Steve Rogers (
onlyforthedream) wrote2011-06-12 05:49 pm
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The Truth Hurts.
It's been three days since I've seen Bucky, and that's enough. I leave the house with the sole intention of finding him, preferably without bringing Natalia or Jason into it- what's about to happen is between the two of us, and I don't want to answer questions, nor do I want to set him up to be asked any. By all accounts, the influence that caused people to speak out against their will should have passed, and I find myself somehow disinclined to wait around for Bucky to come to me. I find Virginia in her stall, which is all the evidence I need of his return, and set off for the house, hoping to find it empty of anyone but him, for convenience's sake. When I don't find him there I strike out for the beach. Bucky's not an easy man to track, and I'm more counting on the general region, knowing his schedule, and the size of the island than anything so obvious as a telling trail of partial footprints and snapped palm fronds.
I can hear the ocean through the trees though I can't see it yet, and it's pushing through some low hanging vines and stepping onto a relatively clear swath of dirt that I find him.
"Bucky."
I can hear the ocean through the trees though I can't see it yet, and it's pushing through some low hanging vines and stepping onto a relatively clear swath of dirt that I find him.
"Bucky."
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"What is it you're so loathe to tell me that you'd rather lie? What is it you have to say that you think I won't be able to handle?" I ask him.
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"I mean, hell, it's a blank slate, right?" he adds, Zemo's words forever echoing in his head. What, wonders Bucky, were the odds that moments after he'd been told he didn't deserve a blank slate, he'd land offshore of an island called Tabula Rasa? "My past is supposed to be wiped clean, anyway. Erased."
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The second thought is that he doesn't want a blank slate. That Zemo was right about that much, if nothing else; Bucky doesn't deserve to have his indiscretions erased, because until he starts to live his life without the promise of a reset button, he'll never earn it.
"Right," he scoffs, crossing his arms. "Well, that's the problem, isn't it? I'm not that kid anymore, Steve. The good ol' days are long gone, and all that's left is me."
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"No, Bucky. That's not the problem. I missed you like hell, that's not a matter of question." Every enemy with half a mind to bring me down knew as much.
"But I don't have to do that, anymore, because you're here. Not some ghost I'm carrying around, but you. Do you honestly think that not getting to know the man you've become as well as I did the kid that I knew, that I loved like a brother, wouldn't be one of the biggest regrets of my life?" I shake my head a little, a sharper gesture than I intend. There's a growing tension in my frame; trying to keep my emotions reigned in isn't helping it.
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"And that's not something you'll understand. You can't."
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"By what standards are you a bad one? I want to know who set the benchmark for good and bad in this situation, and I want to know what they had to go through to get to a place where they had the right." I can't even touch on the latter half of what he's said. It makes me too angry, stings too much, and that's not where I want this to go.
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"By standards I learned from you... Fighting at your side, as your partner. And maybe you're too blind to see it, but I'm not."
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"How many children do you know who kept plastic explosives in their arm, Steve?" Bucky retorts. "How many children do you know who could throw a knife with my accuracy? Could shoot a gun like me? How many children could stand alongside the Invaders, utterly powerless, and not just be a liability? I was as much a child as you were just a soldier."
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"I shouldn't have- This isn't the point." To say my hackles are raised would be a dire understatement. I can hear my pulse in my ears. The knowledge that the anger has more to do with my own failings than anything Bucky is saying doesn't make it any more manageable.
"The point is that up until the day that drone plane exploded I had never seen you do a single thing that made you a bad person, just like I haven't since the day you got your memory back. So what information am I missing, Buck, that's got you so damn convinced?"
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There's color high on his cheeks, his eyes bright with rage, and finally he takes that all-too important first step forward, though he doesn't go any further than that, his body coming to an abrupt halt, even as he swings an arm outwards in a wild gesture.
"How about everything in between and not a few things afterward?" he yells. "Do you really need a $*%&ing list, Steve?"
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"Because apparently I'm not capable of understanding with my limited knowledge."
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He stops short of his friend by a few feet, not close enough to throw a punch from a standstill, though the threat is undeniably there, just as it's been all along.
"The only person who wants to talk here is you."
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"You can't keep running."
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That he trusts me so little, that he would rather fight his way out of talking to me than forfeit anything... I know it's selfish, but I need to know why.
I do not offer to get out of his way.
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He sucks in a sharp breath that might've been a laugh in another life, but comes across only as desperate now. Since taking over the mantle of Captain America, he's done his best to do right by Steve's legacy while still striving to carve out his own identity under the flag, and in this much he's been successful. But at the end of the day, what Bucky wants most is to make the man proud; the disappointment cuts him down faster than any knife, and for a moment, he feels no older than the child Steve accused of him being. Even so, he doesn't avert his gaze, too afraid he might miss some subtle change of expression, some change of heart, though in this, too, he's not hopeful.
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I lift my gaze from where it had been hovering about three feet off the ground to Bucky's face.
"You can call me blind, but I know you, Bucky. I knew you then and I knew you when you came back. The last good thing I did before I came here, the last good thing, was asking Tony Stark to save you the way I couldn't," I say, the memory bitter for the knowledge that it was the right call to make, that I had to turn to Tony, of all people, to reach out to Bucky. I reach out to him now, to catch his shoulder, hoping that we can find a way to talk instead of following our natures and training to a foregone conclusion.
"The good old days are gone, Bucky, and if all that's left is you then the rest of them can go hang, because I'm glad."
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"The last time you saw me before you showed up here, I tried to kill you. And I'm not flattering myself when I say I nearly did."
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"Bucky-" I start, knowing as I do that I've already lost this round, in the ways that count. I didn't say what I meant to, what I needed to. It's like watching an iron door slam shut and searching desperately for anything to keep it wedged open.
"The fact that you were alive meant there was a chance where there hadn't been one, before."
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"If the Cube hadn't been there--"
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"It was all I could think of to do."
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