent-related rescue. (Bucky Barnes x Avengers!reader)
Disclaimer: This was based on this post I came across from @ghouljams earlier. Please let me know if you want me to remove any of the information you listed here.
Word Count: 3.4k+
A/N: I had a blast writing this and I am begging on my hands and knees that other people like this as well so I can write more of unhinged reader. Happy reading!
Main Masterlist
Bucky didnât mean to get attached. In fact, he very specifically meant not to get attached to you.
You, with your wide smile and increasingly concerning decision-making skills. You, who walked into a briefing ten minutes late with a Slurpee, claimed you got âtime-displaced,â and then flawlessly identified the year, model, and VIN of a car from a blurry photo Tony handed out. âThatâs a 1972 Chevelle SS,â Youâd said casually. âBut the rims are from a later model. 1976, I think.â
He stared at you. Everyone did.
You slurped. âWhat?â
Later, Bucky watched you put your phone in the fridge, forget about it, then ask him if heâd âseen a text from 7-Eleven recently.â You didnât even seem high. That was the worst part. You just⊠existed like that. All the time.
A living contradiction. A walking cosmic joke. The human version of a browser with 72 tabs open, one playing music, none labeled, and all of them about wildly different topics ranging from âtheoretical wormhole stabilityâ to âcan ducks feel shame.â
And the worst part? You were insanely good at your job.
When it came to the field, you moved like youâd choreographed every punch in advance. Like your brain hit a switch and rerouted all the loose marbles into sheer precision.
But outside of that? Absolute chaos.
One time you asked if the word âcolonelâ was a typo because youâd only ever read it.
"Why is it spelled like 'colon-el'?â Youâd asked Bucky, eating popcorn with a throwing knife for apparently no reason. âLike. Youâre telling me we all just agreed to ignore the 'L'?â
He blinked slowly. âYes.â
âSounds fake but okay.â
He wanted to strangle you. He wanted to kiss you. He wanted to wrap you in a blanket and take you to a doctor because no one should eat four bananas and not know why their stomach hurts. (âI thought they were like⊠natureâs snack bars!â Youâd wailed from the floor. âWhy does nature lie?â)
Still, there was something undeniably magnetic about you. Something that made Bucky keep finding excuses to be around you. Something that made him bite back a smile when you declared, with utter confidence, that âCitizen Kaneâ was a manâs full name and you âfelt bad for him growing up with that.â
Sam had to leave the room. Steve looked like he aged five years. Bucky? He just leaned back in his chair and muttered, âYouâre so lucky youâre pretty.â
You beamed. âI know, right?â
And that was just the beginning.
-
Bucky knew it the moment you turned to him in the middle of a high-stakes infiltration and whispered:
âHey. Do you think raccoons ever get embarrassed?â
He froze mid-step, crouched beside you behind a cluster of storage crates, both of you watching a Hydra compound patrol pace along the wall ahead. Guns primed. Comms live. Two minutes to breach.
You blinked at him, eyes wide and totally serious about the question in the entirely inappropriate setting.
âWhat?â He hissed.
You frowned thoughtfully, like he was the weird one. âThey have those little hands, right? Like⊠what if one drops its snack in front of another raccoon. Is that, like, raccoon shame? Do they feel judged?â
Bucky stared. He wasnât sure if he was hallucinating. It had been a long week after all.
Then you added, âAnyway, two guards approaching. Theyâll pass each other in about four seconds. I can take the left. You want the one with the scar?â
You didnât even wait for an answer. Your body vanished into the shadows, clean and calculated. Three seconds later, both guards were unconscious and being gently rolled into the bushes like unwanted pizza boxes.
Bucky just stood there, breathing. You terrified him but not in the way enemies did. No, that would be too simple. Because he could fight Hydra, take a bullet, disarm a bomb, but you?
You were something else. A walking contradiction.
You once tripped over your own shoelaces while explaining quantum theory, then beat four highly trained operatives unconscious with a clipboard. You called a Glock a âgrippy lilâ pew stickâ but recited the Geneva Convention word-for-word because you âliked bedtime reading.â
And tonight was no different.
By the time the mission was done, the intel recovered, and the building cleared, Bucky was sore, bruised, and fully convinced that he was doomed. Because somewhere between the absurd commentary, the flawless fighting, and the way you wiped blood from your brow and grinned at him like you werenât covered in chaos, he felt it.
That thing. The awful, nauseating, heart-clutching feeling.
Affection.
It hit him in the middle of your post-mission debrief, which mostly consisted of you sitting on the quinjet floor, drinking chocolate milk out of a thermos and recounting the entire op like it was a cute story you were telling children.
âAnd then I was like, Bam! right to the neck, and he just went down like a sack of sad potatoes. Did you see that? You saw that, right, Buck? I did the thing with the kick!â
He didnât answer. He was looking at you like youâd grown a second head or like how you were the only thing stuck in his head these days. God, you were awful.
You had two blood on your elbow and half your gear undone. You were sprawled out on the floor like a sleep-deprived gremlin, and when you looked up at him and smiled, like he was the only person in the world who mattered⊠He was done. Gone.
âYou okay there, Grumpypants?â You asked.
âI think I might hate you,â He muttered, sitting down beside you.
You grinned, bumping his shoulder with yours. âThatâs fair. Iâm an acquired taste. Like oysters. Or war crimes.â
He barked a laugh before he could stop it. You looked so proud.
âIâm serious,â He said, sobering. âYouâre gonna get yourself killed one day. You donât take anything seriously.â
You just stared at him for a moment, and then, quietly, you said, âI take you seriously.â
The jet went quiet.
And Bucky sat very, very still because somehow, that hit harder than any mission ever had.
You werenât just funny. Or weird. Or brilliant in a way that made his head hurt.
You were kind. Kind in a way he hadnât felt in years. Like you saw through the Winter Soldier and the scowl and the kill count, and you still chose to sit beside him, sipping chocolate milk and talking about raccoon shame.
And Bucky Barnes, world-weary assassin, trauma-laden super-soldier, turned to you and realized:
He was fucked.
In love with a person who once confidently said âquinoaâ was pronounced âkin-oh-ahâ and didnât believe him when he corrected you.
You looked up from your thermos. âYouâre doing the staring thing again. Am I bleeding from the ear?â
âNo,â Bucky said, voice low. âYouâre justâŠâ
âSexy?â You offered helpfully.
ââŠTerrifying.â
You winked. âSame difference.â
And Bucky Barnes, against all logic, reason, and survival instinct, knew he was already in too deep.
-
The next mission had gone off without a hitch⊠at least, for everyone except Bucky.
A few cuts here, a couple of bruises there, but nothing too serious. At least, thatâs what he told himself as he sat on the edge of the quinjet, feeling the burn in his shoulder from a bullet graze. But the moment you walked into the medbay with a roll of bandages in your hand, it was like everything inside him twisted in a way he couldnât explain.
âOkay, Bucky. Time to let the master do her magic,â you said, flashing that grin of yours, the one that always made his heart do weird, involuntary things.
Bucky blinked, trying to shake the disoriented feeling. âYouâre the one who got shot today. Why am I the one getting patched up?â
âBecause Iâm immortal,â You said matter-of-factly. âAlso, Iâm not bleeding anywhere you can see, so thatâs a bonus.â
Bucky raised an eyebrow. âYouâre immortal?â
You sat down beside him, rolling your sleeves up. âNo, but I like to pretend I am. You know, like a cooler superhero.â
He winced slightly as you poked at his side. âThatâs what Iâm dealing with, huh?â
âYou love it,â You teased, squeezing out some antiseptic onto a cotton pad.
âYouâre lucky I havenât thrown you out of a plane for this,â Bucky muttered, though he couldnât stop the faint grin from tugging at his lips.
âNot gonna lie, Iâd be mad if you did,â You admitted, gently dabbing at his side. âAlso, Iâd haunt you. I know how to haunt people. Iâve read a lot of books about ghosts.â
He chuckled, despite himself. âOf course you have.â
âOh, absolutely. I even have a theory about why the Titanic sank, and itâs completely different from the official one. But Iâm telling you right now, itâs not what they say.â
Bucky glanced over at you, eyebrow raised. âThis I gotta hear.â
You leaned closer, lowering your voice dramatically as if revealing state secrets. âOkay, so. It wasnât an iceberg that caused the sinking. It was actually the government trying to erase all evidence of the giant squid they were experimenting on, and they blamed it on the iceberg to cover up the real cause.â
Bucky blinked, unsure whether you were serious or not. âWait, what?â He asked slowly.
You looked at him deadpan. âYou didnât hear the rumors? They found footage, you know. The squid was huge. It even had tentacles.â
He stared at you, speechless.
"Anyway," You continued, as if you hadnât just suggested the worldâs greatest conspiracy, "What we do know is that my bandage technique is flawless. See this?" You lifted a corner of the bandage to show him a perfect wrap around his side.
Bucky blinked. "Did you just distract me with a giant squid theory while you patched me up?"
âAbsolutely.â You beamed at him. âWorks every time. Just donât tell anyone youâre in love with me because Iâm not responsible for any heart attacks.â
Bucky froze, his heartbeat suddenly in his throat.
You were still so nonchalant. Still so you, so damn confident and so sure of yourself. It took everything in him not to lean in and kiss you right there.
But then, you looked up at him, and for the briefest moment, that smile of yours softened. âYouâre good, Bucky,â You said quietly. âYouâve been through more shit than any of us. But youâre still here. Thatâs something, you know?â
His chest tightened.
âAnd you know what?â You continued, your voice so much softer now, like a quiet reassurance. âYou donât have to be a soldier all the time. Sometimes, you can just be Bucky.â
He swallowed, looking at you. âAnd what about you?â
âOh, me? Iâm a mess,â You shrugged, finally looking away, as if it was no big deal. âIâm just here to make the chaos look cute.â
Your eyes flicked back to him, that familiar teasing glint in them. âThatâs my secret. You like it.â
Bucky chuckled, but it didnât reach his eyes. He wanted to say something, wanted to admit something. That little voice in his head kept screaming at him to just say it already, but he was scared. He was scared of how deep you had burrowed under his skin, of how easy it was to forget everything else when you were around.
Instead, he just leaned forward and cupped your face, his thumb gently brushing your cheek. âYouâre⊠something else, you know that?â
You blinked at him in surprise, your lips parted, as if trying to process the sudden shift in the air. For a moment, there was a palpable tension between the two of you, like the universe was holding its breath, waiting for one of you to do something.
But then, in your usual way, you broke it, shrugging with a grin. âI know. Youâre welcome.â
Buckyâs heart did a weird flip, and for the first time in what felt like forever, he allowed himself to truly relax, just a little. He didnât want to admit it. Not yet. Not even to himself.
But as you leaned in to finish wrapping his side, your hand brushing his skin lightly, he knew he was already in way too deep.
-
The next incident started with a toaster. Not even a cool toaster. Just a boring, silver Stark-issued kitchen appliance that you were suspiciously proud of. I Youâd taken it apart and rebuilt it but âbetter.â No one asked you to. No one gave you permission. You just did it.
âNow it sings the SpongeBob theme when your toast is done,â You explained, beaming as you held up a slice of whole wheat like it was a golden ticket.
Bucky stared at you. âYou tampered with government property.â
âEnhanced.â You corrected. âAnd before you ask, no, I will not apologize. This is the future.â
Then it sang. âWho lives in a pineapple under the sea?â BWEEEEEP - Toast done.
Bucky looked like he was praying for divine intervention. âYouâre gonna get us all court-martialed over this.â
Two hours later, you were banned from the kitchen, which didnât stop you from relocating to the common area with your newest project: building what you claimed was a âmousetrap but for anxiety.â
It was made of pipe cleaners, glow sticks, and what mightâve been a dismantled Roomba.
âI call her Deborah,â You said, gently stroking it. âShe senses emotional instability and gives you a juice box.â
As if on cue, it whirred over to Bucky, bumped into his leg, and slowly offered him a Capri Sun.
He didnât know whether to laugh or cry. âIâm not drinking that.â
âThen she thinks youâre too far gone. Sheâs very wise.â
Steve walked in, surveyed the scene, and simply turned around without speaking. He didnât even ask anymore.
Later that night, Bucky caught you in the hallway attempting to climb into the ceiling with a flashlight between your teeth and a jar of pickles under your arm.
âDo I want to know?â He asked, exhausted.
You paused halfway into a vent, dropping the flashlight briefly. âDepends. Do you believe in ceiling gremlins?â
âNo.â
âThen Iâm doing taxes.â
He rubbed his eyes. âPlease. Iâm begging you. Come down.â
You stared at him for a long moment, then slowly slid back out like a raccoon emerging from a trash can. âOkay. But only because you asked nicely and not because I got stuck.â
You had absolutely gotten stuck. And the worst part? He was smitten.
Every time you did something completely absurd, which was always, he found himself watching you a little too long, smiling a little too much, wondering what the hell you were going to do next and why it made his chest ache in a weirdly pleasant way.
Even now, covered in ceiling dust and holding a pickle jar, you looked up at him with that infuriatingly endearing grin.
âYouâre in love with me,â You stated confidently.
Bucky blinked. âExcuse me?â
âYou heard me.â You popped a pickle in your mouth. âYouâve got that look. Like a grumpy cat who accidentally cuddled someone and doesnât want to admit it.â
âI do not look like-â
âIt's okay. You donât have to say it.â You patted his chest affectionately. âYour body language screams âemotionally unavailable man finds chaotic cryptid and feels things.ââ
âI am not emotionally unavailable.â
âYou have a go bag, Bucky.â
ââŠThatâs standard protocol.â
âYour toothbrush is still in the packaging.â
He opened his mouth, then closed it again. Youâd won. Again.
âYouâre gonna kiss me one day,â You said as you walked past him, pickle jar under one arm, flashlight in your other hand. âAnd when you do, Iâm gonna be so smug youâll try to throw yourself off the building.â
Bucky stood there in the hall, alone, heart doing its dumb little thudding thing. He hated you. He adored you. And he was never getting that toothbrush insult out of his head.
-
When the big moment happened, It wasnât a big mission. It wasnât even a real mission. It was just supposed to be recon.
And yet somehow, you were sitting on the floor of a dusty, abandoned warehouse with a concussion, holding a broken walkie-talkie like it personally betrayed you.
âOkay, but in my defense,â You slurred slightly, âI didnât know the raccoon had a knife.â
Bucky stared at you, expression unreadable, as blood dripped slowly from your temple.
âYou ran into an unmarked building alone, set off three alarms, fell through a skylight, and got jumped by wildlife.â
You held up a finger. âArmed wildlife.â
He ran a hand down his face.
âI swear to God, you are one poorly timed pun away from getting locked in a broom closet until the end of time.â
You blinked up at him. âKinky.â
He turned away so fast you could almost hear his brain blue-screen. âJesus Christ.â
But when he looked back at you: your lip bloodied, eyes dazed, hair full of insulation from where youâd crashed through the ceiling like a chaotic Christmas angel, something in his chest snapped.
You were always like this. Impossible. Endearing. Brilliant in the most horrifying ways. A human Wikipedia article with a death wish and a spark in your eyes that made him forget, just for a second, that the world was awful.
And that spark was flickering. Just a little. And he hated it.
âYou canât keep doing this,â He began, voice tight. âYou canât keep treating your life like itâs expendable.â
You blinked slowly. âThat sounds fake. Iâm clearly immortal.â
âIâm serious.â He crouched in front of you, fists clenched. âYou run into every situation like youâre bulletproof, and youâre not. One day, Iâm not gonna be there to drag your dumbass out of a flaming building or disarm a guy who has a bazooka made of forks or- or whatever the hell today was!â
âIt was a raccoon with a grudge.â
âThatâs not a thing!â
You stared at him in silence for a beat, then said, very softly, âYouâre worried about me.â
He froze.
âIâm always worried about you,â He said, almost too quiet to hear. âYou think I wake up every day wondering what country Iâll have to fly to because you thought jumping off a roof would âprobably be fineâ if you landed in a bush?!â
You tilted your head. âIt was a very fluffy bush.â
âI love you, you absolute menace!â
Silence. You blinked. Then he blinked. Somewhere in the warehouse, a raccoon chittered menacingly.
ââŠYou love me?â You echoed, like heâd just said he wanted to marry a zucchini.
Bucky looked like he might actually combust. âI didnât mean to say it like that.â
âSay it like what?â
âLike I love you. Which I do. But I was gonna do it after, like⊠dinner. Or when you werenât bleeding.â
âIs this why you made me tea every time I electrocuted myself?â
âYes!â
âAnd why you punched that guy who called me a liability?â
âAlso yes!â
âAnd why you didnât kill me when I installed motion sensors in the hallway and forgot to tell anyone?â
âI almost killed you.â
You were quiet for a long moment. Then: âOkay.â
He blinked. âOkay?â
You nodded, still loopy but smiling now. âOkay. I love you too.â
He stared. âYou do?â
âYeah. I mean, why else would I let you eat the last cookie that one time? Or give Deborah full permission to follow you around and scan your emotional damage like a clingy Roomba?â
He laughed, just once, short and stunned.
You leaned forward and poked his chest with one finger. âAlso, I have a very deep fondness for emotionally repressed war criminals. Itâs kind of my thing.â
Bucky groaned. âYouâre insufferable.â
âAnd yet. Youâre in love with me.â
âIâm regretting it deeply.â
âNo youâre not.â You smiled that crooked, chaotic smile that had ruined his life in the best way.
And despite everything, the dust, the blood, the deeply traumatized raccoon now watching you both from the shadows, he leaned in and kissed you.
It was gentle. Just for a second. As if to say, Yes. Youâre chaos incarnate. But youâre mine.
When he pulled back, it was silent for a moment. Both of you looking in each otherâs eyes before you whispered, âDid you just kiss me in front of a knife raccoon?â
Bucky exhaled slowly, already regretting all his life choices. âGod help me. I did.â
Summary: To the outside world, including Steve Rogers, you're just a close couple. But as Steve begins to notice subtle shifts: distance, lies, unease, he starts suspecting something is wrong. In the moments he tries to confront you both about it, you and Bucky, still cloaked in innocence, continue playing the part. (Yandere Bucky Barnes x Yandere!reader)
Warnings/Disclaimer: Minors DNI. Dark Bucky Barnes. Dark reader. Yandere themes. Implied stalking/watching immensely. Implied death. (Hydra agent)
Word Count: 1.8k+
A/N: I could definitely continue this, but I wanted to focus on an outsiderâs perspective for this one. You are responsible for the media you consume. Let me know if I should add something else to the warnings, tags, or anything else.
Main Masterlist | Obsessive Love (Part 1.)
Steve Rogers wasnât the kind of man to jump to conclusions. He believed in giving people the benefit of the doubt, in second chances and quiet patience, especially when it came to Bucky.
So when he noticed that you and Bucky had grown closer, he smiled. It was good, he thought. Bucky deserved someone kind. Someone who made him laugh again, even if it was that small, fleeting kind of laugh Bucky rarely let out. Steve had seen it once or twice when you were around; a twitch at the corner of Buckyâs mouth, a softening in his eyes. That alone made Steve relax.
At first.
But it didnât take long before something felt⊠off.
It wasnât anything either of you did directly. It was the way Bucky always seemed to be near you, not in an obvious way, but always hovering somewhere just close enough. You could be in the training room, tying your shoes, and there he'd be, watching silently from the other side. You could be in the kitchen pouring tea, and heâd already be there, leaning against the counter, mug untouched.
Steve noticed that you didnât mind. If anything, you seemed to expect it. Like it was natural. Like Bucky belonged there beside you and only you.
He chalked it up to trauma at first. Bucky had latched onto you for comfort, and you were returning the favor. It made sense. You were both quiet, careful, observant. You matched him in energy: soft tones, gentle steps, secrets tucked behind subtle smiles. But the balance between you was strange and way too in sync. Almost too practiced like you didnât just understand each other, you anticipated each other.
And then there were the missions.
Steve began to notice how people who flirted with you on assignments, even jokingly, never got a second chance. Not because you rejected them. No, you always smiled in that sweet, calm way of yours, tilting your head like you didnât even notice the attention.
But Bucky noticed and Steve began to suspect that something was happening after the fact.
A Hydra defector who had been âtoo handsyâ with you during an interrogation mysteriously disappeared between transport stops. No trace. No camera footage. The others brushed it off. âProbably escaped.â But Steve caught the look in Buckyâs eyes that night when he told you, âYou donât have to worry about him anymore.â
You had responded sweetly. "I know. I wasnât worried."
Steve didnât question it out loud. But he felt a small crack in his chest open. Still, he said nothing. Because love made people protective, right? Bucky had been used, abused, weaponized for decades. If he felt like he had something, someone to protect now, who was Steve to challenge that?
But the more time passed, the stranger it became.
He once walked into a quiet common room, only to find Bucky sitting silently beside you, his metal fingers grazing the side of your wrist while you calmly read a book. You were smiling, a soft, dreamy thing, but what startled Steve was how Buckyâs eyes werenât on the book. They were locked on your face, unmoving. Like he was memorizing you. Like if he looked away, you might vanish.
Steve coughed to break the tension, but neither of you flinched. So, he brought it up gently that night. âYou and Bucky seem close lately.â
You looked up at him with wide, harmless eyes. âHe makes me feel safe,â Youâd said, sweet as sugar.
Steve nodded slowly. âThatâs good. Just make sure itâs⊠healthy, okay?â
You tilted your head like you didnât understand. âHealthy?â
Steve smiled tightly. âYeah. Just⊠keep looking out for each other. Thatâs all.â
But behind your eyes, something unreadable flickered, a quiet promise wrapped in silk. You nodded. âAlways.â
The word didnât do much to ease Steveâs concerns. Time continued to pass with strange things coincidences occurring, the love between you two growing even stronger. It all felt off to him when he knew he should have been happy for his best friend. Maybe because Bucky was his best friend that he went to seek out Bucky alone one day, but Steve didnât know.
He didnât know that Buckyâs room was now yours too, not officially, not in front of anyone else. But Bucky had long since cleared a drawer, laid out an extra blanket, and memorized the sound of your heartbeat in sleep.
Steve didnât know about the way Bucky trailed fingers down your back while you whispered in the dark, your voices blending together in quiet, mutual reassurances that no one else mattered. He never heard Buckyâs voice saying no one else deserved you.
He didnât know about the list Bucky kept in his head. All the names of everyone who ever made you uncomfortable, who looked at you too long, who smiled at you the way only he should.
And he certainly didnât know that you had your own list too.
Not violent, not confrontational. No, yours was different. You didnât need to hurt anyone. You just needed to watch. To gather things like passcodes, schedules, weak points, and tuck them away like puzzle pieces. If anyone got too close to Bucky, you knew exactly how to make them leave. An exposed secret. A missing key. A harmless rumor whispered in the right ear.
And you always smiled. You always stayed sweet. Thatâs why no one ever suspected a thing.
Except, maybe, Steve.
Because was definitely starting to feel it, the way the air shifted when you were together. The way your devotion to each other was too complete. Too consuming.
So, here he was. It was late, the kind of quiet that settled only after everyone else had gone to bed and the Tower seemed to exhale. The hallways were dim, just the soft amber glow of the lights lining the floor. Steve didnât usually walk this floor after midnight, but something had pulled him from sleep.
A feeling.
He was standing outside of Buckyâs door. It was closed, nothing out of the ordinary. Quiet. Unremarkable. Except your room was dark too. Empty.
Steve stood there a moment longer than he meant to, staring at Buckyâs door, then to your door across the hall, then back again. He hadnât seen you all day. Come to think of it, he hadnât seen you much at all lately unless you were with Bucky. And that wasnât unusual, not on the surface, couples got close.
But this wasnât just close. This was⊠something.
He lifted his hand and knocked twice. There was silence for a moment then the soft sound of movement. The door opened after a few seconds to reveal Bucky bare-chested, relaxed, and not alarmed. But not surprised either.
Steveâs eyes flicked over his friendâs shoulder, and there you were. Sitting cross-legged on Buckyâs bed, one of his shirts drowning your frame, a book in your lap. You looked up and smiled, warm, gentle, like someone caught in the middle of nothing suspicious at all.
âSteve,â You greeted softly, tilting your head. âEverything okay?â
Bucky didnât move to block the door, but he didnât step aside either. âWhatâs going on?â
Steve swallowed. It was dawning on him that he shouldnât have come. He wasnât even sure what he wanted to say. But the pressure in his chest had grown too heavy to ignore.
âI just⊠wanted to check on you two.â
Your smile widened, so sweet it nearly stung. âWeâre fine.â
Steveâs eyes lingered on you, on how comfortable you looked in Buckyâs bed, in his space, like you belonged there. Like you'd always been there.
He turned his attention to Bucky. âYou havenât been on rotation lately. I figured youâd say something.â
Buckyâs expression didnât shift. âDidnât have to. Nat swapped with me.â
Steve nodded slowly. âYou didnât tell me.â
In response, he just shrugged. âDidnât think I had to. She offered.â
Something inside Steve twisted. Not the lie, Nat probably had offered. But it wasnât the truth either.
You glanced at Bucky, then back at Steve with wide, concerned eyes. âDid we do something wrong?â
âNo,â Steve stated quickly. âNo, itâs not that. I justâŠâ His jaw clenched. âYou two seem⊠close.â
âWe are,â Bucky said before you could. His voice wasnât defensive, just final. Undeniable.
You leaned forward slightly, resting your cheek on your knee, still watching Steve. âIs that bad?â
Steve exhaled. âOf course not. Itâs justâŠâ His gaze drifted around the room again, catching the second mug on the nightstand. The way your boots sat neatly by Buckyâs dresser. How a photo of the three of you, taken months ago, had been moved, slightly askew, like someone couldnât stand the sight of it being centered on all of you.
Bucky watched him scan the room in silence.
Steve met his eyes again. âI just want to make sure no oneâs getting hurt.â
Silence.
Your smile didnât drop, but it dimmed, just a little. Your tone remained even though, but had a hint of confusion in it. âYou mean⊠like emotionally?â
Steve hesitated. âThat, and⊠otherwise.â
Buckyâs jaw tensed. Just slightly. âNo oneâs getting hurt.â
It was the first time Steve almost didnât believe him.
You stood up then, walking slowly to Buckyâs side. Your hand slid up his arm, fingers wrapping around the crook of his elbow. Not clingy. Just natural. Just claiming.
Steve tried not to stare at your actions. âYou two would tell me, right? If something felt wrong?â
âOf course,â You whispered, tilting your head again, the innocent confusion in your tone too pure to question, too calm to accuse.
But Steve felt it again building in his chest, that pressure. That wrongness. And he couldnât identify or say why, but it terrified him more than anything else. You both looked so perfect standing there, close and quiet and composed, like a picture that had never been touched by blood or secrets.
Like youâd never hidden anything at all.
âI just want you to be okay,â He sighed at last.
âWe are,â Bucky said firmly.
You nodded, stepping a little closer to Steve. âYou donât have to worry about us, Steve.â
And for a moment, Steve swore something flickered behind your eyes, just a shadow, a shimmer of something deeper. Something that didnât match the smile on your lips.
He nodded stiffly. âAlright. Goodnight.â
âGoodnight, Steve,â You both echoed in perfect harmony.
The door closed quietly behind him. And the moment it did, Bucky exhaled. Slowly. Like heâd been holding it the whole time. You remained silent and turned to him, melting into his arms, into your rightful place in his bed, where the rest of the world couldnât see the possessiveness in your fingers or the way your heartbeat sped when he held you tighter in his arms.
âHeâs starting to notice,â You murmured.
âI know.â
âDo you think heâll do anything?â
âNo,â Bucky whispered, brushing your hair back with his metal hand. âNot yet.â
You smiled into his chest, a gentle laugh escaping your lips. A honey-laced weapon.
âHeâll learn eventually,â You whispered. âYouâre mine.â
âAnd youâre mine,â Bucky growled.
And the rest of the world could burn.
I wanna post this Yandere!Bucky Barnes x Yandere!reader fic that has a part two if enough people like it, but Iâm noticing I havenât posted much age regression today. Caged in Comfort doesnât count⊠(* ïœĄ âą áŽ âą ïœĄ)
Time to dig through my notes. Iâm probably gonna do hurt/comfort cause people really liked Difficult Morning and forcing myself to write fluff doesnât seem to go well
Iâm genuinely so surprised that the recent addition (The Weight of the Truth) of Whispers of the Gifted has almost 200 likes/notes. It might take the most liked spot of The Way He Notices. Thank you all so much! Happy reading!!!
Summary: During a meeting, everything becomes too much for you. Your fathers notice instantly, bringing you to a quieter space and reassuring you that you donât always have to be big. (Stucky x little!reader) [Disclaimer: Age Regression!]
Word Count: 1k+
Main Masterlist
You hadnât expected it to be this loud. The conference room at the compound is packed. Agents, teammates, unfamiliar faces. And everyoneâs talking over one another. The sound is a rising tide, voices blending into a thick, dizzying fog. You try to focus on Steveâs voice across the table, but his words get swallowed in the noise. Your chest tightens. The lights seem too bright. Everything feels too big.
You shift in your seat and grip the edge of your chair. The room starts to close in. You know youâre supposed to be âbigâ right now, supposed to sit still, be quiet, and listen. But your hands are shaking. Your breathing gets shallow. Your skin prickles like itâs not your own.
Across the room, Bucky sees it before anyone else does. He watches the way your shoulders curl inward, the way you glance toward the door, your eyes wide and glassy. He doesnât say anything at first. Instead, he just stands, quiet and steady as he crosses the room.
âHey,â He murmurs, leaning down beside you, his voice cutting through the chaos like a lifeline. âCome with me.â
You nod quickly, not trusting your voice. Your fingers twitch as he gently guides you out of your chair, one hand warm on your back. No one stops you. You keep your head down as Bucky leads you out of the room and down a quiet hallway. Steve is swift to finish his part, excusing himself from the meeting to follow the both of you to the elevator. His brow creased with quiet worry.
âToo much?â Steve asks softly.
You nod again, clutching your sleeves.
Steve opens his arms. âCâmere, sweetheart.â
You donât hesitate. You fold yourself into his chest, breathing in the steady rhythm of his heartbeat. He wraps you up without a word, one hand moving gently over your back. Bucky stands beside you both, a silent guard keeping the world at bay.
âYouâre okay,â Steve says into your hair. âYouâre not in trouble. You didnât do anything wrong.â
âIt was just a lot,â Bucky adds, his voice low and calm. âHappens to all of us.â
Your fingers fist in the front of Steveâs shirt. Itâs quieter here. Safe. You still feel small and shaken, but their presence helps ground you, like anchors when everything else is spinning.
âWeâre gonna go upstairs,â Steve murmurs, kissing the top of your head. âSomeplace quiet. Somewhere just for us.â
Bucky offers you a reassuring look, and you manage the smallest nod. Between the two of them, youâre brought to the elevator and out of the noise. No questions. No judgment. Just warmth and comfort and calm. And for the first time all morning, you feel like you can finally breathe again.
As Bucky presses the button to their floor, the elevator hums softly as it rises, the gentle motion lulling you into a calmer rhythm. You stay tucked against Steveâs chest, your cheek resting against the fabric of his shirt. He doesnât shift or speak, just holds you close with the quiet patience he always has when youâre in this kind of space. The small, overwhelmed version of yourself you rarely show anyone else.
When the doors slide open, the light is different. Softer. Warmer. Bucky steps out first, leading the way down the familiar hall to one of your favorite quiet rooms. Not particularly a bedroom, not an office either. Just a little tucked-away space with soft blankets, shelves of books, and no expectations. It's a place meant for slowing down and today, thatâs just what you need.
Steve gently sets you down on your feet but doesnât let go of your hand. âWeâre here,â He says softly. âYou did good.â
Buckyâs already over by the low couch, pulling down your weighted blanket from the shelf and setting out your favorite comfort item. A soft, floppy stuffed dog youâd once found in Steveâs old storage trunk and quietly claimed as yours. He lays it down like it belongs in your hands.
You cross the room slowly, not quite ready to speak yet. The buzzing in your head is starting to fade, but your body still feels too big and too small at once. You curl up on the couch as Bucky drapes the blanket over you. It smells like the laundry soap Steve uses. Like safety.
Steve kneels in front of you. âDo you want us close?â He asks gently, âOr some space for a bit?â
You pause, then mutter out the former. He understands instantly. He always does. Within seconds, both of them are settled nearby. Bucky sitting at the foot of the couch, his arm resting along the cushion behind your legs, and Steve sitting on the floor with his back against the couch, one hand resting where your knee peeks out from under the blanket. They donât ask you to talk. They donât ask you to explain. Theyâre just there. The chaos of the meeting long forgotten.
You clutch the stuffed dog in your hands, the weight of the blanket pulling you back into your body, little by little. You can hear Steve hum softly, a melody you canât place. Something old and calming as you feel Buckyâs thumb draws quiet circles against the side of your calf.
Minutes pass. Maybe more. Eventually, you whisper, âSorry.â
Steve looks up at you, soft and warm. âFor what?â
âFor⊠needing to leave.â
Buckyâs voice is gentle but firm. âYou donât have to be sorry for listening to your body. You told us without even using words. Thatâs brave, doll.â
You blink, eyes stinging again, but not from fear this time. From relief.
âYou donât have to be big all the time,â Steve reassures as always, tilting his head to meet your eyes. âNot with us.â
You nod slowly, the tension finally slipping out of your shoulders. Youâre not sure youâre ready to go back downstairs. Maybe not for a while but right now, here, wrapped in their quiet protection, you feel safe and thatâs enough.
I love soft Bucky too, heâs so attentive and caring!! Thank you for reading! âĄ
Summary: As the teammate with invisibility, your powers often result in you disappearing from the Compound when the day becomes too much. However, youâre always seen by one person who has started to sit in silence with you, offering occasional comments and comfort. (Bucky Barnes x invisible!reader)
Disclaimer: Angst (sort of). Hurt/Comfort. Reader has the power of invisibility.
Word Count: 1.3k+
A/N: I had fully intended to just make this a blurb. I like imagining the reader with different powers, but this went over the 500 words I had initially planned lol
Main Masterlist | Whispers of the Gifted Masterlist
The compound was too loud.
Even if no one was yelling, even if no one was fighting, your skin buzzed with the memory of raised voices, flashing lights, hands that werenât kind. Your breathing had gone shallow the moment the door shut behind you. Your hands trembled. Your pulse raced. Your instincts screamed.
So you disappeared. Literally. One blink, one breath, and maybe the world would forget you were there. Invisibility was your gift. When activated, everything fades. Body, clothes, scent; not even heat sensors can detect you. It remains a power you hold to help people from the shadows. Both your shield and your curse.
And right now, you use it to curl up into the corner of your room, legs pulled tight to your chest. Your breathing was quiet now, nearly silent. You liked it that way. Invisible and silent, unnoticed to the world.
But Bucky noticed. He always did. You never told anyone about what it really meant, to vanish. Not in words. Not out loud. But Bucky figured it out anyway.
He paid attention in a way most people didnât. Not the loud kind, not the prying kind. Just quiet observation, patterns, and pauses. He noticed the things others dismissed: the way your fingers twitched when a voice got too sharp. The way your leg bounces nervously when the room turns tense. The way your eyes never quite met anyoneâs after a hard mission.
And most of all, he noticed when you were suddenly gone.
Not physically. Not entirely. Just⊠hushed. Faded. The kind of gone where your seat at the table was still warm, your plate barely touched. The kind of gone where you stopped making eye contact, stopped breathing deep, stopped existing in the room even if you were still in it. The kind where your powers were not needed at all to remove your presence from a space.
Then overtime, he learned the different ways you could vanish. And unlike others, he didnât joke about it. Didnât push or pull or guilt you back. He just waited. A silent and steady presence to turn to.
The first time it happened, he stood in your doorway for ten full minutes, speaking to the air. Not because he thought it would fix anything. But because he knew what it meant to be terrified, voiceless, and unseen, yet still wanting someone to come find you anyway.
After that, it became a kind of rhythm between you. A quiet understanding. Then, the similarities began to show themselves. You werenât touchy, and neither was he. Your voice was soft, never one to stand out in a room full of people. He was quiet, selective who he spoke to as he watched more than he engaged. You didn't open up easily. But you know he also struggled to do so as well. And when the world pressed too close and you disappeared into silence, he was the only one who could sit with it without trying to fix you.
It wasnât romantic, not in the beginning. But it was intimate.
In the moments you let yourself be visible, Bucky saw you in ways no one else did. The slight tilt of your lips when you made a dry joke. The way you tilted your head when you were curious, and the way you flinched when someone raised their voice, even if it wasnât at you. He never made it a big deal. Never made you feel small, insecure, or unworthy. Not even when you couldnât quite express how you felt and never for existing.
He just noticed. And remembered.
So when your door clicked shut, and you didnât speak, didnât eat, didnât check in? He knew. Because this man had memorized both your presence and absence like a shadow. It was what led him behind your door now, knocking three times. Three simple, soft taps. The kind that asked for permission, not attention.
You didnât answer. You couldnât.
âDoll?â His voice was soft, the edge of gravel worn down into silk. âI know youâre in here.â
Still, you stayed quiet. Hidden. Gone.
The door creaked open. He didnât turn the lights on. He didnât need them to know you were there. Sometimes you cursed his super soldier hearing.
âI saw you leave the training room without speaking to anyone. Thatâs not like you.â
There was no accusation in his voice. Just concern. Measured, careful concern. He stepped in further, and you saw the glint of metal catch the moonlight through your window.
âI know what itâs like,â He said after a long pause. âTo want the whole world to stop seeing you. To disappear because itâs safer that way.â
You turned your head slightly, though you werenât sure why. He still couldnât see you. No one could.
âI used to hide,â He continued. âBehind orders. Behind missions. Behind⊠the Soldier.â
The reference hit the air with a dull ache. He sat down on the floor, not too close, but close enough.
âIâm not sure what happened. Maybe I never will. But I know you donât have to be alone.â
You heard a quiet rustle before spotting his hand reaching out, palm up, resting between you both.
âI wonât touch you. I wonât even look, unless you want me to. Just know Iâll be here.â
Your breath hitched. Not because of the panic, but because of him. He stayed yet again. You still canât get used to it, like somehow youâve convinced yourself youâre not worth it.
But minutes passed, maybe an hour or more. Who knows. Bucky had learned the hard way how to sit with silence. How to let it breathe instead of trying to fill it. How sometimes just being there meant more than any words.
But slowly, carefully, you let the invisibility fade. Like dust in sunlight. Your fingers, trembling and pale, reached out and barely brushed his.
His hand didnât move. Instead, you heard his voice, gentle and soft.
âThere you are,â Bucky whispered, a ghost of a smile upon his face.
Something in his chest loosened. Not relief exactly, but⊠a sense of trust. Pride almost. You trusted him enough to come back, to be seen.
Because for the first time all day, you werenât afraid. You werenât alone nor unseen. He had stayed there, grounding you.
Your voice didnât answer him, not out loud. You didnât need to. Instead, you leaned just a little closer, the barest shift of weight, but he felt it. You were still trembling, but you werenât hiding. Not from him.
He turned his palm so his fingers could wrap lightly around yours. Not tight. Just enough to remind you he was there.
âI know the world feels like too much sometimes,â He began quietly. âI donât blame you for disappearing. I used to want to do it all the time. Hell, I did.â
He gave a short, hollow laugh; no humor, just memory.
âWhen I first came here, I kept thinking: If I can just vanish, if I can just keep still enough, no one will look at me like Iâm broken. Like Iâm dangerous. Like Iâm one bad memory away from snapping.â
You shifted. Still silent, but listening. He could feel it.
âI saw that same look in your eyes today. Like you were made of glass and someone was swinging a hammer.â
The grip of your hand tightened slightly.
âYou donât have to tell me what happened. Not now. Not ever, if you donât want. But if you need someone who gets it, you know Iâm here.â
He tilted his head toward you, careful to keep his movements soft.
âNo pressure,â He said quickly, a beat of hesitation filling the space before he added. âJust⊠if you ever wanna disappear, let me be the one who waits with you in the silence.â
A pause. Then, barely above a whisper:
âOkay.â You nodded. It was tiny, fragile; but Bucky felt it like a damn earthquake.
You didnât let go of his hand, and he didnât move an inch.
He doesnât try to fix you. He just stays. Listens. Waits. And somehow, in a world that seems to forget you're there the moment you vanish, you're still seen. Completely, quietly, without question, because of the way he notices.
That photo made me laugh ngl, Iâm so happy you liked it!
Thank you for reading! <3
Summary: Bucky introduces Alpine to you and Mischief one afternoon. An intense, one-sided, stare off ensues with an interesting truce that practically leaves you speechless when they start influencing each other for better or worse. (Bucky Barnes x Avengers!reader)
Disclaimer: Reader has the power to talk to animals.
Word Count: 2.3k+
A/N: To be honest, I wrote this one based on the idea given by @kissingkillercriminals in their reblog of the prequel. Hope it turns out to be a fun read for you and everyone else. Happy reading!
Main Masterlist | Whispers of the Gifted Masterlist | Prequel
It was a slow afternoon in the Tower. Clouds had gathered thickly in the sky, casting a grayish hue through the windows. Rain pattered gently against the glass, the soft drumming filling the silence in the common room.
You were curled up on the armchair with a book in your lap and Mischief lounging across your legs like the possessive feline empress she was. Her tail twitched lazily every few seconds, ears flicking to the rhythm of the raindrops. Her eyes were half-lidded, content.
That is, until the elevator dinged. Her ears perked immediately. You looked up as footsteps echoed down the hallway. Familiar ones.
âHey,â Bucky greeted from the doorway, a little damp from the drizzle. But he wasnât alone.
Nestled comfortably in his arms, perched like a queen surveying her domain, was a stunning white cat. Blue-eyed, snowy-soft, and eerily calm, almost regal in the way she looked around the room.
Mischief went still.
Your eyes widened. âIs that⊠Alpine?â You had heard of Buckyâs cat before, but never seemed to have the chance to meet her until now.
Bucky nodded, a sheepish smile tugging at his lips as he stepped in. âShe was pacing by the window when I left the room this morning. Figured she might want a change of scenery.â
Mischief lifted her head. Her pupils narrowed sharply as she fixed her gaze on the uninvited guest. A low growl began to bubble in her throat, barely audible to anyone but you.
You gently placed your hand on her back. âEasyâ, You thought, not even needing to speak it aloud. She didnât seem to pick up on your message because her entire body was locked, tense, and offended.
Bucky moved slowly, like he knew he was treading on sacred ground. âDidnât mean to start a turf war. Just figured maybe it was time.â
You stood slowly, Mischief reluctantly hopping off your lap. Her tail whipped once in warning.
Alpine was unfazed. Her blue eyes landed on Mischief with mild interest. She gave a soft, courteous mrrrow, as if greeting a fellow royal.
Mischiefâs eyes narrowed. She sat, but her body language screamed intruder.
âSheâs beautiful,â You said gently, watching Alpine with cautious awe. âI didnât know she was so calm around new places.â
âSheâs used to traveling,â Bucky replied, setting Alpine down slowly onto the floor. âDoesnât like being cooped up. Kinda like me.â
You watched with a held breath as Alpine took a few exploratory steps forward. Mischief didnât move, but her eyes tracked every inch like a sniper zeroing in. When Alpine got within a few feet, she paused. Then, with the unbothered grace of someone who feared nothing, she laid down.
Mischief hissed. It wasnât loud. It wasnât even aggressive. But it was unmistakably territorial.
âMischief,â You warned softly, crouching next to her. âSheâs not a threat.â
Bucky crouched too, beside Alpine, who had begun grooming her paw without a care in the world.
âLook at them,â He said, his voice hushed like it was a secret. âItâs like theyâre trying to decide who owns the building.â
You laughed under your breath. âMischief thinks she owns it.â
âAlpine knows she doesnât need to prove it.â
As the two cats stared each other down, you caught it, soft and calm, threaded right beneath the silence.
Sheâs dramatic.
You blinked. Wait⊠That voice, sleek, composed, feminine, was Alpineâs. Not a meow, not a growl. Words.
You glanced at Bucky, but he was oblivious. Still watching the feline standoff like it was a chess game. Mischiefâs growl rose slightly. Alpine remained still.
She likes you. Thatâs why she hasnât lunged yet.
Alpine added, her voice as silky as her fur.
But I donât back down either. So this should be interesting.
You noticed Mischief didnât seem to hear your telepathic conversation with the newcomer. So you didnât respond aloud, instead responding in your mind. âYouâre really not bothered, are you?â
He smells like snow and blood, but his hands are gentle. Sheâs possessive, not of the tower. Of you.
You felt a chill that had nothing to do with the rain. âI can see why.â
Mischief hissed quietly, and you caught a flicker of Alpineâs tail.
She wants me to leave.
âWill you?â You thought, unsure if you were asking out of hope or curiosity.
No. But Iâll wait. Iâm patient. Sheâs not the only one whoâs bonded.
The two cats remained still, locked in a silent standoff. Well, more like a one-sided standoff. A slow, deliberate blink passed from Alpine to Mischief.
To your utter shock, Mischief paused for a moment before blinking back. A beat passed before she turned her head and sat down with a huff. Not surrender. But perhaps a reluctant acknowledgment.
Bucky raised an eyebrow. âWas thatâŠ?â
You blinked. âI think that was the feline equivalent of a handshake.â
He grinned, proud. âProgress.â
You looked down at both of them, one lounging and one sulking. You rose to your feet now, and as you did, Mischief brushed your leg with her tail, circling your feet like she was claiming you. Alpine simply hopped onto the rug and began inspecting a string toy left forgotten from Tonyâs latest failed bribery attempt.
âSo,â Bucky said after a moment, straightening. âWhat are the chances our girls end up tolerating each other?â
You glanced down at Mischief, who gave you a look that seemed to say, I allow this only because you do.
âLetâs not get ahead of ourselves,â You murmured. âBut⊠Itâs a start.â
Bucky stepped a little closer, his shoulder brushing yours. âTheyâre like us,â He said quietly. âCautious. But⊠maybe not beyond letting someone in.â
You turned your head toward him slowly, heart skipping.
âMaybe,â You said. âIf theyâre lucky enough to find the right person.â
And beneath the steady sound of rain, the two of you watched the loved cats learning the quiet language of trust across the room.
-
Though, you didnât know what that trust would actually entail. The first incident began with silence, which, in your experience with Mischief, was never a good sign.
The Tower was unusually quiet that morning. You were sipping tea in the kitchen, reading reports while waiting for the coffee machine to finish sputtering its way through Buckyâs drink order. Mischief had been suspiciously absent since breakfast. Alpine had vanished not long after.
You glanced toward the hallway only to find nothing out of the ordinary.
Then, a crash, coming from the direction of Tonyâs lab.
Not a small bump or a gentle thud. No, this was a metallic, shattering, the Tony-will-not-be-pleased sort of crash.
You bolted upright, nearly spilling your tea, and sprinted toward the noise. Bucky was already there, jogging in from the elevator, sweatpants loose, hair damp from his time at the gym.
âYou heard that too?â He asked, eyes narrowing.
Another sound followed. A high-pitched zip-zip-zip noise, like drones activating. Followed by⊠pawsteps?
You and Bucky skidded to a stop at the entrance to Tonyâs lab. It looked like a bomb had gone off.
Three of Tonyâs prototype micro-drones were hovering erratically midair, one of them twirling in panicked circles. The rest lay in pieces scattered across the floor, wires tangled like a crime scene. And in the middle of the chaos sat Alpine, tail curled delicately around her paws, completely unbothered.
On the counter nearby, Mischief crouched with a gleam in her eye that could only be described as unrepentant. She looked directly at you, then at Bucky, and gave a soft meow as if to assert her innocence.
âI think we just missed the heist,â You said breathlessly.
Bucky muttered, âAlpine was supposed to be the calm one.â
âI never said Mischief was a good influence.â
You both stepped forward carefully, surveying the disaster. Mischief had clearly pried open one of the drawers, Tonyâs "Do Not Touch" ones. Wires were dragged out like spaghetti noodles. A spilled jar of who knows what rolled lazily across the floor.
âIs that my cloaking device?â Came a voice from the hallway.
You winced as Tony rounded the corner before stopping dead at the sight.
Alpine jumped gracefully down and walked over to Buckyâs feet, brushing against him as if she hadnât just helped dismantle a small fortune in tech.
Tony's eye twitched. âWhy are your cats smarter than my interns?â
âI ask myself that every day,â Bucky said, scooping up Alpine. âYou didnât leave any exploding gadgets out, right?â
âNot this week,â Tony snapped, waving a tablet like a club. âDo you even understand what theyâve broken? That drone was programmed to help defuse bombs.â
âIâm sure they had a good reason,â You offered, not that it helped, gently lifting Mischief off the counter. She purred, content and absolutely smug.
âAsk her what the hell kind of reason that would be,â Tony snapped at you.
You looked at Mischief, questioning in a flat tone. âWhy?â
Mischief stretched lazily, flicked her tail, and in a nonchalant, mental whisper, said:
It blinked first.
You groaned at the excuse, hesitating before giving the answer. âShe says it blinked at her.â
Tony blinked. âIt blinked? Thatâs your defense?â
âSheâs a cat, Tony.â
âWhatever.â He pointed at Bucky. âAnd your cat?â
Bucky looked down at Alpine, who yawned wide and graceful. She murmured to you with eerie composure,
I wanted to know if it could fly backward. It couldnât.
You snorted before you could stop yourself.
âWhat?â Tony demanded, head snapping towards you.
You waved him off. âYou⊠donât want to know.â
Later that evening, after Tony had barricaded the lab and implemented new retinal scans to keep out the feline menaces (his words, not yours). You found Bucky in the living room with Alpine lying beside him with a toy and Mischief perched on the back of the couch.
âTheyâre lucky theyâre cute,â You muttered, flopping down beside him.
Bucky glanced sideways. âI think theyâre bonding.â
âThey broke a drone.â
âExactly.â
You looked at the two cats now comfortably sharing the space, Alpine nibbling at the feather toy, Mischief eyeing the object like it had wronged her.
You shook your head. âItâs like watching spies team up.â
âThey are spies,â Bucky corrected, definitely not taking this seriously, evident by the grin he wore. âTiny, furry, manipulative spies.â
Mischief flicked her tail in agreement as Alpine blinked slowly. And for a brief moment, peace, albeit temporary, settled over the Tower.
-
However, while the first incident was annoying for Tony, the second was catered more toward you and Bucky.
It started small to the point where you didnât notice it at first. Mischief, your eternally territorial shadow, began to behave⊠differently. She still took up her usual place on your lap, still growled at anyone who got too close, and still owned the Tower like she paid the bills. But she started following you and Bucky when you left rooms. Lingering in the halls, appearing on counters and ledges when the two of you happened to be in the same space.
Alpine, meanwhile, watched everything from a perch of regal detachment, or so it seemed. But you knew better since you heard her.
Donât hiss this time. Just watch. Let him sit next to her first.
You had paused when you heard it the first time, over breakfast. Mischief was on the table (illegally), staring daggers at Bucky as he walked in. Alpine, curled on the windowsill, barely flicked her tail, but her voice unintentionally slipped into your thoughts again as she directed the âsecretâ information to Mischief:
She likes it when he brings her things and when he calls her 'trouble.' You should let her admit that.
You almost choked on your toast, but didnât say anything when Bucky looked over at you with a questioning, concerned gaze.
That was the first clue.
The second clue came two days later, when Bucky was helping you patch up a cut you'd gotten during training. It was nothing, barely a nick, but he'd insisted. Kneeling in front of you, his gloved hand cradled your wrist while the other applied antiseptic.
Mischief watched from the armrest, her ears twitching. It was clear she was tense, jealous⊠until Alpine hopped up beside her and gently nudged her with her head.
Now. Purr. So she relaxes.
Mischief blinked slowly, tail twitching. Then, shockingly, she purred. Loudly and deeply. You actually laughed, easing into the moment, and Bucky glanced up at you with that rare, boyish half-smile that made your chest ache.
You knew that had been Alpine's doing. And Mischief, traitor that she was, seemed fine with it.
The third clue? Bucky confessed it.
You were sitting together in the lounge late one night, watching the rain tap softly at the windows, each of you nursing mugs of tea. Mischief dozed between you on the couch. Alpine had curled beside her, touching, no less. A miracle in itself.
Bucky tilted his head toward the sleeping cats. âYou know, Alpine's been⊠weird.â
âWeird how?â
He hesitated. âShe⊠keeps pushing me toward you.â
Your heart did a very stupid, very hopeful thing. âShe told you that?â
He gave you a sheepish look. âShe doesnât talk to me like she talks to you, of course. But sheâll nudge me when I move away too soon. Block seats unless I sit beside you. Once she knocked my phone out of my hand when I was trying to leave the room.â
You could feel your heart beat faster, but tried to cover up your nervousness with a laugh, joking a little. âSheâs matchmaking.â
âI think Mischiefâs in on it, too. Last night, she dragged your hoodie into my room.â
Your eyebrows shot up. So thatâs where your hoodie went, of all places.
âAnd then Alpine slept on it like it was a peace offering.â
You looked down at the two curled balls of fur, now subtly pressed together. Mischiefâs tail lay loosely draped over Alpineâs back.
âIs this what a truce looks like?â You whispered.
Buckyâs fingers brushed yours, and you didnât pull away.
âLooks like,â He murmured.
You didnât answer this time, but your fingers curled around Buckyâs gently as Alpine purred softly and Mischief, even in sleep, didnât object.
That was enough of an answer until either of you could act on the same thing both of your hearts wanted.
Awww, thank you so much! Iâve always loved fairies honestly, so itâs nice to see so many other people enjoying this idea as well. Thank you for reading!!! âĄ
Summary: Youâre only a few inches tall, full of sparkle and mischief. When SHIELD accidentally captures you in a jar, Steve and Bucky are tasked with figuring out what you are. You refuse to speak at first, until Steve gives you a cookie. Now theyâre stuck with a clingy, stubborn fairy who calls them âTreeâ and âShadow.â (Steve Rogers x Fairy!Reader x Bucky Barnes)
Word Count: 1.1k+
A/N: It was either mermaid reader or fairy reader. Fairy was easier to write soooo⊠Enjoy! Happy reading!
Main Masterlist
You were caught in a jar.
A pickle jar, to be specific. It still smelled faintly of vinegar and dill, which you found personally offensive and not just because fairies are very sensitive to smell.
You were fluttering peacefully through the trees near the outskirts of New York when a group of shouting humans in dark armor leapt out from behind a bush and trapped you in what they called a âcontainment unit.â You didnât know what SHIELD was, but their agents were very loud and very rough, and they didnât even ask your name.
You sat cross-legged at the bottom of the jar, wings tucked in, arms folded across your chest, trying your best to look unimpressed.
And then he walked in. Tall, golden-haired, broad-shouldered, a man who practically radiated kindness and confusion in equal measure. Steve Rogers.
He approached the table with another man behind him, darker, quieter, haunted-eyed but alert watching everything. Bucky Barnes.
âI thought you said there was an artifact,â Steve said slowly, looking at the jar.
âIt is,â The agent replied. âIt talks.â
You gave the man your most dramatic eye roll.
Steve crouched beside the table, eyes soft, voice careful. âHi there. Whatâs your name?â
You turned your head away and said nothing.
Bucky stepped closer, narrowing his eyes. âDo fairies sulk?â
You didnât like his tone not cruel, just skeptical. So you stuck your tongue out at him and turned invisible.
Bucky jumped slightly. âOkay. That answers that.â
âHey, hey,â Steve murmured, holding his hands up gently. âWeâre not gonna hurt you, promise. You just surprised everyone, thatâs all. Didnât mean to scare you.â
Still, you said nothing.
It wasnât until someone walked by with a coffee and a chocolate chip cookie that you broke your silence. You reappeared instantly, pressed against the glass, eyes wide.
Steve blinked, then laughed softly. âYou want one of those?â
You nodded furiously.
Five minutes later, the jar was opened and you bolted straight onto Steveâs shoulder, snatched the cookie chunk he offered, and curled into the crook of his neck like youâd always lived there.
You stayed close after that. Not that they had much of a choice.
You built a tiny hammock out of tissues on their bookshelf. Braided thread into their laces. Tried to âfixâ Buckyâs grumpy face with flower petals and got scolded, very softly, for it. You called Steve âTreeâ because he was tall and smelled like sap. You called Bucky âShadowâ because he followed you around pretending he wasnât trying to protect you.
You refused to be studied, refused to go back in any jars, and made it very clear youâd chosen your new home: right between two super soldiers who didnât know how much they needed something as strange and sweet as you.
Sometimes, youâd land on Buckyâs shoulder when he couldnât sleep, singing soft, wordless melodies that reminded him of something in the past. Sometimes, youâd perch on Steveâs chest as he read, snuggled into the fabric of his henley like a kitten with wings.
You were tiny, fragile, ridiculous, and completely, utterly theirs.
Even if you still left cookie crumbs everywhere.
-
Steve and Bucky discovered quickly how particular fairies could be. Or maybe it was just you.
See, they realized you were much more stubborn than they had anticipated which caused another one of your sulking moods. It started because you werenât allowed to use the microwave. Which, in your defense, made no sense.
You werenât trying to start another fire, that was an accident. And yes, maybe the leftover spaghetti had exploded the last time, but how were you supposed to know that foil was banned? Youâd never had a microwave before. You grew up in moss and tree hollows and warm sunlight. Your diet was dew, nectar, and whatever you could barter from passing squirrels.
Now, you wanted popcorn, but Bucky had said no. He had looked down at you with his arms crossed and that stupid I care about you and youâre being ridiculous face, stating, âYou almost fried the towerâs circuits last time. Find something from the fruit bowl if youâre hungry.â
You responded with the most dramatic gasp you could manage and fluttered up to the top of the cabinets, crossing your arms with a huff.
Steve tried to step in, intervening gently. âHeâs not trying to upset you. He just doesnât want you to get hurt.â
You didnât answer. You turned your back with your wings flaring slightly in righteous fairy fury, you refused to acknowledge either of them. Not even when Steve sighed and offered you a piece of shortbread. Not even when Bucky muttered something like âSheâs sulking again, isnât she?â
You remained a furious little sparkle, curled into a puffball of wings and pouting.
Hours passed. You still refused to come down.
They tried tempting you with cookies, with your favorite mug of rose petal tea, with one of Steveâs socks (which you always stole to use as a blanket).
Nothing. You were mad. And fairies, though small, are very good at holding grudges.
By the time night fell, you were still wedged behind a cereal box, curled into a mopey heap. And then⊠you heard a sound. Thump. It was a soft knock on the cabinet.
You peeked over the edge to find Bucky standing there, holding a tiny plate.
âI made popcorn. Not with the microwave. Just the pan.â
You stared at him.
âI didnât put salt on it. Figured youâd want to do that yourself.â
He set the plate down gently on the counter, then leaned against it, arms folded.
ââŠYou gonna stay up there forever?â He asked after a pause, tone mild.
You turned invisible.
He smirked. âCute.â
Moments later, you reappeared beside the popcorn and began nibbling, still silent, still frowning.
Steve walked in just then and paused. âIs that a peace offering or a trap?â
âIâm not sure yet,â Bucky replied.
You muttered something under your breath.
Steve blinked. âDid she just call you a âgrumpy tin soldierâ?â
âI think so,â Bucky said, raising an eyebrow.
You stuffed a piece of popcorn in your mouth and glared at them both, cheeks puffed out like a hamster.
Steve crouched beside the counter, eyes warm. âHey, no oneâs mad at you, sweetheart. We just donât want you getting hurt.â
You looked away before mumbling, âI wanted to make it myself.â
And that was the truth of it. You wanted to prove you could. That you werenât just tiny and delicate and fluttery. That you could be useful, capable. That you werenât always the one needing help.
Bucky leaned closer, voice quieter now. âNext time⊠Iâll show you how.â
You peeked up at him, suspicious.
âYou can hold the lid,â He said, tone serious. âThatâs an important job.â
ââŠFine,â You muttered.
Steve smiled gently, brushing your wing with one careful finger. âWeâre proud of you, yâknow.â
You huffed, still pretending you werenât moved before climbing into Buckyâs hand, wings drooping slightly from exhaustion and popcorn forgotten. You curled into his palm with a sigh, tiny fingers gripping the edge of his sleeve.
Still sulking but not as much. And this time, you werenât alone.
She/Her | 18+ | Marvel WriterAsks/Requests are welcomed!
88 posts