Sharon Carter (
from_the_outside) wrote2023-05-06 08:21 pm
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[ WWII AU ] a ghost story
It's been almost two years since she's been home, and little by little, the grief has gotten easier to live with.
It hasn't gone away. But she's able to focus on her job, watch movies, chat with friends, sleep most nights. She still dreams about him, but the dreams are tinged with wistful longing and only sometimes does she wake up with tears on her cheeks. She can't have his picture out in this apartment, Kate's apartment, but it's safe in the mountain house, along with his last letter to her, and she has a scan on her phone to look at when the long day is over and she's in bed, the stars from the lamp he'd given her filling her dark room.
Steve has helped, more than she could ever explain, and she hopes she's helped him in return. Aside from a few deeply classified missions here and there, they haven't worked together all that much, but she still sees him almost every day. In the halls, she's undercover as his mild-mannered neighbor, Kate, but in her secure apartment they can talk over anything, everything.
And it works. Every day is a little easier. They lean on each other when they need to, and they spend hours remembering and reminiscing about Bucky, talking shop, chatting about how Steve's fitting into the future. It's nice. She still misses Bucky, an ache that never really goes away, but they can both breathe through it, work through it, live through it.
She's on her way up from the basement laundry machines when she hears a familiar step in the hall, and has to smile to herself – first her own, then Kate's sweeter, more open one. "Hey, neighbor."
It hasn't gone away. But she's able to focus on her job, watch movies, chat with friends, sleep most nights. She still dreams about him, but the dreams are tinged with wistful longing and only sometimes does she wake up with tears on her cheeks. She can't have his picture out in this apartment, Kate's apartment, but it's safe in the mountain house, along with his last letter to her, and she has a scan on her phone to look at when the long day is over and she's in bed, the stars from the lamp he'd given her filling her dark room.
Steve has helped, more than she could ever explain, and she hopes she's helped him in return. Aside from a few deeply classified missions here and there, they haven't worked together all that much, but she still sees him almost every day. In the halls, she's undercover as his mild-mannered neighbor, Kate, but in her secure apartment they can talk over anything, everything.
And it works. Every day is a little easier. They lean on each other when they need to, and they spend hours remembering and reminiscing about Bucky, talking shop, chatting about how Steve's fitting into the future. It's nice. She still misses Bucky, an ache that never really goes away, but they can both breathe through it, work through it, live through it.
She's on her way up from the basement laundry machines when she hears a familiar step in the hall, and has to smile to herself – first her own, then Kate's sweeter, more open one. "Hey, neighbor."
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Her breathing is shallow and too fast, and it hits him with the impact of a grenade. She's scared. She's scared of him, and she has every right to be.
Moving with deliberate care so as not to startle or alarm her further, he retreats all the way across her living room, giving her as much space as is possible within the confines of the apartment, and stops against a wall there. He's out of sight from the windows, but could be through one quickly if he needs to go.
Maybe he should. "Saw they treated you as well. How badly did I hurt you, Sharon?"
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The deep slice on her arm had required stitches, and it's not the only trophy of her fight earlier. "I tangled with Rumlow, too."
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Bucky studies her carefully, searching for any and all signs of injury and making note of everything he sees. There, damage to the corner of her mouth; there, a chafe mark from the harness strap; a bandage on her forearm, and those are just what he can easily see.
Bitter self-loathing threatens to swallow him, and in that moment he wishes again that he'd died years ago.
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Smashing. Destruction. Clouds of dust and bursts of explosions. "He wasn't quick enough."
He looks her over, and she wonders what he sees. The last time they'd seen each other, she'd been in uniform, and so had he; she'd sent him off, bare-headed and brave, with a wink and a smile and foolish optimism. Sharon swallows, hard, against the lump in her throat. "Are you hurt?"
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It hangs there in the air between them.
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It jerks out of her, reflexive, and she can't quite keep the anguish and guilt locked behind the agent, not when his name is on her lips. Not when she owes him this. "Bucky, I'm sorry."
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"You're sorry? You have nothing, nothing to apologize for. Not to me. Not ever."
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Old, bitter guilt seeps in, poisonous. "Or if we could have made you remember, at the boatyard – " She swallows, hard. "Or come for you, under the bank, sooner."
Or if she'd pushed to look for him, to dig up the cold case of how Bucky Barnes went missing in action, worked it through. Could they have found him? Could she? "I'm sorry. I'm so sorry."
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Or had she? Sudden nausea twists his insides as the thought occurs, and his shoulders slam against the wall as he takes an involuntary step backward. He stares at her in horror.
"How did you know about the bank?"
No. No, it's not possible. Couldn't be possible. She wouldn't have, couldn't have - she didn't know who he was when he came for her, she didn't.
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"Sitwell," she answers, trying to slow her racing heart. "He spilled his guts, the coward."
He's watching her with horrified confusion, and she lifts her free hand, carefully, holding it up, palm towards him and fingers spread in the universal slow down gesture. "No. I didn't know this. But if I could have stopped you from falling, none of this would have happened."
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He shakes his head once, back and forth, keeping his eyes on her.
"You tried. To stop it. It's not your fault we, we couldn't. It's not Steve's fault either." He draws a ragged breath. "You both thought I was dead. Should have been dead. Shouldn't have survived. You couldn't have known. None of this is your fault. Nothing. Don't apologize to me."
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All of it – the last two years, the last two days – it's all crashing against her like waves breaking on a dyke.
It's Bucky. Bucky. Here, and alive, and standing there looking at her. Different, but still him. Her breath catches like a sob in her throat. "I missed you so much."
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Like now. "I'm sorry," he whispers, low and desperate. "I'm sorry. Sharon. I'm sorry."
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She breathes, very evenly, then slowly sets her Kahr down on the coffee table. Without it, she feels bare and vulnerable.
It used to be so easy to be vulnerable with him.
Sharon takes one careful, wary step towards him, then another. When she's a few feet away, she holds out her hands, palms up. When she speaks, her voice breaks, just a little. "But I missed you."
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She sets aside her weapon, and he stares at her, surprised, before his eyes widen in true shock as she steps forward, as she tells him she missed him, as her voice cracks.
He almost can't make himself move. Not even to meet her halfway. But he can't leave her standing there like this, either.
His shoulder twinges as he pulls his right hand from his pocket. He ignores it, and reaches out to her, palm downward, making it entirely her choice.
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– his fingers gripping her arm, clenched in her hair, pulling her head back, hitting her, hurting her –
She shakes her head and holds on, stubborn, despite the wave of dizziness, the way her stomach churns. "You're alive," she whispers.
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His left hand stays in his pocket, the metal of his left arm hidden by the light jacket he's wearing. He'd almost rather cut that arm off again than touch her with it.
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"Aren't you happy to see me?"
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Not him; not the Winter Soldier. Weapons don't have wants, needs, or emotions, and he doesn't know what to do with everything welling up in him now.
"I nearly killed you," he falls back on, a barely audible whisper.
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Her own voice is a low murmur. She closes her eyes and fights back the flashes of memory that come, unbidden, before looking at him again. "You were very careful to not kill me."
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"You were a high-value associate of the target that intel indicated he'd do anything to save. Keeping you alive but at risk was the fastest way to bring him out of hiding before the deadline."
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Lucky me, she'd told Nat. Despite everything, she had been. Very lucky. If he'd killed her and then remembered... if he'd killed Steve...
But he hadn't. "It made sense."
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He opens his eyes again, having discovered he can't keep them closed; the internal yammering about threat assessment and situational awareness is too loud. He stares down at the floor instead.
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He'd have told her about Sam otherwise, she thinks. He knows she wants to know whenever he's made a friend. She squeezes his hand, trying to get his attention. "But the result was the same. You didn't almost kill me."
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