The Grandmaster never cared for anyone but himself, except for you. You were the closest thing he would ever have to a daughter. This meant that on the rare occasions you asked for something, he would look past what he wanted and grant you what you wanted, and right now you wanted the dark haired man who had been brought to the Grandmaster.
“Who is this?” the Grandmaster asked the scrapper who had brought him in.
“I am Loki, king of Asgard,” the man declared, absolutely infuriated. “I demand you release me at once!” The scrapper activated the shocker on his neck in response, and his knees buckled before he fell to the ground.
“No one demands anything from the Grandmaster!” The scrapper snapped at him. When he deactivated the shocker, Loki struggled to his feet again.
“You will pay dearly for this,” he seethed as a glimmer of light raced down his hands.
“Be careful with that magic,” the Grandmaster said, gesturing to you. “I have a bit of my own.”
Loki’s eyes darted to you, looking you up and down as if he doubted your abilities.
“I want this one,” you said.
The Grandmaster gave you a look of surprise. “This one, Y/N? Why? He’s so—”
“Handsome,” you said, stepping away from him and towards Loki. He regarded you carefully, clearly not knowing what to make of you. The two of you were strangers, and he would kill you without a second thought if it meant escape from Sakaar, but he wisely chose not to.
“What do you think, your majesty?” you asked softly so only he could hear, your fingertips grazing his chest. “Stay by my side, and you can have anything you desire in all of Sakaar.“
He held your gaze after his eyes drifted over you once more, a smirk curling his lips. “Anything you say?”
You ordered the scrapper to remove the shackles and shocker as the Grandmaster paid him.
“You ask to keep the oddest things,” the Grandmaster said as you went back over to him to give him a kiss of gratitude on the cheek.
“Trust me. This one will come in handy,” you told him. When you looked back to Loki, you didn’t miss the look of desire you shared.
Warnings: Light touches on PTSD. Inappropriate joking.
Summary: Reader was a bit of a local badass during the attack on New York. Steve wants to say thanks.
A/N: A short drabble (hahahahaha) based on this ask. Why am I into the idea of Steve Rogers liking girls who put him on blast? IDK, he’s an angel.
“Jesus, throw a strike already. Give your defense a chance.”
You grumble at the television caddy-cornered into the ceiling above your hospital bed, grateful that at least it is tiny enough and far enough away to spare you from most of the up close action as the Mets bomb another game against the Phillies.
“They needed to pull him last inning. He’s tired.”
And the unbidden voice from just outside your room causes you to flinch, causes your heart rate to skyrocket, the machine monitoring your vitals to temporarily pick up pace. Your eyes narrow as you turn your head toward the man in the door.
“You are lucky I’m on so much pain medication,” you say, “that would’ve hurt.”
“I’m sorry. Can I come in?”
You don’t answer as you watch him. Tall and broad enough to take up most of the doorway. After a moment’s pause he steps inside anyway, his heavy boots thudding against the linoleum. He looks like a photograph, all muscled red, white and blue. A star is emblazoned across his chest. His dark blonde hair is neatly coiffed and his eyes are a clear, startling blue.
You know him. But you don’t.
There was buzz of the Avengers touring the hospital. Visiting with the victims who still remained after the Chitauri attack. You’d ignored it. Buried your frustration into a tanking baseball team and wished you had a beer. Not that you were a fan of the taste. It was the gesture that counted.
You eye the man beside your bed now and frown, “Are you lost? I think they have the costume parties downstairs.”
He raises his eyebrows in surprise. His hands are clasped before him, his thumbs fidgeting as he tentatively speaks your name. You give him the barest nod of confirmation, and he looks temporarily relieved.
“I’m in the right place, then, I believe,” he says, “How are you?”
And the question, to you at least, is so bizarre that you merely watch him bluster in the silence.
“Maybe I should introduce myself,” he says, “I’m-”
“I know who you are,” you answer, cutting him off with a wave of your hand, “Mister America. Captain, sir. Whatever they call you.”
“Steve,” he says, “Steve Rogers.”
You hum in acknowledgement, “Right. Everyone wants to thank you for saving our city. But I have a feeling our city wouldn’t have needed saving had you all been living somewhere else.”
Your words take him by surprise. Make him take a step back away from your bed. You’re certain no one has spoken to Steve Rogers in such a manner since the attack. Maybe ever.
“Here’s a thought,” you add, “how about a team move to Atlanta or Philadelphia? Bring the baddies there. Do your city a real favor and give us a better shot at winning our division.”
And you don’t mean to sound so bitter. Or maybe you do. Maybe your only goal is to have Steve Rogers leave you to suffer alone in grumpy silence.
But he doesn’t. He’s quiet for a long moment. And then, full circle, his words surprise you.
“Or maybe we could just localize efforts over Yankee Stadium next time. Clench the Subway Series, at least.”
You don’t want to. You really don’t. But your mouth betrays you. Curves into a smile. He returns it. His teeth are perfect, white and straight.
“Heard you were pretty brave that day,” he says. And your smile vanishes.
Images flash, unbidden into your mind. Faces riddled with panic as you ushered as many as you could into the small sandwich shop where you’d been having coffee. You’d shouted through the smoke, choked on the ash and dragged injured people to safety as you watched your city fall apart. You’d felt blind terror as you had only seconds to dodge an airborne taxi, hurtling through the sky and straight for you.
You’d stopped counting what was broken or fractured or bruised on your body. You’d stopped wondering how many weren’t as lucky.
You frown at Steve Rogers now, pull down your veil of cynicism once again.
“Yeah? Well if you heard it from the nurses, just know they were all taking bets on whether or not you enhance your suit. In certain places. And they all agreed they needed to see you in person to find out.”
You detect a faint flush on his cheeks at that, but he doesn’t indulge you.
“What if I were told by reporters?” He presses.
“Sensationalist news. I know modern television is still a pretty new concept to someone your age. But trust me, they love stuff like this. Just don’t ask me to take a picture with you. I’m not sure the public could handle it.”
“And what if I watched it myself? Everyone has a camera these days.”
“Do you? Who taught you how to use it?”
Steve Rogers laughs. Short and abrupt. Like a punch to the stomach. He kicks out the stool from beside your bed, takes a seat and shakes his head, “You know, I had a friend who would love you, busting my chops like this.”
“Had?” You ask, noticing the tense.
“Perils of being my age,” he answers with a shrug. But you don’t miss the very brief human and faraway look flash across his eyes.
When he speaks again, his words are soft, concerned, “I know you probably saw some things that day that scare you. Now that you’ve had time to process it all. That you aren’t running off adrenaline. And I want you to know that it’s alright. That we all feel that way. So if you need anything…
“What I need is to get out of here. Not some sycophantic lecture on the importance of mental health from Captain America,” but you think about that look, and your tone is softer, and you add, “It’s a nice gesture. But I’m fine. I’ll be fine. So there. Civic duty done.”
You almost pity Steve Rogers’ goodwill gesture gone so wrong. You almost laugh. But he remains there, seated beside you, gives you a long look before asking, “What do you like to do? When you do get out of here, what is it you’re looking forward to?”
And it’s almost painfully genuine, the question. Real curiosity.
“You’re going off script,” you tease.
His blue eyes search yours. His mouth twitches.
“I’d like to breathe in something other than disinfectant, first of all,” you say, “Maybe walk in the park. See the flowers.”
“Which ones?”
“Hydrangeas. The blue ones at Mumford Gate. They’re my favorite.”
Steve nods. Crosses his arms in front of him and says, “I prefer the tulips.”
Your laughter comes out as an unbidden snort, “You would.”
And he looks surprised. Delighted that he’s caused it, but confused as to why. He raises a brow in question. Drops his arms.
“Tulips try too hard,” you say, “pretty to look at, but annoyingly perfect and impractical.”
He tilts his head back. Barks a laugh, “See, you think that, but they saved a lot of people’s ass during the war. Kept a lot of people from dying,” his eyes find yours again. He grins, “They may be pretty to look at, but don’t count them out in a fight.”
Something about his tone prickles heat up your neck. You break his gaze. Look resolutely ahead, “Just reinforces my point,” you say, “they try too hard.”
There’s a long stretch of silence, a fidgeting of your own thumbs before Steve says finally, softly, “You’ll feel normal again. Maybe not today. But. Eventually. And maybe not the same normal as before. But a new one.”
You swallow. Stare at the wall in front of you and nod.
It’s the closest you can get to thanks.
Smell is the first sense you register the following day. Honeyed and sweet, it pulls you from a deep, restful sleep, nudges your eyes open to the veritable garden that has taken over your room.
Tulips of all shades fill the tiny space. Perch on the table, the desk, the chair. Vibrant reds and pinks and oranges and yellows. You take a deep breath, your mouth fixes into a smile.
You barely register the nurse in the background, fussing over such a display normally being against protocol. How it was insisted upon anyway.
And you don’t have to ask by who. Because you know. She hands you a card. A simple, undecorated ivory bifold.
“A glutton for punishment,” you murmur to yourself as you flip it open.
The handwriting is neat. A looped hybrid between print and cursive.
So you can breathe something other than disinfectant.
And so you can show me the hydrangeas yourself, once you’re free.
Don’t try too hard to say no.
Steve
Yo, this is so cute I actually cannot. I love Steve when someone else is…picking on him? Taking some of the wind out of his sails? I can’t think of the right phrase (other than “putting him on blast” like in the AN), but I love this. So good.
This is a reader’s attempt at getting links to every single part of this verse available – the main AO3 fics, Tumblr ficlets that have or haven’t been crossposted, AUs & fics in-between canon and AU – and trying to list them in a rough in-universe chronological order whenever possible. There’s a lot of approximation and I unfortunately don’t know how long I can keep this updated, but I thought I might as well as post it in case it might be helpful. ^^;
AUs and fics not at a specific point of the timeline are listed at the bottom, in the order they were posted.
This started out as a personal ref post so there’s a bunch of needlessly extensive labels you can probably ignore, but if you’re interested:
Fics in bullet lists take place during the non-bulleted fic above them
[Date] = The day the fic was posted on Tumblr (which has so far been either at the same time as or earlier than AO3)
[~] = The author’s notes gave no indication of this fic’s place in the timeline, so its placement here is a very imprecise estimation based on the setting/situation in the fic plus, possibly, the date this fic was posted
There are several categories of fic:
All main fics in the series, the ones on the AO3 series page, have bolded titles (note: I didn’t bother to mark whether these fics have nsfw content, so please look out for the rating if needed!)
Fics from Every Little Earthquake are indicated by the abbreviation [E] plus the chapter number; similarly,
The following fics take place in the approximately-three-month time gap between with an untrained voice and reflected in someone like me; I don’t have an official ref for the chronology, so the order is very approximate.
Rating: R (NC-17? This is graphic graphic smut, darlings.)
Summary: You can’t fucking stand Steve Rogers. Leave it to him to mess up your night out. Can he make it better?
Warnings/Notes: Yet another Stark Tower drabble, though I also think that 14 pages is too long to be called a drabble. No real backstory to this one, no real reason for the reader to be in the tower. Just accept that she’s part of the team and you’re good to go. In this one, she’s got a female body and identifies as female, so if that’s something that yanks you out of a fic, I’m sorry. The original plotbunny for this was a longstanding desire I had to read some Steve Rogers hate!sex, but I’m not sure the actual sex part really counts as hateful. Pretty rough, pretty graphic. Beware.
After a mission,
once everybody got home and tended to their wounds, there always
seemed to be some kind of…dark cloud hanging over the tower. It
didn’t seem to matter whether the mission was successful or not:
you all just kind of got on each other’s nerves for a while until
everyone found a way to cool off and decompress.
Title: Walk With Me Fandom: Tom Hiddleston/RPF Genre: Horror/Romance? Rating: PG-13 Summary: What if that sweet Tom Hiddleston we all think we know is nothing more than an act? What if he’s something more than that—and has been for hundreds of years? Warnings/Notes: I know, I know: vampires. But I was inspired by “Possum Kingdom”–can you blame me? If blood’s not your thing, I’d say give this one a pass. Also, looking back, I’m kind of not happy with my choice of keeping Tom an actor in this one: if I rewrote it, I think I’d just have him be some stupidly-attractive dude instead.
It was so easy now.
He was a megastar, adored and celebrated by millions around the globe. He might as well have had limitless amounts of money, not that he needed it in the first place—all he needed to do was ask for something, maybe flash a shy smile or two or accompany it with that strange, almost nervous titter he’d taught himself, and people would fall over themselves in order to get it for him. Most of the time, he didn’t even need to ask: the people around him were paid to anticipate his every need before he had a chance to voice it.
Your head hurt, your shoulders were cramped, and there was dried drool along your chin. You had overslept.
You sat up with a snort, your heart racing as you reached for your phone. You were twenty minutes late to the morning briefing. Tony had made a point of warning everyone the night before not to be late but here you were. You hated when you were the victim of his lectures and today’s would surely be tedious.
Summary: An ignored injury leaves you with more trouble than you bargained for.
A/N: This was supposed to be a one shot…but I got carried away so here we are. Another series. That will take me months to update. Well, hopefully not.
You weren’t clumsy per se, but you definitely weren’t nimble. You had your fair share of missteps, but that was to be expected of someone who didn’t have superhuman abilities or fancy technologically advanced suits. By some stroke of luck, you’d never gotten seriously injured on any missions as of yet and you were determined to keep it that way.
You and the rest of the Avengers were currently on what was supposed to be an easy recon mission. Go in, get information, and get out. What you weren’t anticipating was a welcoming committee made up of HYDRA henchmen. The others were able to keep the enemies at bay while you and Natasha covertly made your way inside the enemy compound. Once inside, you were surprised to find the compound empty. Each room you passed was barren, save for a few tables and chairs. Since the place appeared empty, you and Natasha agreed to split up to cover more ground faster.
we don’t know where tomorrow ends, 2.7k, thor & loki, post-infinity war future fic. a little while ago an anon sent me an ask that goosed me into writing this fic, self indulgent as it is, because, you know, that’s just what I do
Some days, Loki wasn’t certain that all of him had come back.
Some days, he was nearly certain he wasn’t back at all. Was certain that he was still dead, and everything around him was just an elaborate games of shadows. He dug his nails into his palms to prove that he was flesh and blood, but even with that some part of him doubted. The world felt strange, and he was ill at ease.
It didn’t help that Thor wasn’t at his best, either.
Thanos had left scars on his brother. Not on his skin, but there were scars nonetheless: he carried fear with him in a way he never had before, and the knowledge of loss. He hovered around Loki, around Heimdall, as though fearful of what might happen if he took his eyes off them. All Loki had done was die; Thor had had to live with everything else.
That is the best description of Steve I have ever seen
I was always so confused about if Joss Whedon had seen The First Avenger. Because Steve swears in the movie. Not like hard, its a PG-13 family movie, but he does swear.
I think Joss Whedon falls into the same trap as bad fic writer, where he thinks Steve is a farmer from 1950s Kansas instead of Irish Catholic kid from 1920s Brooklyn.
Steve Rogers is 400 pounds of righteous kickass in a 100 pound body and by using the serum the army found room for only most of it.
he thinks Steve is a farmer from 1950s Kansas instead of Irish Catholic kid from 1920s Brooklyn.
this is it. this is the description for how steve is so often mischaracterized.
It’s my personal theory (in-universe) that Steve did this on purpose. In Avengers I, he’s only been out of the ice for about a week, and hes got a feeling of what everyone expects from him, so he plays it up. He goes “golly gee” because that’s what people think Captain America is going to be, because he listened to the Captain America radio show and he knows how they played him, so he goes with that because that’s what they need: in Coulson’s words, “a little old-fashioned.”
It’s once he gets to know the Avengers better, and once they stop needing Captain America and begin to need Steve Rogers, and he gets comfortable around them, that the Brooklyn Bitch finally starts to come back out. And by then it is TOO LATE TO STOP THE SWEARING AND THE RECKLESS ASSHOLERY