Sharon Carter (
from_the_outside) wrote2021-05-01 03:01 pm
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Entry tags:
[oom] you don't need to save me, but would you run away with me? // Part 2
It's a long, long week.
All the weeks here are long. She's been exhausted since she first arrived, and it hasn't gotten any easier – she's just gotten used to it.
What she isn't used to is watching what it does to Bucky.
He keeps busy, vanishing shortly after breakfast and not reappearing until well after dark, sometimes not until close to midnight. That doesn't mean she doesn't have eyes on him – she has eyes everywhere in this city. Some of what he gets up to he tells her about. Some of it she sees or hears about.
Some she only pieces together after the fact.
For example:
Four days into his stay she sees a flurry of alerts and messages about a gang of thugs that had decided to tangle with him in a Lowtown market. The videos of him throwing them into plate glass windows and walls and storefront doors travel through Madripoor like wildfire.
And then there are the rumors. It's public knowledge he killed Cade and that he's been seen with the art dealer: what no one knows is why, and the whispers grow steadily more frenetic as the week rolls on. The general consensus seems to be that the art dealer had Cade disposed of in order to help her own climb to power. More than one person attempts to contract him for help with an unsolvable problem. No one manages to hire him. No one seems to know what he wants.
Worse is that as the power dynamic between those on the lower rung vying for Selby's position fluctuates, he deliberately allows himself to be seen more often, delves more deeply into Madripoor's seedy shadows. She doesn't understand until her security catches a would-be assassin she saw coming a mile away, and then she realizes: his involvement with her, with Cade, has painted a target on her back.
So he's decided to paint a larger one on his own.
He loses weight. She pushes breakfast and dinner at him, but he eats mechanically, hardly seems to notice. The lines drawn on his face seem carved into rock. He stops smiling except occasionally when they're alone in the middle of the night, or when his phone pings with a text from Sam.
On the fifth night, he stops sleeping.
He wakes up from a nightmare he refuses to talk about, and for the next few days she doesn't see him sleep at all. He's catching catnaps like he used to back in the Winter Soldier days, she thinks, but she's not sure. Every day he's a little quieter, a little more grim.
Which is why it's so strange that her apartment is completely filled with flowers.
Everywhere she looks now, there they are: large, expensive bouquets in fancy vases on nearly every available surface. He's had one delivered every single day, and every day she hates herself a little more for bringing him here. Every day he tells her come home with me.
Every day she tells him I can't. And he looks at her with those determined, weary eyes, and her heart breaks a little more.
It's a little over a week after he'd first arrived that she's hosting clients again. The party hasn't even started, and she already wishes she had a drink.
(There weren't any flowers today. She wonders if that's a sign.)
All the weeks here are long. She's been exhausted since she first arrived, and it hasn't gotten any easier – she's just gotten used to it.
What she isn't used to is watching what it does to Bucky.
He keeps busy, vanishing shortly after breakfast and not reappearing until well after dark, sometimes not until close to midnight. That doesn't mean she doesn't have eyes on him – she has eyes everywhere in this city. Some of what he gets up to he tells her about. Some of it she sees or hears about.
Some she only pieces together after the fact.
For example:
Four days into his stay she sees a flurry of alerts and messages about a gang of thugs that had decided to tangle with him in a Lowtown market. The videos of him throwing them into plate glass windows and walls and storefront doors travel through Madripoor like wildfire.
And then there are the rumors. It's public knowledge he killed Cade and that he's been seen with the art dealer: what no one knows is why, and the whispers grow steadily more frenetic as the week rolls on. The general consensus seems to be that the art dealer had Cade disposed of in order to help her own climb to power. More than one person attempts to contract him for help with an unsolvable problem. No one manages to hire him. No one seems to know what he wants.
Worse is that as the power dynamic between those on the lower rung vying for Selby's position fluctuates, he deliberately allows himself to be seen more often, delves more deeply into Madripoor's seedy shadows. She doesn't understand until her security catches a would-be assassin she saw coming a mile away, and then she realizes: his involvement with her, with Cade, has painted a target on her back.
So he's decided to paint a larger one on his own.
He loses weight. She pushes breakfast and dinner at him, but he eats mechanically, hardly seems to notice. The lines drawn on his face seem carved into rock. He stops smiling except occasionally when they're alone in the middle of the night, or when his phone pings with a text from Sam.
On the fifth night, he stops sleeping.
He wakes up from a nightmare he refuses to talk about, and for the next few days she doesn't see him sleep at all. He's catching catnaps like he used to back in the Winter Soldier days, she thinks, but she's not sure. Every day he's a little quieter, a little more grim.
Which is why it's so strange that her apartment is completely filled with flowers.
Everywhere she looks now, there they are: large, expensive bouquets in fancy vases on nearly every available surface. He's had one delivered every single day, and every day she hates herself a little more for bringing him here. Every day he tells her come home with me.
Every day she tells him I can't. And he looks at her with those determined, weary eyes, and her heart breaks a little more.
It's a little over a week after he'd first arrived that she's hosting clients again. The party hasn't even started, and she already wishes she had a drink.
(There weren't any flowers today. She wonders if that's a sign.)
no subject
"How're you doing, baby?"
no subject
no subject
But she doesn't show any sign of wanting to move.
no subject
no subject
But that grasping anxiety that corkscrews into her chest at the thought of being even that far away from him means she probably wouldn't get much rest, regardless
no subject
"Come on," he says, gently. "Let's get you settled."
no subject
A deep breath, like she's bracing herself, and she pulls back enough to look up at him, her smile rueful. "Only, what. Fifteen hours to go? That's nothing."
no subject
no subject
The co-pilot's seat is small, but she can curl into it without too much trouble, taking the blanket from him and tugging it over her legs, propping the pillow behind her head. This way, even if she does fall asleep, he'll be the first thing she sees when she opens her eyes. It might not stop the nightmares, but it should help with the waking.
no subject
It looks like they're going to get lucky on weather, enough so that he can take the more northerly of the great circle routes and avoid the majority of Russian and European airspace. He can't say that he minds that in the slightest.
The trim little jet flies on through the night, chasing the sun on the far side of the world, and Bucky keeps watch while it does.
no subject
Occasionally nightmares shake her awake, variations on the same one she's had all week: they arrive and she is arrested. Or worse.
But at one point she blinks awake to see the horizon limned in the shimmering watercolor lights of the Aurora Borealis. She reaches for his hand and watches it with him in silence for a long time, and for a little while manages not to think of anything at all aside from how lucky she is.
no subject
Which is fortunate, as they're starting to enter more populated airspace. Bucky turns the volume up on the radio and starts monitoring more closely as they begin the long arc over Canada that will eventually lead them down to New York.
no subject
But it does make this whole trip feel even less real than it did to begin with. She pulls herself from her cycle of catnaps as they soar over Nunavut towards Quebec, gets up to make a new pot of coffee and dig out something resembling breakfast that Bucky can eat one-handed. She sits cross-legged in the co-pilot's chair and sips at her coffee, watching as the sky gets busier, as the lights of once-familiar cities begin to sparkle in the darkness below.
no subject
Bucky gives her a bland look, and takes a swallow of his own coffee.
no subject
Home, home, home. Nearly there.
no subject
He leans over to give her a quick kiss, running his fingers into her hair and cupping the back of her head in his hand.
"Almost there, baby. Hang on just a little longer."
no subject
no subject
Within minutes, they're authorized to proceed, and Bucky sends the plane slipping down through the air on the designated heading to circle the airport, maintaining altitude as instructed. Ten minutes after that, they hear,
"Hotel Zulu, cleared to land runway one-niner."
A surge of adrenaline races through him, and Bucky glances at Sharon with a grin as he sends back, "Confirm Hotel Zulu landing runway one-niner," and swings them around into the descent.
no subject
Her breathing comes faster and faster as they slip lower and lower, and then Bucky's initiating the landing sequence – there's a bump and a skidding sensation – and then she's home. For the first time in seven long years, home. She's a bundle of nervous energy as they taxi in, as Bucky talks through their arrival, as they come to rest in a hangar, and then the hatch opens and she can walk down the stairs and onto US soil for the first time in seven years.
Nobody arrests her. Nobody sees her and shouts. Nobody pulls a gun. She breathes in the muggy night air and looks at Bucky with shining eyes, absolutely unable to speak.
no subject
When Sharon turns to him, he walks forward and cups the back of her neck with his left hand, gently, and bends down to kiss her.
"Welcome home, angel."
no subject
Home. And for a moment, she doesn't care that it's the place that shut her out, burned her, called her enemy. It's still where she was born. Where she grew up and lived. Where she became who she is.
Who she still is. Somewhere. I don't have a home, she'd told him, and it was true, but she doesn't want it to be true anymore. She doesn't want to be homesick anymore.
So she nods and smiles a little at him and takes another deep breath before she trusts herself enough to speak. "Almost."
If she has a home, it's not a place. It's just wherever he is. "Brooklyn's waiting."
no subject
"It sure is. Come on. Let's grab a cab."
Bucky shifts the painting to his left hand and takes hold of her hand with his right, drawing her after him towards the other side of the terminal. As he'd expected, there are more than a few yellow cabs lurking in line across from where the car services drop off and pick up. Bucky leads Sharon to one and opens the door for her before he puts their things in the trunk and climbs in after her, giving the driver his address.
no subject
(They weren't. She has so much still she needs to do.)
She almost laughs at the familiar scent of cab interior, at the cracked seats and surly driver, and when Bucky slides in and closes the door and the cab pulls away, she sits close to him and puts her head on his shoulder to watch the city as it slowly appears through the windows.
no subject
The cab slows to a stop in front of one of them, and Bucky swipes a card through the payment terminal on the back of the seat, leaving a good tip, before he gets out and goes to collect their bags.
He meets Sharon on the sidewalk and nods toward the building. "It's that one," he murmurs, indicating the half-flight of stairs that leads up to a wooden door with a large white-curtained window overlooking the street. Bucky takes her by the hand and leads her up the stairs, then fumbles his keys from the outer pocket of his pack and unlocks the door.
no subject
She likes the old brick buildings and the spacious sidewalks. And the trees: there were no trees around her in Madripoor. Nothing alive and growing, nothing fresh and green. She looks around, taking in the quiet neighborhood, as he unlocks the door, then waits for his nod to make her way inside.
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)