✧ summary ─ bucky has finally found a family that he deserved so much, and he is not letting it go any time soon.
✧ pairing ─ tfatws!bucky barnes x reader
✧ warnings ─ softness, fluff, so much fluff, kissing, pet names, veery light angst, found family <3, happy ending, alpine and amber are the cutest, bucky deserves everything, FLUFF, oh bucky being the asshole that he is btw lol
✧ a/n ─ ‘TIS THE FINAL PART. i can’t believe this is the last part *cries ugly*. thank you all so much for being here with me on his journey. thank you for cheering, getting horny and angry with me while this series updated throughout the months. thank you all so much for your nice comments and asks about this series. i really hope you like the ending and that i did justice to bucky. thank you <3
series masterlist ─ previous part
It was almost a month later when Bucky told you that he wanted to take you to Louisiana. You were there when Sam told him to bring you around for the cookout, but you didn’t expect Bucky to take him up on that offer this quickly. You knew that he was protective over this little family you have created together, that he wasn’t ready to share it with the world yet, so it came as a surprise when he told you about it post-coital, laying in the bed all naked.
Keep reading
summary: you need to get some air, and see some friends.
word count: 2.3k
warnings: mentions of the death of a father, super vague mentions of MCU-typical violence/terrorism
(part 1) (part 2) (part 3) (part 4) (part 5) (part 7) (series masterlist)
“Trouble in paradise?” Helen peers above her sunglasses, frowning.
“What?” As if you hadn’t spent ten minutes inside the hotel bathroom washing your face with cold water, minimizing its puffiness. “No.”
“I just thought your hot-shit husband would be the one driving you around,” she explains while you buckle your seatbelt. “He seemed really excited to pick you up last night.”
Back then, you had expected a text to light up your phone at eleven o’clock, followed by excusing yourself from the bar. But Steve actually found you and walked to the rental car. He greeted your friends charmingly, shaking hands and joking about the late hour, but mostly he ushered you out the door to kiss you again. And again and again—
“We’re not married,” you mutter.
“Like, really excited.” She elbows your ribs. "Did you have sex?"
You roll your eyes. “Can I not just wanna see my best friend?”
Helen removes her sunglasses in time for you to spot her side-eye. “Not when she’s hungover, and late to work.” She exits the roundabout driveway and starts toward the Fairmont. “Honestly, a school night. You’ve changed.”
At least these drinks celebrated an accomplishment. Once, you went with Joaquín because a student vomited on your favorite patterned dress and her mom had shamed you for failing to nurse her precious daughter back to health. Still, Helen’s chastisement—no matter how lighthearted—makes you squirm. “I missed you,” you tell her, “Doesn’t that count for something?”
She checks her mirrors. “How was your art thing?”
You haven’t given her an update yet. Your friend group had agreed to a No Work Talk policy on nights out. Though, the art festival never felt like work—so unlike the long days you spent prancing around Steve’s office, providing help where it probably wasn’t strictly needed. The event meant something to you. And to Steve, who apparently hid his creative talents from you.
Paling in comparison to what you hid from him.
“It was fun,” you say honestly. “It was… everything.”
Helen gives you a sidelong look. “You don’t sound enthused.”
You cross your arms. The festival should spark a dozen happy memories: a triumphant return to the elementary school you loved, to doing what you do best. Plus, a definite win for the campaign, the entire night brimming with your favorite people.
Maybe twenty year’s time will allow you to forget all the bad that happened after. “I wish I could stay longer.”
“Shut up,” Helen laughs. “I’ve never seen you so happy.”
Your face warms, because No Work Talk inevitably meant Steve Talk. Your futile attempts to discuss Joaquín’s abrupt switch to kindergarten or Helen’s new roommate or Dane and Sersi’s next vacation all failed to overshadow the rapid questions regarding your fiancé.
You answered them like a lovesick schoolgirl, the corners of your lips lifting as you pictured him, especially his slightly mussed hair when you reluctantly left the heat of your first real kiss.
Now, thoughts of Steve turn sour. Nails scraped across his scalp out of frustration rather than passion. His height towering over you. The room filled with his anger, floor to ceiling.
He made you feel small. Maybe you are, or maybe you should be.
“It was fun while it lasted.”
Helen interprets your shift in tone as your mind shifting to Shangqi, and the spirit inside her car lessens. Jerking a thumb toward the backseat, she explains, “I have two things of pajeon. One for him, one for Xialing.”
You squint at the truly giant containers, crammed with steamed-up food and strapped into each seat. “You cooked?”
Helen huffs, pulling into the Fairmont’s driveway. “Well, I bought it and then lovingly transferred it to a different container, creating the illusion that I can cook.”
Apparently, no amount of misery can ever overpower Helen making you laugh. “You’re ridiculous.” You gently dismiss the valet driver as you unbuckle the comfort food.
Helen doesn’t return your smile, mocking seriousness. “You realize how much takeout I eat now that you’re gone?”
“Thanks for the ride.” You haphazardly balance the Tupperware against your torso while shutting the door. “Y'know, I can send you my recipes.”
“Too much work.”
“For one of the smartest people I know, you’re awful at following directions.”
“Hey.” Helen stretches across the console. “Double checking. You sure you’re okay?”
She needs to get to her lab. “Yeah,” you lie. “Love you.”
“Love you.”
You weave effortlessly through the bustle inside the Fairmont. Enough red-vested employees give you vague nods of recognition that you sneak inside the staff break room without arousing too much suspicion. There, you find Shangqi poking a vending machine, his crisp white sleeves folded to his elbows.
“Hi,” you whisper. Then, you realize the room is empty.
He tilts his head affectionately, flipping his soda can. “Hey, Mrs. President.”
You wrinkle your nose, bashful at the stupid nickname. “Um…” You shove the pajeon toward him. “Helen sends her love to you and Xialing.”
Shangqi hums. Then, he lifts the plastic from your hands, stifling any of your weak objections with a tight embrace. You shove your nose into the scratchy material of his uniform, which smells like the inside of a new car mixed with crisp laundry detergent. Reminiscent of home—or what home used to be. You mold yourself to his solid, secure body.
You’re already sniffling. “Why didn’t you take the day off?”
He sits at a small round table, cracking open his soda and poking the giant mass of food now in his possession. “Already, with the patronizing.”
You fold your arms. “Sorry. I know.”
“Maybe parking cars helps me process my emotions," he chuckles, while motioning you to grab a chair. “The lack of tips is a metaphor for my grief.”
You place a hand over his, letting one finger trace the bumps along his scarred knuckles. “Shangqi,” you start again, “I’m really sorry.”
He drinks his soda, his mouth forming a thin line. “It was unexpected but… bound to happen.”
Thankfully, no foul play. His father passed in his sleep, an oddly peaceful death for such a violent person.
Although, that side of Wenwu never revealed itself to you. Shangqi and Xialing openly disdained him, and although their tension thickened the air of his cold home, you mostly remembered an old, kind man who made you tea and inquired about your career.
A nice girl, Shangqi relayed to you later, lightly mimicking his father’s accent.
The nicest, you replied smugly.
“Is there anything I can do to help?” You feel stupid asking the question, especially with the hours counting down before your flight back to New York.
His smile returns, barely detectable, and he interlocks your fingers briefly. “I’m glad you’re here.”
“Bothering you during your lunch break?” you tease, but your grimace keeps the mood dampened.
He smacks the plastic lid. “I get to eat scallion pancakes for the next two weeks, thanks to you.”
“Are you sure you’re okay?” Asking a second time usually earns you a real answer.
Shangqi softens at your concern. “I don’t know. It’s my dad.”
“He was intense,” you agree.
“Not exactly the most healthy relationship I’ve ever had.”
You bite the inside of your lip. The crack in his voice transports you back to the nights you spent at his place, the rare ones when he opened up about Wenwu. Even underneath the cover of darkness, you struggled to look Shangqi in the eye as he talked through the trauma of living under the Ten Rings’ oppressive shadow. A past he rejected without hesitation, favoring a cramped studio apartment and a low-paying job heavy with entitled customers. Something simple and uncomplicated, far from family.
Still, you listened, both to his stories and to his heart beating steadily against your cheek, pretending—mostly for your own sanity—that throwing a leg over him and tracing patterns on his chest could protect him from the worst of it, and lull him into a sleep where thunderous nightmares wouldn't jerk him awake.
“You’re the only one of my girlfriends to meet him.” He clears his throat, eyes going glassy at the realization. “Actually, you’ll be the only one to ever meet him.”
“Well, I’m lucky then.”
“You don’t have to lie,” he says bitterly. “He did some terrible things.”
Six months into your relationship, you accepted Shangqi’s first—and extremely hesitant—dinner invitation to meet his father.
You owed him. While your personal challenges could never eclipse his, he supported you, through frazzled weekend lesson-planning and long nights. Shangqi drove you to half a dozen art stores to find the best deal, kissed your shoulder when you cried, offered to beat up your administration when you texted him about losing your job.
No, you didn’t owe him; it wasn’t an obligation. Rather, a privilege. To have a little bit of his pain be yours.
“That doesn’t change the fact that he’s your father, and a part of who you are.” You nod decisively. “I got to be a part of that.”
He sighs, a brief and shaky thing. “Thanks.”
“But I…” You wipe away a tear. “I can’t go to the funeral.”
“That’s alright. You’re busy.”
The quickness of that response makes you wince. “I’m sorry, I tried, but I’m not—”
“Hey." Shangqi takes your hand again. “S’okay.”
“I should have answered my phone last night,” you choke out.
“I didn’t even think you were in the city.” He shrugs. “Honestly, I kinda expected you to be asleep on the east coast.”
You scoff. You would have preferred that. Instead, guilt calcifies inside your stomach.
Mere months ago, you wouldn’t have so idly dismissed his name flashing on your screen. He seldom called you—never twice in a row. But you were too distracted by your friends, the drinks you shared with them, the prospect of spending the rest of that night with Steve. While you and Shanqi ended on good terms and you’d never purposely ignore him, maybe deep down you rebuffed even the possibility of something sidetracking your perfect night.
Fucking selfish.
“I just wanted to hear your voice,” he confesses. “I didn’t expect any more from you.”
You shake your head, refusing his conjured-up excuses for your behavior. “I should have called back. I would’ve wanted to be there for you.”
“You’re here now,” he urges. “Even if you are taking up my lunch break.”
With a cheeky wink, Shangqi grabs a plate and two forks from the miniature kitchen counter. He cracks open the top container, carefully transferring a pancake and cutting it in half.
The moment strikes you as alarmingly familiar: yet another one of the hundred meals you’ve shared, yet another time you’ve arrived with food to break up the monotony of his day. In fact, you could both name the exact Korean place where Helen got these pancakes. And if you thought about it, you could probably recite Shangqi’s regular order back to him.
Earlier today, as you pushed through the hotel doors, the muffled yet cheery beat of Helen’s favorite pop music reached your ears, immediately relieving the burns in your heart after leaving your fiancé speechless on the hotel room floor.
You suck in a deep breath. It’s been so long since you’ve felt at ease, among friends, your love mutual and long-lasting.
It’ll never be this way with Steve. The realization crushes you a little.
“I have to ask about your new guy,” Shangqi remark, offering you a sip of his drink.
“No, you really don’t,” you mumble.
“That happened quickly.”
“Only because—” He wouldn’t believe the truth, if you could tell him. And if he did believe you, he’d pity you. “We should talk about you and your dad.”
“C’mon.” He leans backward, satisfied with how flustered you seem. “Take my mind off things. Are you with him ‘cause of his money and looks? Be honest.”
“No, Steve, he’s…”
“He’s rich and attractive,” Shangqi supplies.
“He’s… good to me.”
Most of the time.
“A very glowing review,” he says, every word drawn out in suspicion. “Not surprised though, I’d trust a politician as far as I can throw him.”
You laugh. Steve is kinda strong, but Shangqi has mastered, like, every martial art under the sun. It wouldn’t even be a fair match. “You could throw him pretty far, I think.”
“Not far enough.”
You can’t finish your food with the funny feeling sloshing inside your gut. “He’s different, sometimes.”
“Sometimes,” Shangqi repeats sadly. There’s the pity.
“He won’t let me go to the funeral.”
“Won’t let you?” Shangqi leans forward, his strong forearms bracing the table, the pale scars on his knuckles flexing.
You hate this subtle macho display just like you hated Steve’s yelling. It’s not cute, this overprotectiveness, and you wish they would think to comfort you instead. “Most people don’t know, right?” you ask, deflecting. “That your dad was behind all that stuff. They've just heard of the Mandarin.”
After a pause, he nods gravely, sitting back in his chair. “When it comes to Wenwu, most people just see a very rich and powerful man, with two kids who hated him.” His jaw ticks. “But most people doesn’t mean all people.”
You wring your hands. “You’re right.”
“I think your senator made the right call.” You catch the derogatory tone on Steve’s title, yet he doesn’t apply it to yours: “Future First Ladies of the United States shouldn’t be seen at a crime lord’s funeral, no matter how innocent it may seem.”
You push your half-eaten pajeon toward him. “Yeah.”
“I’m not voting for him though. Seems like an asshole.”
A laugh, a real one. “That’s okay.”
Win or lose, you don’t care. You just wanna get through this, whatever it takes.
“Is this what you want, with him?”
You blink. “Is it okay to say that I don’t know?”
“You don’t have to ask if it’s okay.” Shangqi considers you for a long moment before picking at your food. “Whatever happens, you can always come home.”
— — —
masterlist
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