Enduring Remembrance - an MCU-ish project

Original writings and artwork by Tolkien fans.
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Newborn of Imladris
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Enduring Remembrance
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A mini NaNo project, to help me get back to writing with a little each day. I've been pretty busy with work and life since September, and I want to see if I can do this. My aim is to write 300-400 words every day during the month of November - I do think this ought to be achievable, since the goal is 10k words, rather than 50k. I clearly can't maintain that pace, I'll just extend it ...or come back to it next year, she said sheepishly.

My theme is James Buchanan Barnes, known as Bucky, who came to be known as the Winter Soldier. This is a mish-mash of MCU and comic-canon with heavy doses of my own headcanon; basically I want to explore storytelling, and may be playing with POV and narration, and anything else that tickles my fancy.

1. courage - Bucky Barnes meets Steve Rogers
2. consequences - the effects of friendship with Steve
3. ragged - Steve loses his mother
4. service
5. goodbye
6. battlefield
7. science
8. cold
9. whisper
10. repeat
11. longing
12. rusted
13. seventeen
14. daybreak
15. furnace
16. nine
17. benign
18. homecoming
19. one
20. freight car
21. dead
22. winter
23. retired
24. consignment
25. red
26. echoes
27. thaw
28. fall
29. always
30. lost

The prompts above are my ‘plan’, such as it is, with each word triggering a scene. There may be pictures accompanying these snippets, and, since NaNo offered me the opportunity to make a playlist, it may also have a song per post too ... we'll see. I did get very distracted with Youtube for about a week! :facepalm:

These may or may not be done in order, as the muse allows.
Last edited by Lirimaer on Tue Dec 15, 2020 11:39 pm, edited 5 times in total.

Newborn of Imladris
Points: 1 463 
Posts: 1319
Joined: Thu May 14, 2020 10:54 am
Prompt: (1) Courage
POV: Bucky Barnes, 3rd person
Word count: 2096
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"Bucky Barnes and Steve Rogers were inseparable on both schoolyard and battlefield -"
- Smithsonian ©2014: Captain America Exhibit
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Brooklyn we go hard - JayZ
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The day he first saw Steven Grant Rogers, the boy was sitting outside the headmaster’s office.

Bucky played soccer at recess, pretty much exclusively. Most of the boys did, since options weren’t extensive at their inner-city school. The concrete playground curled around the ancient school building, providing many little nooks and opportunities for quieter play, but the main area was a stunted rectangle with some monkey bars at one end. The game was dominated by the older kids, but fourth-grader Bucky Barnes got in because he was a frickin' poacher: whip-fast, genius at stealing tackles and exceedingly dangerous in the strike area. Nobody ever bothered shouting ‘Man-on’ at Barnes when he had the ball, since the tricky little devil had inhuman spacial awareness and was as likely to nutmeg or chip-shot his way through the problem as feint one way and go the other. It was particularly humiliating if he feinted one way and then went that way, while the opposition floundered in the other direction wondering where the hell he’d gone. The only way to stop him was to attack him en masse, and this generally happened at least once a week, sometimes even without injury. Not so today.

Bucky had seen the three guys flanking his left, two on the right and the goalie coming toward him – and he’d hoofed the ball toward the goal micro-seconds before the guys behind him had cannoned into him and they all went down in a heap, him on the bottom.

“GOOOOOOOAL!”

The high-pitched cheer went up from the few players who weren’t currently snarled in a jumble of limbs and pointy elbows. It took a minute to untangle the mess, and eventually Bucky was able to push himself up. Wetness dripped down into his mouth and his hand came away wet with blood. Ugh. He grimaced and pinched his nose as he got to his feet, trying to keep the blood off his shirt. His Ma would go spare.

“Run it off, wuss,” called one of the sixth-graders, laughing.

Bucky made a rude gesture, heading inside, poking his tooth gingerly with his tongue. His face was stinging from the air, which didn’t bode well. He made it to the bathrooms and went to look in the mirror. His fears were well-founded; Ma was gonna kill him. There was no way this was gonna be cleared up for Church on Sunday. He washed his hands and tried to wash the blood off his face, not doing too bad a job, he thought. His cheek was grazed all up the right side, his nose was bleeding slowly, as was his mouth- his upper lip cut on his tooth. His tooth; he stared unhappily at the wonky angle of it, fingers trying to push it tenderly back into position.

“Barnes.” Mr Hawkins appeared, mirrored at the doorway. “Get yourself to the Nurse and be quick about it. I’ll tell Mrs Hudson where you are.”

“Yes, sir,” Bucky answered smartly. He’d liked Mr Hawkins back in second-grade, since he was one of the few teachers he’d come across who didn’t make him write endlessly about stuff he wasn’t interested in. Mrs Hudson on the other hand … the less said the better; he tended to get hand cramps daily in her class. Still, it was science this afternoon, and he was disappointed to be missing it. Mrs Hudson had once been a chemist and allowed a lot of leeway when exploring her favourite subject. Unfortunately it included writing up the experiments, but at least there was a trade off he could agree with.

The Nurse’s station was an office along by the Headteacher’s. There were a few chairs outside in the corridor and one was occupied by a small tow-haired kid. Bucky walked past him, to the Nurse’s door which was shut. That was unusual, so he knocked and waited. He could see the kid watching him out of the corner of his eye.

“With you in a moment, take a seat,” came Nurse Helen’s voice. Clearly, she was busy.

Bucky sighed, stuck his hands in his pckets and and slouched into a seat opposite the kid. The kid looked away as he sat opposite him. He was dressed in clean hand-me-downs which were slightly too large for him. It wasn’t anything unusual in their school. Bucky’d got lucky last time, with pretty good hand-me-downs from his cousins, but even he could tell that he’d need new pants soon; he stretched his legs out and looked at the fraying hems flapping above his ankles. Yeah, he was growing again. He took his penknife out of his pocket and began cutting off the worst of the frayed edges. He resigned himself to some slightly too big pants in his near future, but at least they'd look better for now.

“What happened to you?” the kid asked in hushed tones, drawing him out of his reverie.

Bucky smirked. “Trip to the zoo. Fell in the alligator pit. Only just about pulled me out in time.”

The kid’s eyes grew large and he sat up straighter before suspicion narrowed his eyes as his brain worked through Bucky’s tale. “You did not,” he stated deliberately. “That’s a lie.”

The kid was evidently on patrol as the truth police. Bucky rolled his eyes. “Yeeeah?” he drawled, wincing as his smile hurt his face. “What gave it away?”

“I’m not helping you lie –” the kid started hotly, but stopped when Bucky gave a bark of laughter.

“It’s a joke,” he said placatingly, flicking his knife closed and losing it in his pocket again. “You’re too serious, kid.”

“Don’t call me kid,” the kid said, squirming uncomfortably.

“What are you, four? Five?” Bucky asked, eyes judging his size, and looking pointedly at his feet which didn’t touch the floor properly.

“I’m seven!” the boy snarled indignantly, glaring across at Bucky.

Bucky’s eyebrows shot up in surprise at the aggression, but any response was stalled as the Nurse’s door opened and a blonde woman came out, Nurse Helen escorting her.

“Thanks for coming in to explain about his breathing, Mrs Rogers. We will have that all organised for you when Steve starts with us after Easter.” She smiled and saw the woman out, coming back and sighing as she looked at Bucky. “Again, Barnes? Anyone would think you were having an intimate relationship with the asphalt. Come with me.”

Resigning himself to her abrasive care, Bucky followed her into the room.

*

After Easter, Bucky saw the kid more frequently. He was kind of a loner, since he couldn’t run about like the others without spending a lot of time in the Nurse’s office, and they formed a sheepish nodding acquaintance in the corridor outside the offices, waiting for the Nurse.

It might have continued like this, but at the end of April Bucky sprained his ankle badly and couldn’t play soccer for a week. He could have, he supposed, but then Nurse Helen would have gone mental and told his Ma or something. With lowering glances, he agreed to her stipulations, muttering darkly about unfairness and unreasonable grown-ups who didn’t understand the importance of soccer until she shooed him out of her office with yet another dire warning: “I do NOT want to see you again, Barnes. For a week! Or so help me God, I’ll –”

Well, it was a vague warning, but Bucky’s Ma had said those words often enough that he knew the ending. He limped out of earshot before resuming his grumbling.

At recess the next day, he was watching the soccer game sourly when someone plonked themselves down next to him.

“I used to sit here and watch you,” Steve Rogers said, after a few moments.

“Didja?” Bucky said, squinting at the kid with a frown. “What for?”

“Wishin’ I could play like that,” Steve said wistfully, then added, “and hopin’ you weren’t gonna get hurt.”

Bucky snorted. “I don’t get hurt most times,” he boasted.

“If you passed the ball quicker, you’d get hurt less,” Steve pointed out.

“Mhmm,” Bucky made a noise which meant he wasn’t gonna give that comment the time of day, no matter how true it was. Despite that, they spent the week watching the soccer and talking strategy and deriding the offside rule. After that, when Bucky’s foot got better and he was allowed to play again, he’d glance over to where Steve was watching and grin, and sometimes he’d stop playing for a bit, both watching the game.

They sort of gravitated together naturally, especially when they discovered they lived close enough to call round after school and weekends. Their families got used to seeing them in each other’s pockets and if Steve’s asthma attacks were a little more frequent because of Bucky trying to teach him football skills in the alleyway round the back, at least Bucky became adept at noticing the signs and stopping play before it all got too much for him.

*

Steve would occasionally head into the alley on his own to practise the skills Bucky had been teaching him before the other boy got there, then Bucky’d chide him for overdoing it and they’d bicker cheerfully about everything under the sun till sundown. Bucky was generally late, arriving after lunch since he had to run errands for his Ma most days, but today he’d got finished early since his Ma was ahead of herself and looking forward to some time to herself. She’d made him a packed lunch for them both and sent him off with a smile.

“You little misfit!

Bucky heard the shout and the unmistakeable sound of a punch landing before he entered the alley; dropping his lunch on a nearby fire-escape, he rounded the corner at a run, seeing Steve on his back with a larger kid, bent over, fists in Steve’s clothes, lifting him only to drop him again, hard. The wheeze that punched out of Steve’s lungs hit Bucky’s senses like a fire alarm. Not slowing down at all, he launched himself at the bigger boy, knocking him off his friend.

“What the hell?” the boy snarled, reaching to grab ahold of Bucky. Quick as an eel, Bucky avoided the snatch and scrambled to his feet, putting himself between Steve and his attacker as he too got to his feet. Bucky’s Pa, for all his faults when he was drunk, had given his son a good grounding in the rudiments of boxing, and Bucky, for all his lack of dedication, was a quick study. He darted in as soon as the other boy was on his feet and hit him twice in the face, quick jabs with both fists, leading with his left, then, as the other boy stumbled back, punched him with all his strength in the sternum, dancing back out of reach himself.

The other boy, suddenly breathless, panicked visibly. His face drained of colour as he realised he couldn’t breathe in; one hand dropped to his chest as the other hand raised warily, warding off any further attack. Bucky advanced menacingly, and the other boy made a slow retreat, gasping shallowly.

“Buck, no,” Steve said, somewhat breathlessly, as Bucky kept distance with the other boy, fists still clenched. “He – he’s done. He can’t breathe either.”

“Then mebbe he shouldn’t pick fights with kids half his size!” Bucky spat, not losing eye-contact with his rival.

“Yeah, he’s probably got that now,” Steve came to stand next to his friend. “And he might think twice about stealing footballs too.”

“Yeah?” Bucky asked the boy. “Ya think ya got that, ya misfit?”

The other boy flinched and nodded, still retreating from Bucky’s murderous glare.

“Then get the hell out of our alley … misfit.”

The other boy shuffled backwards out on to the main street, followed by the two friends. He moved slowly, like he was an old man, away from them until he was on the other side of the road, where he shakily sat down on the kerb just trying to breathe.

“How did ya know to hit him like that, Buck?” Steve asked quietly, eyes on the assailant-turned-victim.

“My Pa,” Bucky answered wryly. “Said I’d need to know, since I’ve got sisters ’n’ all.”

“He wants you to hit your sisters?” Steve said, with confusion written all over his face, no doubt thinking of Bucky’s pretty, gentle, funny sisters.

“Naw, you dope,” Bucky was surprised into barking a laugh. “For when boys give ‘em the run-around, y’know.”

“Oh,” Steve said, in a relieved tone. After a while he said: “So will he get better anytime soon?”

“Yeah. I reckon,” Bucky said, and as he said it, the boy rolled to his feet and with a final glance in their direction, stumbled off. Bucky fumbled an arm round Steve in a half-hug. “See? Wanna get some lunch?”

Image
Last edited by Lirimaer on Fri Apr 09, 2021 10:45 am, edited 2 times in total.

Newborn of Imladris
Points: 1 463 
Posts: 1319
Joined: Thu May 14, 2020 10:54 am
Prompt: (2) Consequences
POV: Bucky Barnes, 3rd person
Word count: 1021
Total word count: 3117
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If you've got troubles, I've got 'em too
You've got a friend in me - Claire and Dad
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Steve got a certain look sometimes; somewhere in his head the scales of justice were horribly unequal and he couldn't live with it.

They didn’t ‘go looking for trouble,’ as Bucky’s Ma had said to Mrs Rogers. It wasn’t like that. At least on his part; he wasn’t sure about Steve – he sure seemed to attract it. And to be fair, the teachers weren’t as hard on the two of them as they might have been, almost as if they knew of Steve’s righteous quest. That’s not to say they didn’t get in trouble, but it was always together, and if Bucky’d heard, You don’t always gotta finish what Rogers starts once, he’d heard it a hundred times. Wasn’t true though; they had to be put down hard, so they didn’t get up again. And Bucky’s Da never said anything except giving him pointers on form, which his Ma frowned at, but still gave him an extra helping of pudding at dinner. So that was that.

For whatever reason, Bucky rarely noticed anyone getting picked on, for one; his focus was elsewhere, usually on whatever they were actually doing. Steve, being the nosy parker he was, couldn’t help but notice the little guys, probably since he was one of them. Steve, pint-size avenging angel, would dart off on a mission, and Bucky – belatedly realising his friend had disappeared again – began the inevitable search of all the hidden corners and niches around St Bart’s Elementary until he found Steve and his latest rescuee, and had to rescue them both.

At first, nobody’d understood that Steve had back-up, and when Steve stormed into situations, all bark and no bite, he’d gotten his ass kicked a few times before Bucky’d got there and waded in, hauling kids off his friend, fists flying. Fights never tended to last long when Bucky got involved, and tapered off soon enough, since few people wanted Bucky going Irish on them.

It got a bit bad for Steve once Bucky left for high school, since Steve’s mouth wrote cheques his slight frame couldn’t cash, and it didn’t matter that Steve was in sixth grade, since the fourth-graders were bigger than him. Of course, Bucky generally got out of school before Steve and he sometimes came the long way home to meet up with him, hanging around outside twirling his knife until Stevie came out. It was inevitable that at some stage he’d notice the uncomfortable way Steve held himself, even if bruises weren’t on show, and he began asking questions. Not of Steve, obviously; Steve wore his bruises as badges of honour and he was far from likely to tell Bucky what he wanted to know. Bucky’s sisters were far more reliable.

Over the course of a few weeks, Steve began to look less belligerent and defensive all at once, and it was without guile or suspicion that he confided to Bucky that he thought he’d finally got through to the bullies in the school, who'd learned to stop bullying, at least in Steve's sight.

Bucky smiled, laying back on the wall they were sitting on, closing his eyes. “That’s great, pal.”

*

Of course, Steve at high school was another matter. His mouth was a menace, and Bucky had taken up boxing training with his Da in earnest, ‘cause he knew he was gonna be needing it. He was a pretty fit kid, all told, and the gym masters loved him. With a deadly combination of knowing exactly where to strike for maximum pain and paralysis, and lightning fast reflexes, no one ever wanted a repeat performance of the Barnes’ kid’s right hook – or his left, for that matter. Word spread fast. It made life at high school pretty damn chill, and the years passed ...

*

For his part, Bucky found himself noticing the shadowy corners and furtive behaviour more and more, eyes drawn to a certain hunched posture, even if it turned out it wasn’t Steve. “Knock it off, Parker,” he growled, as a boy even smaller than Steve made a whimpering sound as he was cuffed round the head by the older boy. “Leave the kid alone.” He leaned against the wall, one leg kicked up, to roll a cigarette.

Parker snarled, but let the kid go, strolling off as if it was his idea, eyeing Barnes with hatred.

“You wanna make somethin’ of it?” Bucky drawled, still looking down. He licked the strip briefly and looked up, dark eyes challenging, standing suddenly.

The boy started, and stumbled backwards in a hurry, flushed and darted away. Bucky snorted and lit up, taking a drag and peering into the darkness at the little rat picking up his belongings. “You okay, kid?”

The kid, red-faced and teary, wiped snot on his sleeve and fled the scene with barely a nod. Bucky slid down the wall into a crouch and flicked ash into the darkness. It was there that Steve found him maybe half an hour later, eyes shut, humming a tune.

“Heard you got Parker off Liam,” he said, looking at the two cigarette butts at Bucky’s feet and sighing.

“Didja?” Bucky squinted up at Steve, standing silhouetted against the sinking sun, his blond hair glowing white around the edges like a halo. Bucky thought it suited him.

“Why you gotta smoke these?” Steve whined, toeing the butts with distaste.

“’S’all about the image,” Bucky smiled slow. “Ya know I don’t inhale. My Da’d kill me.”

“Still,” Steve grumbled, clearly not willing to let it go. “I wish you wouldn’t.”

“We can’t all be perfect,” Bucky yawned offensively. “Let the lesser mortals have their vices, Stevie.”

Steve punched him in the arm, and Bucky frowned. “Ow. Whaddya do that for?”

“Making a point,” Steve said, his chin going up. “I came to say thanks for helping Liam.”

Bucky’s face rapidly shifted through confusion-incomprehension-perplexity and ended with wary acceptance. “And for that you hit me? Don’t thank me anymore.”

“Jerk,” Steve sank down next to him.

“Punk.”

They smirked at each other.

“I’m pretty proud of you,” Steve said nobly, albeit awkwardly.

Bucky rolled his eyes, but the pink in his cheeks was rising fast.

“Shut up, Stevie.”
Last edited by Lirimaer on Fri Apr 09, 2021 11:27 am, edited 1 time in total.

Healer of Imladris
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I think this is a great NaNo project @Lirimaer! I too will be pretty happy in the end if I just manage to write a few hundred words every day. NaNo is a good time to jumpstart a writing habit.

Captain America isn't my area of expertise, I've just seen a couple movies, but I enjoyed reading both of these nevertheless. Loved their first meeting outside the nurses office (alligator pit!). Good friendship fic is my favorite type of fic.

Newborn of Imladris
Points: 1 463 
Posts: 1319
Joined: Thu May 14, 2020 10:54 am
Prompt: (3) Ragged
POV: Bucky Barnes, 3rd person
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Steve had always suffered with pride. It was his greatest weakness.

The thing was, Bucky mused, Steve was aware of it. You didn’t grow up in nineteen-twenties Brooklyn unaware of your flaws; they were highlighted weekly at Church, just in case your parents were doing a piss poor job of letting you know, and in case the preacher had forgotten, every adult in the general area felt an unction to point out your misdemeanours – from your teachers to the local shopkeepers.

It was enough to drive you mad on its own, at least if you paid them any attention. And Steve did. He respected his elders right up until they failed the Steven G Rogers’ litmus test on equity. Steve had gotten his morals from his Ma; a strong sense of fairness and righteousness and the drive to march into places and demand action - or at least, to be heard. Sarah Rogers was a force of nature, and the apple hadn’t fallen far from the tree. Steve believed in truth with a fervour that had Bucky feeling like a cad whenever he lied to his Ma, and he believed in justice like it was a tangible thing. With Steve punching everyone who disagreed with him, Bucky supposed it was pretty tangible.

But Steve didn’t have the presence or power to match his personality, and the disparity was galling. Steve clearly resented the weakness of his body and hated the asthma which enfeebled it further with every passing year. Getting a cold in winter was an awful trial which lasted weeks, followed by several months of recuperation and getting stronger before the cycle started again, tripping hazard wires with every change in the weather and woe betide him if he got a summer sniffle, because life was a misery with his lungs. Mrs Rogers erred on the side of caution and refused to let Bucky in the house if either of them looked sickly, in case poor Steve worsened. Bucky generally tended to lurk out of sight of Steve’s Ma and would then crawl in through the window after she’d gone to work or bed. The Rogers’ place was always cold, but Bucky tended to run hot anyway. It was no never mind to Bucky to slip into Steve’s chilled room and bunk with his friend, sharing stories and heat – it was worth it to make sure he made it through the nights. Bucky’s Ma had fewer worries, since the Barnes’ brood were a hardy lot, and she’d often press a flagon of hot broth into Bucky’s hands as he attempted to steal out of the house with an overnight bag. Not a lot happened in the Barnes’ household that Ma Barnes didn’t know about, but she approved of Bucky trying to keep Steve alive with his illness-prone body in the harsh winters. If a couple of extra blankets made their way to the Rogers’ home, it wasn’t because she was unaware of it.

Of course, none of this held Steve back from waging his personal war against bullies whenever he was hale. Bucky didn’t quite know why he’d agreed to train Steve in the proper technique, apart from wanting his friend to be able to defend himself better. It generally didn’t help; once Steve had been hit, his stance went to the wall and his guard dropped, lax and wide. He was scrappy though, and was liable to pick up anything he found on his brief sojourns to the ground. Bucky’d been on the receiving end of everything from banana skins to breadbins, wielded haphazardly – proof that Steve could look after himself for a while, before his stamina ran out and his lungs couldn’t cope. Bucky never wanted to see what happened then, and if he’d taken to stalking the alleyways and car parks he knew Steve might frequent, he wasn’t sorry, for seven times out of ten he was in time to save Steve from a beatdown by a bigger guy. The other times, Steve was at home, righteously offended that Bucky would even presume he might be causing trouble in alleyways. It made for a delicate balancing act, not humiliating his friend while dispatching his aggrieved opponent, who, more often than not, had not in fact started it.

It had been a surprise when Steve had come along to the boxing gym where Bucky trained.

Steve had turned up one day, and watched critically as Bucky and his fellow students were tasked into the ring to spar in two-minute bursts with the winner generally staying on. Bucky had seen his cogs whirring almost as soon as the guys were put through their paces. They were all at varying stages, but Tanner, the retired US Naval Chief Petty Officer who ran the club, knew what he was at and ran it like a ship - entirely in keeping with his past – and the whole thing went like clockwork.

Bucky, sixteen and skilled, generally tended to be one of the last called, since Tanner started easy and liked to give the boys something neat to watch, with successive fighters being more skilled and thus the fights being more exciting. Tonight, he was near the end, coming in fresh and easily holding his own against Jim McMurphy who was already tired from winning his previous two bouts. The difference in quality was seen directly; McMurphy was heavier-set and just didn’t have the speed Bucky was taunting him with; although he did pack a wallop when he connected, he liked to grab and hold before he hit. Bucky’s technique against him was to avoid the grab, dancing in and out of range after delivering his own packet of fury, picking off his opponent in short bursts.

Bucky glanced over at Steve when Tanner stopped the fight to give the other boy pointers for next time, watching his friend taking on board the advice; Steve would be a menace to society with a healthy body, he just knew it. But his next opponent, Micky Fletcher, was climbing into the ring and in short order Tanner was giving them the go ahead.

Micky fared little better than McMurphy, his sloppy technique visibly letting his guard down and giving Bucky far too many opportunities. Bucky rolled his eyes at Steve’s thumbs up as the bout came to a close. As a third opponent tapped in, Bucky rolled his shoulders to loosen them, grinning at his new sparring partner and raising one eyebrow in silent challenge. Angelo Genovese was a good fighter, and Bucky’d lost as many fights as he’d won against him. Their private war was strictly limited to the ring, since the boys were friendly. Not to mention that Angelo’s Pa had designs on Bucky’s future career, so sometimes invited him over to give him errands to run for cash. Mr Genovese’d been doing it ever since Bucky’d hit his teens, (but his Ma would’ve had a fit, so the less she knew about it the better).

The two were pretty equally matched at first glance. The first blows traded were fast and sharp, both sides landing and reeling from the fallout.

Angelo was cocky and brash, but his guard was flawless, and every blow was calculated. Bucky found himself on the defensive soon enough, as Angelo pressed his advantage. He kept his gloves up, giving ground quickly, turning the tables with a tight volley of hits, but he was getting tired now. He didn’t press hard enough and Angelo’s retaliatory strike caught him by surprise; trying to summon up another burst of energy was not going to happen when the other boy gave no quarter. Bucky found himself hemmed in, the ropes the only thing holding him up at one point – guard up, covering his head as Angelo exploited his moment of weakness, tight little punches aimed at Bucky’s poorly-shielded body sapping his energy. Only damnable stubbornness lifted him out of it; making himself smaller, he used his thighs, twisting in close to his assailant unexpectedly and punching up straight into his face, certainly harder than anticipated. Angelo reeled back, stumbling as he fought to keep his feet under him, Bucky following it up with a relentless assault until Angelo was on the floor and Tanner was between them.

“Good job, Barnes,” the trainer remarked calmly, fist bumping Bucky’s glove and raising his arm high. “C’mon, Genovese. Get your ass up.”

Bucky met his friend’s eyes wearily. Offering his hand to the downed Angelo, the other boy took it with reluctant grace.

“I had you on the ropes,” Angelo complained, rubbing his face gingerly as he stood.

“Yeah? Don’t mean nuthin’ t’Barnes,” McMurphy drawled from somewhere down below. “Boy don’t know when t’quit.”

Bucky gave a tired grin, threw an arm around Angelo’s sweaty head and kissed his dripping temple in mute apology. “I thought you had me too, pal,” he offered. “Guess it was my lucky day, today.”

“I reckon you just wanted it more,” Mr Genovese’s voice cut through the air. “Nice work, kid. I always liked your style.”

“Uh,” Bucky looked wildly embarrassed, threw an apologetic look at Angelo and ducked his head. “Thanks, Mr Genovese. I didn’t know you were watching.”

“We only got here a few minutes ago,” Angelo’s father answered, one hand encompassing his entourage, who seemed to have taken over the gym. “Enough time to be thoroughly entertained. C’mon, Angelo, family night tonight. Another time, kid.”

“Right,” Angelo swung into high gear, collecting his kit with the help of one of his father’s mooks, who helped unlace his gloves. “Get ya next time, Barnes.”

Bucky laughed and gave a wave as the sweaty teen was ushered out, nodding deferentially to Mr Genovese, who followed his son with a final gesture at Bucky. Steve’d watched the exchange, jaw set, a frown settling between his eyes as he stared at the door they departed through.

Once they’d gone Bucky dropped his arms onto the ropes and climbed through, pulling at his gloves’ ties with his teeth until Steve came across and batted his hands until Bucky let him help untie them.

“I thought he had you there,” Steve muttered, focused on his task.

“Yeah,” Bucky said wearily. “Me too.”

“He almost did,” Tanner said matter-of-factly, coming over to debrief Bucky on the many things he could’ve done better. Bucky nodded and pretended to agree. “I can read ya like a book, son,” Tanner grinned, slapping his shoulder. “You ain’t listened to a word I said since I told ya to stop being proud you can take a lickin’.”

Bucky barked out a laugh, mostly at Steve’s mulish expression, and pulled his hands out of his loosened gloves.

Tanner followed his look and smiled wryly. He’d seen Bucky arrive with bruises or favouring a limb and he never poked his nose in. Bucky was no man’s fool though, clearly Tanner had taken it upon himself to make sure Bucky never seriously hurt anyone in his gym; he’d had to stop matches before, like today – and Bucky’d overheard him once, saying that there was something feral in the Barnes kid which got mean when cornered.

“Who’s ya friend, Barnes?” Tanner asked.

“This is Stevie,” Bucky answered, ignoring Steve’s sputtered, Steve! “I’ve been teaching him some things. This is Tanner. He owns the place.”

Tanner, whatever he thought about that, kept it to himself. “Oh yeah?” he asked Steve. “He a good teacher?”

Steve raised his chin. “The best,” he answered stoutly.

Bucky laughed some more, and stood up unsteadily. Tanner eyed him critically.

“Steve, you mind getting him some water?” he said, gesturing vaguely across the room.

“This the kid your Pa was telling me about?” Tanner asked.

“Probably,” Bucky said with a shrug. Who else would his Da be talking about?

“He looks like a stiff breeze’d knock him down,” Tanner remarked casually. “You wanna go careful there.”

“Yeah, I got it,” Bucky said, turning away, stubbornness to the fore.

“I meant,” Tanner said to his back, “that I don’t wanna see you coming in here with yet more injuries.”

Bucky’s spine went ramrod straight and he whirled round, eyes wide. “You don’t want me here?”

“Kid,” Tanner breathed out a longsuffering sigh. “I didn’t say that. I don’t wanna see you getting unnecessarily hurt.”

Bucky stared at a point on the wall, biting the inside of his cheek.

Tanner sighed again. “Look, kid. I just call it as I see it, okay? You’re hanging out with this Steve and getting into fights for him, and don’t think I missed that little tete-a-tete you had with Mr Genovese. You know who he works for. That’s a connection your Pa wouldn’t like.”

Bucky’s mouth pulled into a little moue of distaste. He didn’t get into fights for Steve, just – well, mainly because of Steve. There was a difference. And regarding Mr Genovese, his parents wouldn’t like it, for sure, but Mr Genovese was offering him work, and well-paid work, which was more than anyone else had offered. “You gonna tell him?” he asked shortly.

“I think a man’s gotta make his own mistakes in life,” Tanner said carefully. “But I also think he deserves to make a choice based on good information. I ain’t gonna tell your Pa, kid. I think you should talk it over with him though.”

The way Bucky’s lip curled may have told Tanner what he thought of that suggestion, but he didn’t respond as Steve came back with water.

The conversation naturally curtailed with Steve’s return, but clearly the air was thick with tension as Steve looked interestedly between the two of them. He packed up his stuff quickly and left with Steve, who was obviously fighting with himself to be polite and not inquire, whilst being simultaneously alive with curiosity. Since Bucky had no intention of talking about it in the slightest, he encouraged the former by talking about anything and everything else. He had no illusions that Steve would forget it, but at least he let it drop.

Bucky didn’t give Tanner the opportunity to talk to him like that again. Leaving school at sixteen, full of brash confidence and darkly suspecting Tanner of being a do-gooder, Bucky kept him at arm’s length. He obeyed the man’s rules in the gym, and kept his conversation limited to sport. Steve would come and watch him spar sometimes, but he never joined the gym himself.

Bucky gradually gained more control in his boxing technique, although he could never be called a defensive fighter, preferring to go on the offensive almost every time. He was aware of the hypocrisy of giving Steve defensive advice he himself rarely used, but it was amusing every time Steve told him he’d had someone on the ropes.

His developing working relationship with Mr Genovese was a private affair, conducted outside of the gym and Tanner’s sphere of influence. At eighteen, he was earning pretty good money and wearing a tailored three-piece suit to work. He was still living at home, officially, but most of the time it was just easier to bunk down in one of the Boss’s many spare bedrooms. He still gave half his pay to his Ma for rent, but he was barely there overnight anymore. Bucky’d never asked what Steve thought of this arrangement, and by the time he turned nineteen, had enough money saved to get his own apartment – though his Ma kept his bed made up at home, just in case.

He still spent a lot of time with his friend (who probably thought he was a chauffeur) in his time off, but Steve’s Ma had gotten really sick recently; she wasn’t getting better, and Steve was distracted. Bucky took him places to get his mind off the morbid thoughts he was mired in; fairs, museums, even a boat trip (that was a mistake). He dropped by every so often and surreptitiously left fresh food in the house, left money in the tin to help with the bills, brought round his Ma’s cooking, but she wasn’t getting better. By the next fall Sarah Rogers had succumbed to her illness.

Steve had found her body one morning, having passed sometime in the night. Bucky had turned up later that day and found his friend, barely eighteen and newly alone in the world, trying to breathe through stifled sobs on the fire escape. It was easy enough to help Steve make the necessary arrangements, but trying to get him to come back for dinner was difficult. He’d never liked accepting charity for himself. Of course, once he was out of the apartment, Bucky had better luck taking him back to the Barnes’ family home before heading off to work; Steve had spent the evening being smothered in Barnes’ women concern and the night in Bucky’s old bed, while Bucky crashed on the couch when he came back in the early hours. When Steve came down to breakfast the next day, no one mentioned his red-rimmed eyes. Bucky’d taken some days off, and proceeded to cart him off round town to the funeral parlor and the pastor, stopping out for lunch to give his Ma and sisters time to go over and clean up the apartment while they were out.

Of course, Steve had retreated to the cold, empty place as soon as he could, making himself hard to reach in a misguided attempt to not be a burden in his grief. It wasn’t until the card appeared on the mat that anyone heard from him again, and it merely detailed the date and time of the funeral.

Steve’d looked desolate in the vast Church building, sat in the front row mostly ignoring other folks as the service went on. Bucky’s Ma had made him sit with the family rather than go up with Steve, so he’d spent the whole thing just watching the forlorn little figure of his friend all alone up at the front.

Bucky’d tried to catch up with him after, but Steve somehow managed to sneak out unseen. Bucky did check the alleyways around the Church, just in case anyone was beating the snot outta him, but eventually just wandered the streets back home after the service, looking for Steve and failing to find him. It wasn’t until much later that he caught up with a somewhat drained and emotional Steve dejectedly wandering back through the streets, unseeing. Bucky fell in step beside him, not having the words as he followed him back home, but eventually blurting, “We looked for you - after. My folks wanted to give you a ride to the cemetery.”

Steve looked vaguely guilty. “I know, I'm sorry. I just... kind of wanted to be alone.”

Bucky let it go. “How was it?” he asked.

“It was okay,” Steve shrugged one slight shoulder, barely whispering. “She's next to Dad.”

Bucky grimaced in sympathy. “I was gonna ask...”

Steve interrupted. “I know what you're gonna say, Buck. I just...”

Bucky continued as if Steve wasn’t trying to be manly and stoic and foolish. “We can put the couch cushions on the floor like when we were kids. It'll be fun. All you gotta do is shine my shoes, maybe take out the trash.”

mmm
Image
mmm

He tried for a smirk, but it was lost on Steve, who was not in the mood for jesting, and had clearly misplaced his keys. Bucky kicked a brick aside, picked up the spares from under it. “Here, come on,” he said, handing them over.

“Thank you, Buck,” Steve replied primly, donning the Sarah Rogers’ we-accept-no-charity-here stance. “But I can get by on my own.”

Bucky repressed a sigh. “The thing is, you don't have to.” He scrunched his face into a wry grimace. “You don’t always gotta be a punk.”

“Jerk,” Steve muttered, without heat.

“Yeah,” Bucky lolled against the bricks with a smirk. “I know. Better’n bein’ alone though. C’mon, y’ain’t gotta shine anythin’. My Ma wants to make sure you’re okay.”

“Don’t blame your Ma-” Steve started hotly, before looking down, unable to swallow past the lump in his throat.

“Hey, hey, it’s okay,” Bucky soothed, feeling wretched. “I wanna make sure you’re okay, too. We don’t gotta do this right now. Here, let me make somethin’ ta eat.” He took the keys out of Steve’s unresisting fingers and opened the door into the apartment, striding in to put the kettle on the hob and listening for the little snick of the door closing behind him which told him Steve had accepted this intrusion.

It was awful, and so so quiet here, but at least Steve wasn’t alone with his grief.

Ilmarë
Ilmarë
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Whoa, I am glad I finally had time to read through these tonight! I know only what's in the Marvel movies, and I loved reading these to get a look beyond what's been done on screen. (Nice work weaving that one scene into your writing!)

I love the single-word prompts (how did you come up with those? some - seventeen, homecoming, freight car, etc. XD - are familiar, but am curious about the others!) and songs to accompany each story.

I look forward to reading more as you share them!

Newborn of Imladris
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Aerlinn - thank you for reading. You may like to stop reading when Bucky falls from the train ... not a lot of good feels for a while then. If I get that far.

Tara - that scene was a nightmare to weave in; it's where I wanted to be, but I thought I'd get there far sooner than I did. Took a lot of editing before I was happy enough to post it. I always liked the idea of drabbles - which used to be a thing on LJ a million years ago - which were 100-word bitesize fics and people used to produce these 1-word prompts in tables. I think I started one once, but never got very far. I do like the idea of short and sweet, less is more, but find it hard to do, expecially when I am on my soapbox. I picked 30, one for each day in November for NaNo, and just thought about the story I wanted to tell. I have attempted not to be too cryptic with it all, but #3 ragged is quite obscure - it comes from a line in Simon and Garfunkel's The Boxer (a song for later in the fic) laying low, seeking out the poorer quarters where the ragged people go, looking for the places only they would know. It's a reference to growing up poor, to living in the back streets and the troubles of Depression-era poverty, expecially with Steve's sickliness. Both Steve and Bucky grew up ragged people. Eminem's 8-Mile anthem more properly fits this story as the song, because it's about taking advantage of opportunities offered and fighting for it - pulling yourself out of the gutter through something you're good at, which Bucky is trying to do, albeit in a way his mama (and Steve) wouldn't approve of. Bucky's not quite there though, he didn't lose himself totally to it - when Steve needed him, he was there; he's just getting by - but I'm trying to set the stage for later!Bucky, who does get lost (unwillingly) in almost the same sort of activity as I've only alluded to very tentatively here. The next installment should be a little more clear about where Bucky's path was heading, if you don't already have a clear idea.

Ilmarë
Ilmarë
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Ahhh LJ drabbles!! That really takes me back in time! :lol:

I am loving these insights into the words you chose and the thematic relevance of each song. "The Boxer" is amazing. And now I must go listen to "Lose Yourself"!

Looking forward to more! :grin:

Thain of The Mark
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I'm sorry that I haven't gotten around to reading these yet, and that I won't before my impending Plaza-sabbatical. But, please do tag me in a reply to this so that I remember to come back to it when I return!

Also, another old LJ crowd person here. I never did much fandom writing ON LJ, but I followed several people who did and I remember drabbles!

Newborn of Imladris
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@Taeth-on-Hiatus You are absolutely under no compulsion to come back here at all, but I appreciate the thought! Consider yourself tagged. :smooch:

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