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A Toast to Whiskey: Chapter 1 / 2
Summary: You work in an old bar hidden away from the modern world. It's almost charming, but not quite. That's probably why Bucky likes it.
Words: 2,325 Pairing: Bucky Barnes/reader Characters: Bucky Barnes Additional tags: Bucky needs a hug, recovering Bucky, mostly canon compliant (Infinity War and Endgame didn’t happen, Stark Tower still exists), angst, she/her pronouns, more tags/characters to be added with part 2, brief mention of Nazis, mental health will be prominent part of part 2
Note: Find this fic and others on A03 - click here. And follow this Tumblr! I post lists of Bucky/Reader fic writers and reblog all my favs. I’ve just started it, so would love the support! xo Rhi
Dedicated to: @browngirlmagic for the conversation. The next chapter is the Lush one!
A Toast to Whiskey Chapter 1 / 2
There were a lot of things in the dusty, old bar that made the man's jaw clench in annoyance, distaste, or anger. You were compiling a list of these things, doing your best to minimise their occurrences. There was one you couldn't avoid though, and it was almost amusing that it bothered him at all. Each time someone ordered a drink - beer, cocktail, shot, whatever - a clean glass was given. The man didn't like it. Was it not like that in his time?
If James Buchanan Barnes thought he'd gone unnoticed in the hole-in-the-wall bar you worked at, he was mistaken. Not entirely, to be fair; the baseball cap and quiet stopped the other patrons from even giving him a second glance. 'Patrons' might have been too civilised of a word to call them. They were old, sickly, local men that had been drinking the same beer from those same taps forever. Harmless, mostly. Unobservant, entirely. Not you though. The first day Bucky walked in and taken a barstool on the very corner, closest to the door, you knew exactly who he was.
Like a lot of people that came and went from the establishment, Bucky's seeking of anonymity was granted. You pretended to not recognise him. You were kind to him, a little more gentle than you were to others, but mostly just a good bartender. And in time, you grew accustomed to the charade. He came in a couple of afternoons a week, but never during the nights when it would be busy. Eventually, he even started to speak more than a couple words to you.
"New cap?" you greeted Bucky with a grin, putting the only drink he ever ordered down in front of him.
Bucky wrapped his right hand around the glass of whiskey. He glanced at you, smiled and shrugged.
"Speaking of new, can I ask you something?" you asked.
The expression on Bucky's face was guarded, but definitely one of concern. You realised you should have just asked, rather than let his mind spiral.
"What’s your problem with clean glasses?"
He looked surprised. Surprised was an experience Bucky wasn't particularly used to or fond of. He wouldn't hold it against you though.
"How do ya know I got a problem?" he asked back, genuinely curious.
Shrugging, you looked around casually. "Guess I notice a lot of things about people,"
"Right," he said slowly, knowingly. "I don't know… Just seems wasteful… Is it the law?"
"That we have to use clean glasses?" you asked with a laugh. "I don't know… probably not. I mean, it's more hygienic. Probably makes the drink taste cleaner or whatever. Board of Health might have a problem with us if we didn't… Not that I've seen one of them in here in years."
Bucky picked up his glass and finished the whiskey. "Fill her up," he quipped. He'd made a half-joke, and you appreciated the effort.
"Yes, sir. Lemme know if you, you know, what anything else," you told him, topping him up, knocking your knuckles on the bar top, and walking away.
…
Bucky Barnes certainly wasn't the most chatty person you'd met. It was better to ask questions if you wanted to pass time with conversations. Easy conversation was one of your special skills, being a bartender and all. However, it was incredibly difficult to do this when you were purposefully avoiding topics that would put Bucky in a position to have to, you know, admit his identity and all that. So, things stayed superficial.
No, Bucky didn't watch the game.
Yes, the weather's been insane.
No, he doesn't want any nut mix.
Okay, maybe yes to pretzels.
Yes, he can see your hair has changed colour.
Yes, he likes it.
For as long as it had taken to get to the point of superficial conversation, it didn't take any time at all to run out of things to say. As it turned out, neither you nor Bucky had lived, or were living, shallow enough lives to sustain it. There were questions you were begging to ask, and if he was honest with himself, Bucky was kinda just counting down until you finally spoke up.
…
"So, I got a question,"
"Mmm. You have a lot of questions," Bucky said, smirking then taking another sip of his whisky.
"You could ask me somethin' if you want a change of pace, pal."
It was a joke. Just banter. But a dark expression flashes across Bucky's face for only a split second. You didn't catch it.
"What's your question, Y/N?"
He knew your name?
Of course he knew your name. He was The Winter fucking Soldier. He probably knew everything about everyone that worked and frequented the bar. How had you not thought of that before? Suddenly, it seemed risky to ask what you had planned to.
Bucky watched you hesitate. He sighed and looked around at the empty room. It was a Monday afternoon and it was just before the regulars showed up to knock beer bottles together and catcall you across the bar. It was just you and him.
"Ask," he said softly, taking his cap off and setting it down on the barstool next to him. You watched Bucky run his hands through his hair, tucking some of it behind his ear.
"Why do you drink whiskey?"
Bucky laughed. Like, a proper heartfelt laugh. "What?" he said, nose still scrunched up in amusement.
"What?"
"Why do I drink whiskey?" he repeated.
"Yeah… I mean… It's disgusting… and, like, you… can't get drunk, right?"
There it was. You did it. Admitted you knew him. Which he figured out. So none of what was happening was really a big deal. But it sure as fuck felt like it.
"Right. I can’t- Well, I can, but it takes a lot,"
"Asgardian mead a lot?"
Bucky grinned and tipped his glass towards you. "How do you know about Asgardian mead?"
You snorted. "Everyone does. Everyone knows everything these days,"
"That's what we want you to think," he said, not skipping a beat.
It made you laugh. It was already better talking to him without false pretences. "So, whisky?"
"Ah… Guess it's that everything's different now… An' that's mostly good. But… You know."
No. No, you didn't know. How could you even begin to understand? "Yeah," you said, your voice far more quiet than you meant it to be.
"Whiskey's still whiskey,"
"It tastes the same?" you asked.
"Almost. Not exactly. Close enough,"
"Makes sense… But why here? S'not like this bar been here since the 40s or anything."
Bucky was visibly trying not to smile. Or make eye contact. "Ah… Not sure how to answer that without… offending ya,"
"Huh? ... Oh, I don't own the joint or anything,"
"You don't?" he asked, his eyebrows furrowed together in confusion.
"No? You think I did? Why?"
"You're…" but he shrugged, still guarded. "I don't know," he lied. "But, ah, I was just lookin' for somewhere…"
"Pretty much stuck in the 40s or thereabouts?"
He nodded, smiling. "But without the Nazis,"
"Mmm… I mean… Have you watched the news lately?" you very quickly said.
"I try to avoid it," he admitted solemnly.
As people started to wander in, the conversation waned. Bucky watched you serve cold beer and pour bags of crisps into bowls. He listened to the worst songs being picked on the jukebox and he sat truly shocked you weren't even at least the daughter of the owner. Despite what you may have thought, he hadn't bothered to investigate you at all and finding his assumptions to be wrong was unsettling.
See, Bucky was a little bit smitten with you. He thought you were smart and sassy and timelessly beautiful. You were the ultimate perk of randomly picking this as his hideaway from the world. But, he figured you were only here because it was a family business. Why was someone smart, sassy and beautiful working strange hours at a shitty bar?
It was hard to say which of you was more curious about the other.
…
Something about what Bucky said had stuck in your head. Whiskey, his drink of choice, was the closest thing to his own time he could find. You could do better than that though.
About a year into working at the bar, you were finally allowed to venture into the cellar to clean it up. There were boxes of shit from forever ago down there and you just wanted it sorted, gone, and the space put to better use. Most of what lived beneath the floor was trash, but every hour or so you'd find something cool. A few vintage beer signs. Empty bottles of collector edition Coke. That kind of stuff. But, there was one thing you had found that you now wanted to stumble across again.
Nobody could remember where it had got to.
It took two days of searching to find it.
The bottle of whiskey was shoved under a bunch of paperwork in the office's bottom drawer desk. Not exactly where you'd store something worth a lot of money, but hey - the barely-there owners of the bar were eccentric, to put it nicely. You didn't recognise the brewing company on the peeling label, but that wasn't the point. The date on the bottle quite clearly read 1940.
When Bucky took his usual spot that afternoon, you bounced over to him with a grin on your face. He looked up at you, keeping his cap.
"Aren't you gonna ask me why I'm so happy?" you said, elbows on the bar and head in your hands.
Bucky smiled a little. He seemed sad. Sadder than usual. Good timing.
"Why are you so happy?"
"'Cause I found something that's gonna make you real fuckin' happy. Check this out!"
You produced the bottle from where you had it stashed under the bar and handed it to Bucky.
Bucky's lips parted slightly and his eyes went all glossy. He read the label carefully, probably trying to place the brand you couldn't. He handled it so carefully, even more than you in your fear of dropping it.
"This is real," he finally said.
"Yeah. I found it in the basement ages ago and just remembered it. 1940, so I figure it's like, first or second batch after Prohibition, yeah?"
Bucky nods. "I guess…" he replied, smiling, remembering Prohibition. "And before all the distilleries had to stop again,"
"For what?" you asked.
"The war," he said so matter-of-factly that it hurt a little. He looked up then, saw your confusion. "Dunno if it was law or if they just did it, but most places stopped making drinking alcohol and started making stuff to help win the war. And ah, whiskey stopped being made because it took up too much crops. I don't know. Something like that."
Something like that. Like he hadn't lived history.
"I didn’t know that. That's…" Not 'cool.' "That makes sense… Anyway. Open it," you ordered, getting out two clean glasses.
Bucky put the bottle on the bar and looked at you seriously. "Y/N, that's gotta be worth… a lot… Can't open it for no reason,"
"Nobody here cares about it. And besides, it's not really no reason, is it?" He didn't move or say anything. "Bucky." He flinched at his name, glanced around to make sure nobody heard. They hadn't. "I think you kinda earned this one, yeah? Now do me the honours."
Why was everyone in Bucky's life so goddamn stubborn?
He sighed and opened the bottle silently. You nodded in encouragement, letting him pour.
"A toast," you posed, holding your glass up. Bucky mimicked your action. "A toast to…" Everything in your head sounded either very cliché or very sad.
"Whiskey," Bucky finished.
"Whiskey," you agreed.
Drinking at the same time, Bucky swallowed in two gulps while you struggled with a sip.
"Jesus fucking Christ it tastes like cat piss now and it did then," you whined, pouring the liquid left in your glass into Bucky's. He laughed at you.
After drinking that down quickly, Bucky reached across the bar and took your hand in his. "Thank you, Y/N. Really."
A toast to finding things that make us less homesick.
…
After the 1940 whiskey, Bucky came in more regularly. He stayed longer, despite the place filling with people. He even began to talk to the other regulars when they sat at the bar and argued with you about politics, the news, and kids these days. You watched him play devil's advocate, siding with the old men, sarcastically poking fun at you with a quick comment every now and then.
You weren't sure when it happened, but you realised Bucky had grown to be comfortable in the space. And there was something about that that made you ridiculously happy. Like, sunbeams bouncing around on the inside of you making you all hot and tingly and full of joy whenever he was there kind of happy. It was gross.
Bucky would walk in, sit, place his cap down and grin at you with his cute little teeth and sparkly blue eyes. It made your day without exception, and you started to notice more little things about him and how they made you feel. When he hooked his hand behind his ear it would make your stomach flip.
One time, when he was telling you a story about carnival rides and baby Steve throwing up, a loose strand of hair fell across his face and you immediately and unconsciously leant across the bar and folded it gently behind his ear for him. Bucky froze, and you went to apologise, but he spoke first. "Thanks," he said softly, with more meaning than the situation called for, then continued on with his story.
It was like that for just over a month. Then he stopped coming in. There was nothing in his final visit to indicate he wasn't coming back. Bucky just disappeared.
CLICK TO READ PART 2/2
#Bucky Barnes#Bucky Barnes/Reader#Bucky Barnes/You#Bucky Barnes/Y/N#Bucky Barnes x Reader#Bucky Barnes x You#Bucky Barnes x Y/N#Bucky Barnes fic#Bucky Barnes fanfic#Bucky barnes needs a hug#mine
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