lefthandfree: (before it's gone)
James Buchanan Barnes ([personal profile] lefthandfree) wrote in [community profile] sixthiterationlogs2017-05-14 09:30 pm

wow look what the cat dragged in

WHO: James Buchanan “Bucky” Barnes
WHERE: fountain, inn
WHEN: May 13
OPEN TO: closed arrival, otherwise open to all
WARNINGS: language
STATUS: second prompt is open closed

     the fountain

When he closes his eyes, he knows it will only be a moment in his mind, even as darkness blots out his vision and swallows him whole. Regret lingers as it always does, the fact he chooses this over consciousness impossible to ignore when the last thing Steve does is insist on standing there with the wish that Bucky will change his mind written plainly on his face. But it's all the more reason he shouldn't. Yet, even as he prepares himself to wake again to the worst possible scenario, being immersed in water is definitely not something he considered.

There's air in him, enough that he knows that he hasn't been thrown in and also enough that his mind cannot decipher the circumstances. It's hardly enough reason for dawdling, however, and his focus is quickly turns toward finding the surface. Easy enough, even short an arm. Maybe not as efficient or balanced as he'd like, but there isn't time to reassess.

He gasps for fresh breath once he breaks through to air and throws his arm out to pull his body out from what seemed a well but is apparently a fountain. Curiosity after curiosity, it doesn't stop him from clambering free from the water, even if the effort comes quite clumsily without the aid of a second arm. It's then while water drips generously from him, free from the metal joint and free from his clothing, that he realizes his clothing isn't really his clothing and that this obviously isn’t Wakanda. Not even a little.

Jesus Fucking Christ. “Can’t it be Kansas? Just once?” He doesn't expect an answer.


     the inn (open)

He’s not even going to pretend he’s not new. It seems like something that should be obvious, so why bother with putting people on? Not that it means he won’t do his damned best to make sure people know he’s not incapable, especially with the blatant visible handicap. But he’s dripping a lot less now, and that’s a good time to try and figure out what all he actually needs to deal with given his clear displacement of space and possible displacement of time.

Soaked is still very much the description of his physical state though, something that’s apparently becoming a trend, but he’s far more grateful this time around since his arm isn’t trapped in a vice and, well, he clearly hasn’t gone on a murder rampage either. It’s the little things in life...

There’s a fire at one end of the establishment he wanders into, and even without the cold, it’s a welcome sight. Soggy garments are really not his style, and having a quicker way to dry off other than waiting for the world to end is a huge bonus. He plants himself nearby and takes the opportunity to dig through the pack. It’s sturdy. Effective. But everything else inside is soaked through like him.

God. Why can’t anything ever be easy?

Dragging a hand down his face, he gives a long sigh. One thing at a time, Barnes. And at the least, the water isn’t sopping out of the bag, he tells himself. So it’s not all bad. Maybe.

He wants to laugh, but instead a wry grin plasters itself to his face. Patience is a goddamn virtue, for sure. But as long as he doesn’t get kicked out for being a drowned mess, he’s glad to stay parked here for another couple hours before moving on.
womanofvalue: (head tilt)

[personal profile] womanofvalue 2017-05-24 07:41 pm (UTC)(link)
Sipping at her tea, she pauses and waits a very long moment to respond. It's not kind, perhaps, but she can't help but want to tease Barnes just a little. She's grown to enjoy the man's company, through his many iterations, and she keeps her expression even as she sips at her tea, thoughtfully. "Well, the hair was something to get used to," she concedes, aiming to allow him to lead this conversation himself.

"It was...other aspects," she says, purposefully vague. In truth, he had been an excellent roommate. It was someone who understood their time, someone who understood the war, and with Steve, they had a common topic in the event they ran out of other things to discuss. Beyond that, they could also talk about the Howlies and Howard and any other myriad of things.

It had been a nice touch of the past to make Peggy feel comfortable, which she's been missing out on, ever since.
womanofvalue: (contemplation)

[personal profile] womanofvalue 2017-05-26 01:27 am (UTC)(link)
"There was no shirt thing, unless you've somehow developed new bad habits," Peggy remarks, sipping at her tea one last time before settling it down. "You were a lovely roommates, Sergeant Barnes." Honestly, it's strange, because she had been calling him James, but only briefly, and now she feels as if she's lost that permission and ability.

"I was feeling rather guilty, when I began to stay with you," she admits. "I had just learned that Steve was alive, and I couldn't sleep for the guilt that I stopped searching for him, that I gave up on him. You, he," she clarifies, "you helped. Not to mention, you had an excellent habit of being very helpful with dinner."

Mainly because she was awful at cooking, but let that not be said out loud (not by her, at least).
womanofvalue: (furrow)

[personal profile] womanofvalue 2017-06-09 09:31 pm (UTC)(link)
Her lips curve upwards with delight at his grumbling, but seeing as there was no shirt habits to speak of, they can move on without anyone's feelings getting hurt. It's still so strange to have him here, especially when in the past, he's come on the heels of or before Steve, but right now, Peggy doesn't need that heartbreak and grief. She just needs a friend and Barnes is one of them.

Maybe, if he remembers, at least. "No pancakes to speak of, I'm afraid," Peggy informs him, not sure that this is awful news. Then again, she'd never really grown up in a home that had pancakes so much as cold cereals and the occasional egg. "It was mostly fish and grains and whatever greens we could drudge up. I did the knifework, left the cooking to you so no one got poisoned."

"I'm afraid I haven't even seen what we might need for pancakes," she says, "but I wouldn't say no to them."