In 1928 Bucky Barnes sees his best friend choke down a glass of raw liver bigger than the size of his dad’s balled fist. It looks slimy. Bucky once saw a neighborhood cat maiming something unrecognizable and red, but cats are predators. He watches Steve’s small frame lurch through a suppressed heave. Something about it feels perverse. Steve’s no predator.
Tag: thank you
Imagine Bucky eyeing Steve’s paintings, the attention he lavishes on every detail, the way he loses himself in bringing a piece to life. One day, Bucky asks Steve to paint his body.
Appreciating Steve’s
art was weird because sometimes it felt like it was an exercise in appreciating
Steve himself. It was easy to love Steve despite his temper or righteousness
but sometimes it was harder to look at his paintings and say “Yeah, I get
it.”In fact, nine times out of ten, Steve’s paintings
didn’t make any sense to Bucky at all. Sometimes he’d paint people, faces of
loved ones from this life and the last, and for a while Bucky loved those best.
Most other times, though, he’d cover canvas after canvas in big explosions of nonsensical
color. Sure they were pretty, sometimes, but what kind of sense did a blur of
blue and ochre make.Once, Bucky asked him, “What is it s’pposed to be?”
Maybe the sky or the ocean? But why all the yellow?Steve just stared at the canvas, looked back at Bucky,
then back to the canvas. He shrugged.Maybe Bucky just wasn’t cultured enough? Sometimes
he’d flip through Steve’s glossy, expensive art books, but really Bucky was
just in it for the tragic backstories. Sure, Francis Bacon was kinda cool
carrying on with a boyfriend who was hands down bad news, but he didn’t really
see why that made his blobby, half-baked paintings art, let alone worth writing
a book about.Seemed that he and Francis Bacon’s boyfriend were on
the same page there.Hell, sometimes Steve made it just plain tough to take
it seriously. He had a box of latex gloves now and occasionally he’d prep the
canvas, set things up, pull on some gloves, squeeze out some paint and just
smear it all over the canvas with his hands. No pallet, no brushes, no finesse.“No clean up, neither,” Steve told him cheekily,
snapping off the soiled gloves and tossing them into the trash.Bucky’s feelings aside, he liked watching Steve work.
Especially now that he didn’t get all finicky and nervous like he did when he
was still learning. Sometimes he’d just forget Bucky was even there. Other
times, he’d drag Bucky to where the light was best, set him up sans shirt, and
paint some part of him. The slope of his back as he sat hunched over. The cut
of his jaw and the curve of his ear – the one with that bump on it that Bucky
hated. The uneven tilt of his shoulders. The blinding glint of his metal arm,
painted in thick cords of white as it caught the sun.Each time Steve paints him, he blows Bucky’s mind a
little more. And that’s a testament to Steve’s artistic prowess, not just
Bucky’s vanity, thanks very much. That’s what mirrors are for.One day, he’s lurking over Steve’s shoulder, watching
him contemplate making the purple blob on the yellow canvas bigger or more
purple or whatever when he blurts out “Can you paint me?”
imagine bucky and steve taking shots of like 100 proof vodka and trying to get DRUNK and steve is totally unaffected but after the 20th shot or something bucky is drunk as fuck and he looks at steve really seriously (while swaying slightly in his chair) and steve is kind of nervous because bucky hasn’t looked at him this intently since before the war when steve came home with two broken ribs and bucky just stared at him for five minutes before giving him the longest lecture of his entire life so yeah steve is kinda nervous. finally bucky rubs his hand over his face, sighs and says, “steve, i fucking hate it when you wear khakis” and steve laughs so hard he can’t breathe
Meta Master Post
The How to Brooklyn Series – Resources and meta for writing pre-war and modern stories set in Brooklyn
Is having your front door opening to a vacant? lot? a normal thing? because there’s not much street going on during the “end of the line” scene.
Pt 1 – The Basics of New York City, or What the Hell Are Boroughs?
Yes, there were docks. (Sigh.)
Pt 2 – For the lov’a Pete, Put the Subway in Your Stories
A story set in New York City that doesn’t even reference the subway might as well be set in middle America.
Pt 2.1 – The New York City Subway is Fucking Gross
Seriously though, can you imagine how those cushions smelled?
Pt 2.2 – The Brooklyn Trolley System
This one doesn’t even hit my historical boner, it hits my I’d love to be able to travel between Queens and Brooklyn without three train changes and two pack mules boner.
Pt 3 – The Ubiquitous Tenement Apartment
Although we associated the word tenement with shitty slum life, back in the day this just what people called apartments.
Pt 4 – What’s the Deal with the Brooklyn Dodgers?
All right, so we all know how no recently frozen Steve Rogers is complete without shocked references to How Expensive Things Are, What the Fuck Is This Banana, and The Dodgers Moved to Los Angeles?!
So the first thing you gotta understand first is that baseball was invented in Brooklyn.
Pt 5 – Steve & Bucky’s Jobs before The War
Almost definitely not working down at the docks, sorry.
Pt 6 – What did they do for Fun, Other than Dancing?
Hah, I’m a terrible person; my first instinct is to say, they got drunk. Am I projecting? Maybe. Drinking’s a competitive sport here. Anyway, I really like this question, this is a good question. So, are we talking what they did as kids, or what they did as grownups? Let’s do both! I like both.
Pt 7 – Modern AU Headcanons (Steve, Bucky, Sam)
There’s not one way to experience this borough or city, and if I ever claim there’s a right way to “Brooklyn” then please punch me in the face immediately. So what I want to do instead is give you some options! Let’s base them off of fandom tropes, shall we?
Misc. Posts & Meta
What I do with All this Damn Research: My AO3.
Getting to the
WorldStark Fair by SubwayMr Rogers Gayborhood/99% Docks
Is it realistic for Bucky to have been a Sergeant?
Bucky Barnes Makes Weird Faces
Further Resources
How Expensive Was That? by @a-social-construct
Brooklyn Historical Resources by @a-social-construct
1940s Census Data by @a-social-construct (individual data)
1940s Census Data by @a-social-construct (by neighborhood)
Tenement Photos – 1930-1939
New York Transformed – NYCHA Photos 1939-1967
World War II Writing Resources
Historical Newspapers via @fidelioscabinet
Follow for more, or track my tags: Historical New York, The City So Nice They Named It Twice, How to Brooklyn. This post will be updated periodically with additional meta, commentary, and resources. HTB posts will be general topics only to save my sanity, but I’m happy to answer more specific questions privately or in a less sprawling format. If you’d like me to reply to an ask privately, please say so.
“You said you’ve seen the Smithsonian exhibit, didn’t you?” Bucky asks one day, out of nowhere.
“Yeah,” says Steve, looking up from an absurdly difficult crossword. “It’s really–”
“So I guess you know I didn’t enlist,” says Bucky flatly.