It starts like this. She’s furious, anger hazing her mind and making her reckless. Reckless enough that she turns and leans across the center console and presses her lips to his. It’s not a good kiss. Her lips are pursed tight, as tense as she is, and he’s also tense, but she doesn’t break it off and soon his eighteen year old boy brain seems to take over and he’s kissing her back. Ok, maybe it starts earlier than that. Maybe it starts when an eight year old Robb brings home a skinny, sullen boy after little league hockey one day. He’s quiet, but Robb loves him and from that day on, Jon Snow becomes a constant figure in her life.
SINNERS 2025 | dir. Ryan Coogler
The Mummy (1999) dir. Stephen Sommers
Hold Your Breath
pairing | civil!war!bucky x fem!reader
word count | 6.6k words (whoopsie)
summary I After a panic attack triggers something raw and vulnerable in Bucky, a desperate kiss turns into a night of urgent, clothed intimacy where he clings to you for grounding, connection, and humanity.
tags | 18+, (MDNI!), p in v sex, clothed sex, unprotected sex, emotional sex, desperate sex, riding, dry humping, titty sucking, begging, subby!bucky, soft!reader, angst, soft dom!reader, vulnerable!bucky, slow burn to sudden burn, hurt/comfort, PANIC ATTACK! platonic!steve x reader, oh and PLOT! but premises: Fuck His Pain Away
a/n | THIS MIGHT BE THE FILTHIEST THING IVE EVER WRITTEN. uh, Matt Murdock cameo. and Steve and reader lowkey act romantic but they're purely platonic. inspired by THE Stiles and Lydia. ENJOY!
likes comments and reblogs are always appreciated ✨✨
The warehouse looked like it had been forgotten by time. Rust flaked off corrugated walls, the windows long since caked in grime and dust. Faint light filtered in through the cracks in the ceiling, catching on floating particles like a snowstorm of ash.
You stepped through the open door slowly, your heeled boots echoing softly against the concrete floor. The weight of silence sat thick in the air—one broken only by the distant hum of traffic and the occasional creak of aging steel. Sam stood off to the side, posted up by a boarded window, his eyes scanning the outside world like a hawk. Ironic.
He gave you a short nod in greeting, then jerked his chin toward the stairwell.
“He’s upstairs. With him.”
You nodded silently, then started climbing. Each step was slow, heavy with things unsaid. You reached the upper landing and paused at the threshold of a dim corridor, where you finally saw him.
Steve Rogers.
He was leaning against the doorframe to a room that looked like it had once been an office, now stripped bare. His arms were folded, his head slightly bowed, lost in thought. The sharp angles of his jaw were drawn tight, his eyes shadowed with more than fatigue.
He looked tired—drawn in a way you rarely saw. Shoulders too tight. Worry clinging to him like a second skin.
And yet the moment he looked up and saw you, something in his face unspooled.
“You came,” he said, voice low, thick.
You smiled softly, stepping closer. “Where else would I be?”
Steve gave a dry little exhale. “I don’t know. Somewhere safe. Somewhere warm.”
“I’m exactly where I need to be,” you said.
He nodded once, but didn’t move from the door. The weight of the air between you stretched.
“You sure about this?” he asked.
You straightened, gaze steady. “I wouldn’t be here if I wasn’t. You don’t have to ask.”
“I do.” His jaw flexed, eyes flicking away. “Because I don’t know how long I’ll be gone. We’re stretched thin. And Bucky… he’s not in a good place.”
“I know,” you said, voice gentler now. “Steve, I know. I’m not scared of him.”
He let out a breath and dragged a hand down his face, tension radiating from every inch of him. “I’m not either. That’s not it. It’s just—he’s been through so much. He barely speaks. Sometimes I think he’s back—my Bucky—but then I see that look in his eyes and I don’t even know who I’m looking at.”
You took a step forward, heart aching.
“You’re worried he’ll hurt someone.”
Steve didn’t answer right away. His mouth pressed into a tight line.
Then, almost too softly: “I’m worried he’ll hurt himself.”
That cracked something inside you. You reached out, fingers curling gently around his arm.
“Then I’ll be here,” you said, firm and calm. “I’ll sit with him through it. However long it takes.”
Steve looked at you, truly looked, and you could see it then—how much weight he was carrying. And how close he was to shattering under it.
“There’s more,” he said after a moment, voice even lower.
You nodded. “Tell me.”
He hesitated, like he didn’t know if he should. Then—quietly, brokenly—he said, “I don’t know what’s happening to us. The Avengers. The world. It used to feel like we were fighting for something good. Something that meant something. Now… it just feels like we’re tearing apart.”
You let his words hang in the air. Let him breathe. Then you stepped closer.
“It’s going to be okay,” you whispered.
But Steve shook his head. Slowly. Distantly.
“I don’t think it will be.”
There was something so human about him in that moment. Not the Captain. Not the soldier. Just a man who’d lived too long, lost too much, and still hadn’t learned how to stop hoping—even when it hurt.
He looked at you—really looked at you. The intensity in his eyes bordered on overwhelming. But what you saw there wasn’t fear. It was trust. Worn, heavy, aching trust.
“You can back out at any point,” he said, voice rough. “If it’s too much. If he—”
“I’m here,” you interrupted softly, a small smile blooming. “And I’m here to stay.”
Steve stared at you for a moment longer, then—without warning—you stepped in and wrapped your arms around his neck.
He folded into you immediately, arms winding tightly around your waist like the weight of the world was something he could put down, just for a second, if he held onto you.
His breath was warm against your hair.
“Thank you,” he murmured, voice frayed at the edges. “For being here. For me.”
Your fingers curled at his nape, anchoring him. “Always.”
When he finally pulled back, his hands lingered on your waist. The kind of touch that said, I can’t ask for more, but I’d be lost without this.
You gave his hand a final squeeze, then watched as he turned and opened the door to where Bucky waited.
The door clicked shut behind Steve with a soft finality.
Bucky sat on the edge of the mattress, shoulders hunched forward, elbows on his knees. His hair was damp from where he’d splashed water on his face earlier. There was still blood crusted in his hairline from the fight in Bucharest. He hadn’t spoken in hours—not really. Just a grunt here and there when Steve checked on him.
The room was dark and cold, lit only by a single bulb hanging overhead, flickering just enough to be annoying. Dust danced in the light. The walls were bare. There was a thin mattress pushed into the corner and not much else.
He could hear someone talking outside. A familiar voice. And a softer one.
Then footsteps. Boots against concrete.
He didn’t look up when Steve entered.
Steve took a breath and crossed the floor slowly. He didn’t say anything at first, didn’t try to force conversation.
He just sat, giving Bucky space to choose.
"You holding up?" Steve finally asked.
Bucky shrugged. His metal fingers flexed slightly. “Still breathing.”
It took another minute before Bucky spoke again, voice hoarse, low.
“You’re leaving.”
Steve nodded. “Not for long.”
Bucky lifted his head, the shadows under his eyes deeper than ever. “Where?”
“Sam and I need to pull some others in. It’s moving fast.” Steve leaned forward, elbows on his knees. “But I’m not leaving you alone.”
Bucky’s mouth tightened slightly. “You’re not?”
“No.” Steve gave him a look. “She’s staying.”
Bucky’s brow furrowed. “The woman outside.”
Steve smiled faintly. “Yeah.”
Bucky paused, then asked—carefully, cautiously—“That your girl?”
Steve huffed a quiet laugh, looking down at the floor. “No. God, no. She’s… she’s just a friend.”
“Doesn’t sound like ‘just a friend,’” Bucky muttered.
“She’s just my friend,” Steve said again.
Bucky studied him for a long moment, the gears clearly turning behind his tired eyes. “You trust her.”
“With my life.”
“And you’re leaving her with me.” That wasn’t a question. That was Bucky quietly testing the weight of what Steve was asking.
“I’m not leaving her with you like she’s a babysitter,” Steve said, voice firm but warm. “She offered. Because she cares. Because she’s kind. And because she’s not afraid of you.”
Bucky’s head dropped slightly. “That’s a mistake.”
“No,” Steve said firmly. “It’s not. You’re not the man Hydra turned you into.”
“You sure?”
Steve stood slowly, walking over to the window, eyes scanning the alleyway below. “Yes and she’ll be here when you need her. Whether you like it or not.”
Bucky grunted. “Sounds annoying.”
Steve chuckled. “You’ll get used to her.”
He moved to the door but paused with his hand on the knob. “Bucky?”
He looked up.
“She’s not my girl,” Steve said again, softer this time. “But I do care about her. She’ll look after you. Let her.”
Bucky stayed quiet for a long moment, watching his friend’s back. The silence stretched.
Then, quietly, “She got a name?”
Steve turned back to him with a small, knowing smile. “Ask her yourself.”
Silence stretched. The tension in Bucky’s shoulders didn’t ease, but something in his eyes flickered. Not quite trust. But maybe curiosity.
────────────────────────
Outside, you were waiting patiently, arms folded, gaze flicking down the hallway as he approached. You gave him a questioning look.
“How’d it go?”
“He asked if you were my girl.”
You blinked, then laughed softly. “That’s a first.”
“I told him no. Just a loyal, stubborn friend.”
You nudged his arm. “Stubborn’s a little rude.”
“I meant it as a compliment.”
He gave you a final, grateful look—the kind that carried years of friendship in one glance—then disappeared down the stairwell, leaving you standing in the dim hallway outside Bucky’s room.
You inhaled slowly, squared your shoulders, and turned toward the door.
The door creaked softly as you stepped inside.
The air inside was still—almost unnaturally so. Dim light filtered through the cracked blinds, casting lines of gold across the worn floorboards. The mattress sat low to the ground, old and bare, and on it sat a man who looked more like a memory than a presence.
Bucky didn’t look up right away.
He was perched on the edge of the mattress like he didn’t know what to do with his body. Shoulders squared. Hands resting on his knees. The metal one glinting faintly under the weak light. He didn’t move as you entered, didn’t speak—just turned and looked at you as if you might explode if he blinked.
His face was as unreadable as you'd expected. Blank. Cold. Not hostile, just... emptied out.
Still, you offered him the softest smile you could manage.
“Hi,” you said softly, introducing yourself.
No reaction. Not even a flinch.
You took a step forward, slow and steady, keeping your voice warm. “Steve asked me to check in on you.”
Still nothing. But he hadn’t asked you to leave either
“I’m not here to watch you,” you spoke, stepping forward slowly, palms open, posture relaxed. “Not like that. I’m just here if you need anything.”
Silence.
But his eyes followed you, blue and unreadable.
“I’m not an agent or anything,” you added. “But I figured a quiet face wouldn’t hurt.”
His gaze dropped back to the floor.
Your eyes drifted to the gash above his eyebrow again. The skin around it looked irritated. Dry blood had trailed down his temple, now flaked and cracking.
“You’re bleeding,” you murmured. “Your forehead.”
He blinked once. No acknowledgment. Just the same blank stare.
You nodded slightly to yourself, then crossed to the nearby table where Steve had left a bottle of water, some basic medical supplies. You grabbed a cloth and dampened it gently.
When you returned, you paused beside him.
“Can I…?” you asked gently, holding up the cloth just slightly. “Take care of that?”
There was a long pause. A flicker of something unreadable passed through his eyes—suspicion, uncertainty, maybe even something like confusion.
Then he gave a small, stiff nod.
You didn’t sit on the mattress beside him. That felt too close. Instead, you knelt down on the floor, leveling yourself just enough to reach him, and held the cloth delicately in your fingers.
“Okay,” you said, mostly to fill the silence. “This might be a little cold.”
You dabbed gently at the gash on his forehead, careful not to apply too much pressure. The dried blood flaked away slowly under your touch. You worked in silence, the only sound the soft rustle of the cloth against his skin and the hush of your own breath.
Bucky didn’t flinch.
But he watched you.
Close. Unblinking.
Like he was trying to find the trick in your movements. Waiting for the shift—when the care would curdle into expectation. Or interrogation. Or pity.
But you just kept working, your touch steady, your face calm.
After a long moment, he finally spoke—voice low and rough, like unused gravel.
“You an Avenger?”
It caught you a little off guard, but you smiled faintly, not stopping your work.
“Not at all,” you said. “Maybe honorary. I just help Steve out. Here and there.”
You wiped the last of the blood from his temple, then lowered the cloth.
“But mostly,” you added with a small shrug, “I stick to New York.”
He was still staring at you. His brow twitched slightly. “Doing what?”
You chuckled, folding the cloth neatly in your lap. “I’m a lawyer.”
The expression on his face shifted for the first time—just a flicker, but there. His eyes narrowed slightly. Disbelieving, “A lawyer?”
You nodded. “Mhm.”
His look said it before his lips did.
What the hell are you doing here?
You didn’t need him to ask.
You met his gaze—steady, warm, sure.
“A lawyer that knows right from wrong,” you said simply.
The room fell quiet again.
He stared at you like he was trying to see the catch—trying to spot where the kindness ended and the judgment began.
It didn’t come.
“I’m just here to help,” you said, barely above a whisper.
You stayed kneeling for a few more moments, wringing the bloodied cloth between your fingers, giving him space even while sitting right in front of him.
Bucky still hadn’t moved.
He just watched you. Not with suspicion exactly—more like quiet observation, like he was still figuring out what you were.
You gave him a moment, then sat back on your heels and rested your arms on your knees.
“So,” you started gently, as if you were just catching up with someone over coffee, “Steve said you were from Brooklyn.”
His eyes didn’t move.
You waited a beat. Nothing.
“I’m from Hell’s Kitchen,” you added, offering a half-smile.
Still nothing. But something in his eyes flickered. Just barely.
“Grew up around a lot of noise,” you went on, your voice soft but casual. “Corner bodegas. Fire escapes. People yelling out their windows at four in the morning.”
Another pause. You risked glancing at him again.
Still no words. But his gaze lingered now. Slightly more engaged.
“I used to go up on the roof with a book and just... tune it all out,” you said, smiling faintly at the memory. “Never worked. Some jackass was always blasting Sinatra or arguing about Mets scores.”
You caught a flicker at that—almost a breath of amusement in his expression. Almost.
“Guess Brooklyn wasn’t so different back then, huh?”
Still silence.
But now, he was looking at you—not through you.
You shrugged, eyes gentle. “Anyway. Just figured I’d try to talk. Doesn’t have to mean anything.”
His eyes finally dropped to the floor again, but his shoulders had eased. A fraction.
You added, “And if it helps at all… I talk a lot when I’m nervous.”
That got you a flicker of eye contact again.
You smiled, soft and unbothered. “And you, from the looks of it, don’t talk unless you absolutely have to. So, we make a solid pair.”
No reaction.
You let out a small sigh.
The room had settled into a quiet sort of calm by late evening.
Bucky hadn’t spoken much—if at all—but he hadn’t pulled away when you refilled his water or dropped off a spare blanket either. A win in your book.
You hadn’t meant to take the call in front of him.
But you also couldn’t afford to ignore it—not when Matt Murdock’s name lit up your screen with its usual stubborn persistence.
You shifted where you sat on the edge of the room’s lone table, pressing the phone to your ear while still keeping Bucky in the corner of your eye. He sat on the mattress, back against the wall, arms folded stiffly over his chest. Watching. Always watching.
“Good evening,” you greeted softly, careful to keep your voice low.
There was a pause. Then, sharp and unmistakably annoyed, “Where the hell are you?”
You smiled. “Hi to you too, Matty.”
“I came by your loft, you weren't there.”
“No, because I’m in Germany.”
There was a long pause.
“…Germany?”
“Yes.”
“You do realize international borders exist, right? And that we’re not technically allowed to cross them at will?”
“You do realize you’re blind and still have better spatial awareness than the TSA, right?”
“You were just in New York yesterday,” he said, exasperated. “You can’t keep dropping everything the second Steve Rogers snaps his fingers.”
You rolled your eyes. “Wow. Jealousy and judgment in one breath. Impressive.”
“I’m not jealous,” he bit out. “I’m concerned. You didn’t even tell anyone you were leaving the country.”
You sighed, leaning back against the wall. “I didn’t plan to. Things moved fast. It’s not like I’m on vacation, Matt.”
“You think I don’t know what fast looks like?” he shot back. “This is the kind of fast that gets people killed. You’re not a soldier. You’re not—”
“I’m not you,” you snapped, before immediately softening your tone. “I’m not you, Matt. But you don’t get to lecture me about dropping everything for a ghost from your past when you've barely been present since yours came back.”
The line went still.
You exhaled. “I’m not trying to fight with you.”
“I know,” he said finally, voice quieter now. “I just… I worry. You matter to people, you know?”
“I’ll be back tomorrow,” you promised. “Just keeping someone safe until Steve gets back.”
There was a beat.
“…Is that someone dangerous?”
You glanced across the room. Bucky’s eyes were still on you, narrowed faintly in curiosity.
“No,” you said. “Not to me.”
Matt didn’t sound convinced. “Call me when you land.”
“I will.”
You ended the call with a gentle sigh, letting your head rest back against the wall.
Across the room, Bucky was watching you.
Not glaring. Not tense. Just watching—with that unreadable look he wore like armor.
You raised the phone slightly. “Work colleague.“
His brow lifted, slightly skeptical.
You tilted your head. “Okay, close work colleague.”
He didn’t respond. But you swore you caught the briefest twitch at the corner of his mouth—something almost like amusement.
You didn’t press.
You just leaned your head back and closed your eyes.
And that’s when you heard it.
Footsteps.
A faint but steady rhythm outside, boots against gravel, echoing just enough through the warehouse walls to mimic something far more sinister.
The blood drained from Bucky’s face in an instant.
His body snapped upright, rigid. His eyes locked on the door.
And his breathing changed.
Subtle at first. A slight hitch. A break in rhythm. The kind of thing you’d miss if you weren’t paying attention.
And you weren’t.
You were halfway to the window already, your phone still in hand, distracted by the soft scrape of boots on gravel outside. You weren’t even looking at him when you said, “I’ll be right back. Just want to check it out.”
You moved with ease, brushing aside the edge of the tarp covering the glass. From where you stood, you caught a glimpse—just a guy with a backpack, head down, walking briskly down the alley. Civilian. No uniform. No earpiece.
Harmless.
You turned back toward the room, already ready to reassure—
And stopped cold.
Bucky hadn’t moved from the bed.
But everything about him had changed.
He was still seated, but his hands were clenched into fists, white-knuckled. His shoulders were drawn in tight, and his head was tipped down, jaw locked, chest rising and falling in shallow, rapid bursts.
“Bucky?”
His eyes snapped up.
Wide. Unfocused. Wild.
Your heart dropped.
You took a step closer. “Hey. You’re okay, it was just someone walking past. No one’s coming.”
But he didn’t hear you. Not really.
His breath hitched again, sharper this time. A low sound escaped his throat—almost a growl, almost a sob—and his metal hand twitched violently on his knee.
“I can’t—” he choked, fingers clawing at the edge of the mattress. “I can’t—breathe—”
You froze for half a second, then rushed forward, dropping into a crouch in front of him, palms out, voice gentle but firm.
“Okay. Okay, Bucky. You’re having a panic attack. I know it feels like you can’t breathe, but you are. I promise, you are. You need to try to slow it down, or your body’s going to lock up on you.”
His chest was rising in harsh, ragged gasps now, every breath shallow and frantic. His eyes were darting around the room like he was trapped, like every wall was closing in.
You hovered your hands near his knees, not touching, just there. “I’m not gonna grab you. You’re safe. You’re in control. You’re not back there.”
He squeezed his eyes shut, body trembling. “I can’t—I can’t get out—I can’t—”
“Hey. Hey.” Your voice broke on the word. “You’re not trapped. I’m right here. You’re with me, remember?”
No response.
His breathing was worsening. He wasn’t inhaling fully anymore. Just choking down gulps of air like they weren’t sticking. His fingers curled against the mattress, his body rocking slightly.
He’s going to pass out.
You forced yourself to stay calm, to keep your voice steady even as panic rose in your own chest.
“Okay. Listen to me. We’re going to ground, alright? Just do what you can.” You reached up, hovering your fingers closer to his arm. “Five things you can see. Look around, just five.”
He blinked rapidly, lips parted, shaking.
“Five things,” you repeated. “Just name them. Anything.”
“I—I can’t,” he rasped. “I can’t—I can’t see—fuck—”
Your gut twisted.
“Alright. It’s okay, it’s okay,” you whispered, watching his eyes roll slightly upward as if his mind was spinning off. “Bucky, please. Just hold onto something.”
But he couldn’t.
You could see the fight in him, but the grip of the attack had its claws in deep now, dragging him down. His hand jerked, metal fingers spasming like his nerves were short-circuiting.
He was slipping.
You didn’t think. You didn’t plan.
You just acted.
You surged forward and crushed your mouth to his.
Your hand cupped his jaw, thumb grazing the scruff of his cheek, your lips moving against his like your breath could anchor him, like your body could pull him back from wherever his mind had gone.
At first, he didn’t move.
His breath hitched hard in your mouth, his body rigid.
And then—
He breathed.
Not perfect. Not deep.
But something shifted.
The tension in his shoulders dipped slightly. His mouth softened just enough under yours. The rigid rock of his spine eased.
You pulled back after a beat, gasping softly, shocked at yourself, still close enough to feel the heat of his breath on your lips.
His eyes snapped open.
Blue. Wide. Raw.
You blinked, stammering. “I—I didn’t know what else to do. I read once—somewhere—that when you’re panicking, holding your breath can reset your lungs, and so—” You swallowed. “So, when I kissed you… you held your breath.”
His lips parted, still trembling.
Your hand was still lightly on his jaw. You started to pull it away, “I’m sorry—”
But then his hand—his metal hand—caught your wrist.
Gently.
He stared at you, breathing hard, but steadier now. Something wild still flickered behind his eyes—but it wasn’t panic anymore.
It was something else.
Something desperate.
Your breath caught somewhere in your throat.
Bucky’s hand—cold metal and trembling restraint—was still wrapped around your wrist, keeping your hand pressed to his jaw. His skin beneath your palm was warm, rough with stubble, tense with something unreadable.
You should’ve tried to pull away again.
You should’ve said something. But you couldn’t speak.
Not with the way he was looking at you. Like you weren’t real. Like he’d dreamed you up in some quiet corner of his broken mind and was terrified you might disappear if he blinked too long.
Your heart pounded against your ribs. Your mind raced, caught between guilt and instinct.
“I—I shouldn’t have done that,” you whispered, barely able to hear your own voice. “I just didn’t know what else—”
And then you felt it.
His other hand.
You hadn’t even noticed it moving. But now, his warm, flesh hand was at the back of your head, fingers tangling through your hair, firm and certain.
You barely had time to breathe before he pulled you in.
The kiss came fast.
No hesitation. No apology.
It collided with your mouth like a dam breaking—like a gasp swallowed between parted lips and bruised hearts. His hand on your wrist still held you in place, while the other tilted your head just enough to claim every inch of your mouth.
You made a startled sound—something between a breath and a gasp—and your hands moved instinctively finding his shoulders as you fell forward into his chest.
Your body hit his with more force than you meant, but he didn’t flinch. If anything, he pulled you closer, like your weight grounded him.
His kiss deepened.
It wasn’t gentle.
It was hungry.
Like he needed this more than air. Like the feel of your mouth, the press of your body, was the only thing holding him in the present. His lips moved against yours with bruising pressure, desperate and hot, tongue flicking past your parted lips like he couldn’t stand not to taste you again.
And you melted.
Every thought, every question, every ounce of guilt evaporated the second his tongue touched yours.
Your fingers tightened on his shoulders. Your knees threatened to give out. His breath was ragged in your mouth, nose brushing yours, body trembling with barely leashed tension.
This wasn’t just comfort.
This was need.
Pure and primal.
His hands were on you now—both of them. The right still cradled the back of your head, fingers buried in your hair, holding you close. But the left… the left had found your waist, sliding up beneath the hem of your shirt, fingertips brushing along your side like he wasn’t sure if he was allowed to touch but couldn’t help himself.
You felt the chill of metal and the heat of human skin, trembling and unsure.
He kissed you harder. Mouth moving against yours with clumsy, desperate hunger—no rhythm, no restraint. He wasn’t kissing to seduce.
He was kissing to feel.
When his lips broke from yours, they didn’t go far. They dropped to your jaw, then your throat, his breath hot and uneven as he murmured something unintelligible against your skin.
His tongue dragged along the side of your neck, followed by soft, open-mouthed kisses—rushed, messy, too fast. Like he didn’t know where to start. Like he wanted to taste every inch of you at once.
“God…” he breathed, mouth moving to your collarbone. “You’re so soft…”
His hands moved again, a little braver now—palming your waist, then your back, then your hips. He tugged at your shirt, his fingers grazing over the fabric like it was in his way, like he needed to touch more.
And that’s when your thoughts finally broke through the haze.
You gasped, blinking hard, fingers coming up to press gently against his chest.
“Bucky,” you said, breathless. “We should stop.”
He didn’t move. Didn’t pull back.
His lips paused just below your ear, trembling.
“This isn’t good for you,” you whispered. “You’re in a bad headspace, and I don’t want to take advantage—”
He pulled back enough to look at you, his eyes wide and pleading, voice cracking.
“Please,” he whispered.
Your heart shattered.
“Bucky—”
“Please,” he said again, more desperate now. “I—I need to feel you. I need to know I’m still here. That I’m not… that I’m not him.”
Your hands trembled where they rested on his chest.
His voice broke entirely. “Just… just let me touch you. Let me feel something that isn’t pain. Please…”
You stared at him for a long moment, his words still ringing in your ears, his hands trembling against your waist.
Let me feel something that isn’t pain.
The breath left your chest in a slow, trembling sigh.
And then you leaned in.
Your lips met his again—not rough this time, but slow, deep, deliberate. A promise.
Bucky responded like he’d been holding his breath.
His hands flew to your sides, tugging you closer until your knees straddled his thighs, until your chest was flush with his. He let out a broken, needy sound as you kissed him, fingers dragging up your spine, gripping, clutching, like he was terrified you’d vanish if he let go.
You pulled back just long enough to whisper against his lips, “It’s okay. I’ve got you. I’m gonna take care of you.”
He moaned at that—actually moaned—his mouth crashing into yours again as his hands started moving, frantic and restless, skimming beneath your shirt, tugging at the fabric like it was an obstacle, not clothing.
Your fingers slid up into his hair, holding his face between your palms like he was something fragile. You kissed him deeper, letting him pour himself into it, letting him need you. And all the while, you rocked slowly in his lap, hips rolling in a subtle, steady rhythm that made both of you gasp.
“Fuck,” Bucky whispered against your mouth. “You feel so good… I can’t—can’t get close enough.”
He pulled harder at your shirt, his hands shaking with how desperately he wanted more of you. You broke the kiss just long enough to fumble with the buttons, undoing only a few before he lost patience entirely.
His hands flew up to your chest, and in one frantic motion, he tugged your bra down beneath your breasts.
“Bucky—”
But then his mouth was on you, and the words dissolved.
He latched onto your breast with a groan so guttural it vibrated through your core. His tongue swirled around your nipple before sucking it into his mouth like he was starved for it—like this was the only thing tethering him to earth.
You gasped, eyes flying wide, one hand clinging to his shoulder as your hips jerked against him.
“Oh my—Bucky—”
He didn’t stop. He couldn’t.
His metal hand clutched your back, holding you in place as he lavished your breast with open-mouthed kisses, warm and wet and messy. His other hand palmed your waist, guiding your hips in time with his own.
You rutted against him harder now, both of you still fully clothed, the friction unbearable and perfect. His cock pressed thick and hard against you through his jeans, and the way he groaned into your skin when you ground down on him made your thighs tremble.
“Please,” he whispered, voice wrecked. “Please don’t stop.”
You tangled your fingers in his hair, guiding him, anchoring him.
“I’m not going anywhere,” you breathed. “I’ve got you.”
And he moaned again, mouth still on your skin, hips jerking upward into you like he was begging you to believe him.
Your breathing was ragged. His lips were still wet from your skin. And when you pulled back slightly—only just enough to break contact—Bucky let out a whine.
Not a word. A sound. Broken, instinctual.
“Don’t—” he gasped, trying to follow you. “Please, don’t go.”
“I’m not going anywhere,” you whispered, your voice barely stable as you pushed gently against his chest.
He let you guide him back, his body hitting the thin mattress with a soft thump, arms still reaching for you like he couldn’t stand a single inch of distance.
“I’ve got you,” you promised again, voice low and sure, even as your hands moved fast.
You didn’t fully undress—didn’t need to. You shoved your jeans down, just past your knees, the waistband biting into your thighs as you knelt between his legs. Bucky’s chest heaved as he watched you, pupils blown wide, lips parted like he was starving.
“God, you’re…” he breathed, voice hoarse. “You’re not real.”
You reached for his jeans, fingers fumbling slightly with the buckle, your own hands shaking now with the sheer pressure of what you were doing—what this was. You unzipped him, tugging his waistband down just far enough to free him.
And there he was.
Hard. Leaking. So fucking ready it made your mouth go dry.
He twitched when your hand wrapped around him—just once—and he gasped, hips jerking slightly off the mattress.
“Please,” he murmured again. “I—I need to be inside you. Please, I need—”
You didn’t let him finish.
You rose back up onto his thighs, grabbed his cock at the base, and positioned yourself with practiced urgency.
He held his breath.
And then—you sank down.
Slow, steady, deep.
Bucky cried out, head snapping back against the mattress, eyes fluttering shut as your heat wrapped around him. “Fuck,—Jesus—”
You couldn’t even breathe for a second. The stretch was intense, overwhelming—your thighs trembling as you adjusted, hands braced on his chest.
Beneath you, he was shaking.
Completely undone.
His hands flew to your hips, gripping tight, not to guide you—but just to hold on.
You stayed there a moment, full of him, pulsing around him, feeling every tremble in his frame.
Then you leaned down, lips brushing his cheek, and whispered, “You feel that?”
He nodded, frantic.
“That’s real. I’m real. And you’re not alone.”
And then you started to move.
You moved slowly at first—hips rolling, drawing his cock in deep, then easing back up, dragging every inch of him against your walls. Bucky’s head tipped back, a shudder ripping through him, his mouth slack, eyes blown wide as his hands dug into your waist like he was terrified you might stop.
“God,” he rasped, “you feel—fuck, you feel so good—”
You didn’t answer. You didn’t need to. The way your body wrapped around him, the rhythm building in your hips—it said everything.
You rode him harder, faster now, the tension rising like a fever. The denim of his jeans and the way your own clothes clung to sweat-slick skin made everything feel even messier, even more raw. The friction burned in the best way, every drag of your body against his driving him closer to the edge.
Bucky couldn’t stop touching you. His hands were on your waist, your thighs, your back—like he couldn’t decide where he needed you more. His voice was low and broken, a litany of groans and murmured please, please, please, even when you were already giving him everything.
When you leaned in and pressed your forehead to his, your fingers tangling in his hair, he was right there with you—breathing you in like oxygen.
His chest was rising fast now, the rhythm in your hips growing sloppy, desperate. You could feel him pulsing inside you, getting close.
Then—suddenly—he surged upward, wrapping his arms around your waist and pulling you into him as his mouth found yours again. The kiss was rough, needy, all tongue and teeth and shaky breath. He needed to be connected—to feel you pressed against him in every possible way as he unraveled.
And then he came.
You felt it—deep, hot, twitching inside you as he groaned into your mouth, burying his face in your shoulder, his entire body trembling as you held him through it. His arms clutched you tight, almost too tight, like if he let go you might vanish.
You didn’t.
You stayed with him. Arms wrapped around his shoulders. Lips at his temple. Your hips finally stilled.
You hadn’t come. You weren’t even thinking about it.
This—this—had never been about you.
It was for him.
To remind him that he was here. That he was human. That he was held.
You were still catching your breath, his body trembling in your arms, when it happened.
Without a word—without even looking up—Bucky shifted beneath you, tightening his arms around your waist. And before you could ask what he was doing, he flipped you.
Your back hit the mattress with a soft thud, and you barely had time to gasp before his body followed, pressing you down, caging you in.
“Bucky—” you started, surprised, dazed.
But the look in his eyes stole the words from your mouth.
Focused. Intense. Wild with a need you hadn’t seen before—but not for his own release this time.
For yours.
He was still hard inside you. Still there. And now, he began to move.
Not gently.
Not slowly.
He pounded into you—hips snapping forward with frantic rhythm, as if something had cracked open inside him and he couldn’t bear not to give you back everything you’d just given him. Every thrust was deep, hard, messy. His breath came in grunts and gasps, his forehead pressed to yours, his body slick with sweat.
You clutched at his shoulders, your own body struggling to keep up as pleasure started to crash over you like a wave.
“Let me,” he panted, voice low and wrecked. “Let me make you feel good. You—fuck, you were so good to me—I need—I need to make you come—please—”
Your breath hitched, head falling back, eyes fluttering shut as his cock drove into you again and again, hitting all the right angles now with dizzying precision. His hand slid down, slipping between your bodies, fingers finding your clit, rubbing fast, desperate, trying to draw your pleasure up through every inch of you.
The pressure built fast. Too fast.
You were already so full, so overwhelmed—his voice in your ear, his fingers on your body, his cock so hard inside you—and the way he moved… God.
“You don’t have to—” you started, already trembling.
“I want to,” he growled, fucking into you harder, deeper, like he couldn’t get close enough.
You whimpered, body jerking beneath his as the tension in your core snapped tighter, tighter, tighter—
“Come for me,” he groaned. “Please. I need to feel it.”
And then you did.
You came with a moan that tore out of your throat, back arching, hands clutching at his back as your body spasmed around him. Bucky groaned, dropping his head into your neck, hips still moving as he rode you through it, holding you like he never wanted to let go.
Like giving you pleasure was what made him feel whole.
His body trembled as he came down, the last few ragged thrusts losing momentum until finally—finally—he stilled, buried deep inside you, heart pounding hard enough that you could feel it through his chest.
He hovered there for a moment, arms shaking, breath catching in his throat.
And then he collapsed.
Not all at once. Slowly, carefully. Like his strength gave out in stages. But even as he let himself fall into you, he caught his weight on his forearms, mindful, always mindful—never fully resting on you. He curled slightly, pressing his face into the crook of your neck like he needed to hide. Like the world was too bright again, too loud, and your skin was the only place left that felt quiet.
Your arms came around him without hesitation.
One hand slipped across his back, fingers splayed wide, gently grounding him with each stroke up and down his spine. The other cradled the back of his head, thumb sweeping slowly through his damp hair, cradling him like something precious.
His breath hitched once.
You didn’t speak right away.
You just held him.
He melted into it slowly, his metal arm resting against the mattress beside your head, his human hand fisting weakly in the blanket beneath you. You felt the tremble still in his muscles—aftershocks of everything he’d just released.
“Shh,” you murmured, soft against his ear. “You’re okay, baby. You’re okay. I’ve got you.”
His forehead pressed tighter to your throat.
“You’re safe now,” you whispered, voice low and steady. “Right here with me.”
He exhaled, shaky and fragile.
“You’re not alone. You’re not him. You’re not broken.”
He didn’t answer—but he didn’t need to.
He let you hold him.
You kept going, voice like a lullaby, your fingers never stopping.
“You’re gonna be okay,” you murmured. “I don’t care how long it takes. I’m not going anywhere.”
His grip on the blanket loosened, and he shifted just enough to finally let some of his weight settle into your body.
Not too much.
Just enough to trust.
It was perfect 🥺
JOJO RABBIT (2019) dir. Taika Waititi
What a dream being in his arms like that 😍 Lucky girl! And so nice to know that he said he's so much like Leo in real life which I think it's true 🤗 ❤️
The Light Between Oceans (2016), dir. Derek Cianfrance.
LITTLE MIX Sweet Melody (2020)
Suntuosos, presumidos, testarudos, pero entrañables.
Y ya lo ves, que no hay dos sin tres, y que la vida va y viene y que no se detiene y qué sé yo...
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