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disassembling) wrote in
spaces_between2014-05-29 07:53 pm
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(no subject)
Character: James "Bucky" Barnes &
Time period: Post-CA: TWS
Warnings: Obsessive Bucky on the loose.
At first, independence had seemed like one of his better ideas, but he had begun to revise his opinion once he had verified certain truths, taken noted of the factions searching for him, and realizing that the world was a wide landscape where a man could get lost. After he had rearmed himself from the bodies of two Hydra agents, a drug dealer, and a gang banger, he had come to realize that slipping away, hiding, being nothing at all was very easy, too easy.
He had been built on the foundation of a command structure for more than seventy years. Even before the blurred vagueness of falling, he knew order and military command. Aside from mashed up images, feelings and impressions, he knew that he had to have some manner of structure in his life. With no more commands down the line, he loitered, slipping through the shadows on Washington for awhile, finding the unsavoury places and people, leaving a few bodies in his wake and not particularly caring that they were found and televised either. A weapon bared he moved through the chaos at first because it was all he knew, listless for anything but the violence he had played a role in for so long. It lost it's purpose without the trigger of structure.
His world stagnated as he avoided those who hunted him, and he cared little for the lives he took when they found him. They came to command him because they thought he would simply bow to old standards, that he would go back to being his code name if they applied even electricity to his brain. They hadn't earned the right to command him. They were weaker than he, hadn't even survived a single encounter when he decided to throw his weight back at them. They were weak men, lost in words and hiding behind guns and dying in the shadows of buildings and trees.
Slowly, resolution began to form from the ashes of his lost command structure. He decided he would allow himself to be commanded again, that he yearned to be commanded by someone with the strength of both character and body to overtake him or at least bow him slightly with respect. Pierce had been like that, he reflected. The man hadn't needed to physically harm him to command his respect, though he remembered well being struck when he required the prompt. A few others had commanded a similar reaction deep in his guts, and his attention snapped over to them. One at a time, he decided. One searched, the other could be found if he looked.
He had been lost for a few months, considering leaving to go to Brooklyn for more pieces of an old puzzle, but he was drawn back into Washington because beating information out of a SHIELD agent had satisfied him that he would get what he wanted. As a ghost story, he knew that the only way to get proper attention was to do something not only obvious but dramatic. His depth of dramatic no doubt would be very different from others that he knew existed, but like a well-trained dog returning to his master, he knew how to get the attention that was needed to invite a recall command.
Hydra agents were not easy to find in large quantities in Washington anymore, most arrested or underground and hiding. It took him two days to find a nest of the vipers, using the old underground tunnels that he knew well. He'd ended them to prove he might not be under command, but it was something worth earning given his skills. Their bodies were left in obvious Hydra uniforms and symbols and piled high in front of the Smithsonian. As if the symbol of his loyalty degradation wasn't enough, none of the corpses had heads, and he had piled them in such a way that he could sit atop the whole mess and lounge there as obvious as the start of a new day.
Media and police were one thing, not that interesting, but he let them think they had command of him for a moment. Let them show his face around for SHIELD and Hydra and them to know he was here. Meaningless orders were ignored, people's reactions only earned a turning of his cheek in dismissal before he knew that the police presence would be a problem to slip away from. Instead he slipped from his lounging perch to ignore warnings and breaking into the Smithsonian because it suited him there. It seemed a fitting place to bow to the command of someone worthy.
Time period: Post-CA: TWS
Warnings: Obsessive Bucky on the loose.
At first, independence had seemed like one of his better ideas, but he had begun to revise his opinion once he had verified certain truths, taken noted of the factions searching for him, and realizing that the world was a wide landscape where a man could get lost. After he had rearmed himself from the bodies of two Hydra agents, a drug dealer, and a gang banger, he had come to realize that slipping away, hiding, being nothing at all was very easy, too easy.
He had been built on the foundation of a command structure for more than seventy years. Even before the blurred vagueness of falling, he knew order and military command. Aside from mashed up images, feelings and impressions, he knew that he had to have some manner of structure in his life. With no more commands down the line, he loitered, slipping through the shadows on Washington for awhile, finding the unsavoury places and people, leaving a few bodies in his wake and not particularly caring that they were found and televised either. A weapon bared he moved through the chaos at first because it was all he knew, listless for anything but the violence he had played a role in for so long. It lost it's purpose without the trigger of structure.
His world stagnated as he avoided those who hunted him, and he cared little for the lives he took when they found him. They came to command him because they thought he would simply bow to old standards, that he would go back to being his code name if they applied even electricity to his brain. They hadn't earned the right to command him. They were weaker than he, hadn't even survived a single encounter when he decided to throw his weight back at them. They were weak men, lost in words and hiding behind guns and dying in the shadows of buildings and trees.
Slowly, resolution began to form from the ashes of his lost command structure. He decided he would allow himself to be commanded again, that he yearned to be commanded by someone with the strength of both character and body to overtake him or at least bow him slightly with respect. Pierce had been like that, he reflected. The man hadn't needed to physically harm him to command his respect, though he remembered well being struck when he required the prompt. A few others had commanded a similar reaction deep in his guts, and his attention snapped over to them. One at a time, he decided. One searched, the other could be found if he looked.
He had been lost for a few months, considering leaving to go to Brooklyn for more pieces of an old puzzle, but he was drawn back into Washington because beating information out of a SHIELD agent had satisfied him that he would get what he wanted. As a ghost story, he knew that the only way to get proper attention was to do something not only obvious but dramatic. His depth of dramatic no doubt would be very different from others that he knew existed, but like a well-trained dog returning to his master, he knew how to get the attention that was needed to invite a recall command.
Hydra agents were not easy to find in large quantities in Washington anymore, most arrested or underground and hiding. It took him two days to find a nest of the vipers, using the old underground tunnels that he knew well. He'd ended them to prove he might not be under command, but it was something worth earning given his skills. Their bodies were left in obvious Hydra uniforms and symbols and piled high in front of the Smithsonian. As if the symbol of his loyalty degradation wasn't enough, none of the corpses had heads, and he had piled them in such a way that he could sit atop the whole mess and lounge there as obvious as the start of a new day.
Media and police were one thing, not that interesting, but he let them think they had command of him for a moment. Let them show his face around for SHIELD and Hydra and them to know he was here. Meaningless orders were ignored, people's reactions only earned a turning of his cheek in dismissal before he knew that the police presence would be a problem to slip away from. Instead he slipped from his lounging perch to ignore warnings and breaking into the Smithsonian because it suited him there. It seemed a fitting place to bow to the command of someone worthy.
no subject
Surprise flickered in her brown eyes as he told her the details of the mission. So he did remember more than she thought. Interesting... She shifted her weight from one foot to the other slightly. She was used to moving around, standing or sitting for long periods of time tended to make her restless.
"'Course you weren't freezing. You were used to it. Helena, Cosmina and the others weren't." But she was the only one to voice what they were all thinking. How much it sucked to be out in the cold, how badly they wanted to be somewhere else and when they could complete their damn mission.
"After you found me, I was ready to deck you in the jaw for putting me out in the cold but I could barely feel my fingers. You managed to make it up t'me though..." The time they spent together that night kept her warm and made her forget about the cold.
"Think it's your turn." she gave him one memory, the least he could do was give her one fact.
no subject
"The cold was always a comfort," he said slowly. He had been trained in the most basic of senses to accept the cold as a good thing, that it made him docile, pliable but also safe. There was no pain or questions in the cold. "You always mouthed off when you were particularly grumpy about something. It should have gotten you killed a few times, but it didn't."
His eyes slowly moved from the screens back to her, regarding her for the idea that he had brought her comfort. It was not a sensation that he brought to anyone, reaffirming the idea that not killing her and keeping her close was an idea he should invest time and energy into. "I even let you complete mission objective after we were done. That brought praises, I think."
He raised an eyebrow at her. "What do you want to know?"
no subject
In completing the mission objective their handlers began to look at her different, wanting her to be part of more missions. If his training was doing wonders for her, why not test her further? The scientists always wanted to keep pushing their projects forward, just to see what they were capable of. They were nothing more than children in big white lab coats poking at their experiments with sticks and calling it research.
Sarah's hand reached into her pocket, pulling out an old photo of a man in a brown coat, glasses, winter cap and had him standing outside a church. She walked over to the table, placing the old photo by his feet. If he picked up the photo and turned it over he'd see the words 'Project Leda' on the back.
"I'm looking for Ethan Duncan. He was one of the lead researchers and scientists in Hydra. Look familiar to you?"
no subject
He knew back then and now that he recalled that mission in particular that angling her to complete the mission object set her apart from the others of that rather dysfunctional group. He had set her up in his own way, aware that her success would mean that he had more access to her and there was a higher chance that she would be given missions where he could either meet up with her or make an excuse to have some alone time with her. He suspected he continued the trend even between mind wipes, an intrinsic part of himself wanting the closeness even if he didn't know why.
Yet, his eyes shifted to the photo that she produced and shifted on the chair to grasp it. He leaned back and crossed one ankle over the other as he examined the man on it. He had seen so many science-types that it was difficult to tell, but he flipped the photo over to regard the writing and date set there before reexamining the photo again, taking his time sorting through his own mind on the matter as he considered the name.
"He was in Cambridge, England primarily," he said slowly, his eyebrows drawing together in thought. "With a wife, I think. He worked on a Hydra side project for many years. Do you know if he's still alive?"
no subject
"That's where things get tricky..." She knew Duncan was a scientist, but if he was alive or not.
"According to Hydra he died in '79, but that photo is from 1980." Unless Hydra forged a fake death certificate and hid him from the world. If that was the case, why? He was the top scientist on the project. Why hide their star?
"Is there anythin' else you recall about him?"
no subject
He frowned at the mention of being dead and kicked his feet off of the console and stood. He still held the picture in his hand and was again examining it. "Death means nothing to Hydra," he said as he walked out of the room, letting her follow him as he walked through the long halls and passed exhibits until he reached the Captain America one. He knew his way around it very well. "Every person leaves a trail that can be followed. If you want to know about him, I can find him or find out if he's actually dead. However, never believe what you read about the dead."
He stopped in front of a part of the exhibit, shifting his back against the memorial, his face settling very close and very obvious to James Barnes. "Hydra hides their dead as much as they hide the living."
no subject
She stayed quiet, following behind him as they left the room, heading down the halls to the Captain America exhibit. When they stopped in front of the memorial to James Barnes she felt chills ran down her spine. Her eyes shifted from his face to the man pronounced dead. Well...she'd be damned. Sarah wasn't expecting this sort of twist.
"He'll be a hard man t'find..." she murmured, returning her gaze to his face.
"But, you've given me a place t'start. I don't want t'disturb you relivin'....that." she gestured her head to the memorial. As creepy as it was to know when he 'died' and who he was, she had to say...he still looked damn good for a man over fifty.
She stretched her hand out, gesturing for him to return the photo back to her. He trained her well enough to find others. It would be hard, but impossible for her to find Duncan.
no subject
"Depends on where the threads lead, but you don't have to go back that many years," he said casually and looked at the picture again. "Reliving being dead? James Barnes died seventy years ago; what life do I have looking at a memorial?"
He made no move to give her back the photo and instead pushed off the memorial. "Do you really think I'm going to let you leave here?"
no subject
Sarah wanted to know her origins to know if she had the marker for the defective gene. She fought to keep her life and wouldn't have her own body betray her in such a fashion. The only thing standing between her finding Duncan was him.
"Maybe I want to dig deeper. It's my call." She didn't have to answer to him or anyone else.
"Dunno, for all I know you could be waiting for Captain America to show up and knock your teeth out." Why else would he set up camp here? For shits and giggles?
The longer he made her wait the more irritated and annoyed she became. How hard was it to hand back a simple picture? Her eyes narrowed ever so slightly at him. They had a deal. They exchanged information and now they could part ways. A clean break for the two of them. She could find answers and he...could continue to live in a museum.
"I know you're not stupid enough to make threats to me." Her hand slowly moved back to her side.
"Do you really want t'fight? We know the outcome of it." They would fight their hardest, leaving bruises, marks and scrapes on the other. Someone would get shot at, possibly wounded and some how, some way, it would cause both of them to fall back to their old routine where their clothes would vanish and they'd experience a warmth and bliss that only came from releasing tension.
"Save us both the time and give me the photo back."
no subject
"You might not want to pull on that thread; it might not lead to where you want it to," he replied simply. Hydra secrets had secrets and they weren't friendly. One clone searching for a single man that might be alive or dead? It seemed like an interesting adventure.
"I'm wanting for something far less significant," he murmured as he made a show of tucking her photo into his vest carefully so as not to damage it. He zipped the pocket closed and allowed his hands to return to his sides casually. "Purpose and structure," he added airily. "A mission to find a lost scientist gives me a break from running about like a rabid dog."
He wasn't afraid of the threat of a fight, but he knew it was also dangerous to do it here when he had left that nifty gift outside. "You either let me come with you, or I let slip to Hydra where you're going. Don't think they won't be interested in a non-coughing clone."
no subject
A growl rose up in her throat watching him carefully tuck her photo away. Fine, he could keep it. She had the photo memorized enough to do well without it. But no, he wanted to force his way to go with her. Why? Didn't he want to fight someone else or...do whatever it is he liked doing these days.
"Let it slip, then. I know they're after me and if more come to the party, the more fun I'll have." Sarah wasn't backing down from the issue. He wasn't coming. There was no need for them to fall back into their old habits, even if a tiny part of her did like his company.
"If you want your own fun find it elsewhere, Barnes."
no subject
He was going with her, but she just hadn't agreed to it yet. Even if she slipped away, he would follow her, hunt her and keep danger from him because he decided it was structure enough that he could focus on it. He had nothing else after all; Hydra was too deep rooted for him to consider killing it all. This was something he could do well and easily, and he embraced it without even caring for her permission.
"Leaving a trail of bodies only brings more attention. The best you can hope to do is bury them," he replied as he regarded her with cool calculation. She could run and hide and be hunted and never see the end of the rabbit hole she was looking down. "Don't call me 'Barnes'," he snarled, showing teeth in pure threat.
He actually hadn't developed a taste for being called anything really. The name hurt, but he wasn't about to admit it.
no subject
If she did die, at least it would be because she was doing something she wanted to do.
"You're one t'talk, considering your handy work outside." It wouldn't be that hard to hide a dead body or more. Thus far she had done well for herself, keeping her tracks covered unless she wanted to be found. But, he was the best tracker around. Even if she walked away from him, he'd find her. He always found her.
"Make me," she hissed back with anger in her brown eyes. He was doing a far better job of pushing her buttons than she was doing to him. Her fingers were itching to draw her weapon out and shot him. He'd evade her shots, of course and knowing her luck, one would ricochet and end up going through her instead.
no subject
"And do you see them storming the building coming to get me because of it?" He stepped closer as if to prove his point about his own freedom right now. He stood in a shrine to a life that had fallen into the cold, no more than a passing salute the man he once was. "You can't evade me, Sarah. You can't evade Hydra forever either, and what's the point of a fool's quest if you aren't given some information for your troubles?"
He turned his face aside from her attempt to badger him. He could crush her skull if it suited him after all. "You need your tongue to interrogate people, so I'll let it slide this time."
no subject
"I don't need you. Been doin' just fine without you," she hissed between gritted teeth.
He was tempting her, toying with her and doing one hell of a job of it. Either she would have to shoot something when this was all over, or get a stiff drink. Maybe both.
"I can get the information on my own. You're the one that needs a fucking distraction or a hobby..." the words were murmured to herself as she attempted to calm herself down. It wasn't working, it rarely did.
"You..." Sarah stopped herself, forcing herself to take a deep breath and take a step back.
"A fucking, god awful prick." She said the words loud enough for him to hear. There was no point in arguing anymore. He was standing by his decision and she doubted any persuasion on her part would make him change his mind.
"Fine. You can come along."
no subject
He did need a distraction and a hobby, but he had just found one. He felt no need to tell her that right now though, since he knew with her snarling and anger that she was losing her feel of the situation. If he waited her out and poked her a little more, she would give in with little fight and they would be on their way. He'd even give her back her nice little photo once they were out of the Smithonian too.
He smirked when she cussed him out and knew he had won. He shifted his weight to a more relaxed pose, looking eerily similar to the man displayed on the monument behind him. "It's a good thing you accepted the inevitable. A shorter time than most of your project."