open post 3.0
am I even pretending I'm going to make this aesthetic anymore? no.
for dumbass text bullshit, meme overflow, or whatever else you feel like throwing up here, I'm not picky.
for dumbass text bullshit, meme overflow, or whatever else you feel like throwing up here, I'm not picky.

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[Steve would definitely never ever admit to thinking about either a wedding with Tony or Tony in a dress, let alone any kinks involving stockings and garters he might have (thank you, Peggy). It's not Tony's shoulders that he's interested in bringing out.]
Tony, I grew up in New York. We didn't have nearly as many cars back then, but I'm still not dumb enough to keep standing in the middle of traffic.
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I mean, why stop at lights? Make it entirely holographic, fluid nanites! Why wear one dress when you can have infinite dresses!
[ he is.... far too invested in this idea now. somehow this is your fault.
(though you should tell him about those thoughts, maybe not now, but--)
he holds his hands up, but his mouth curls in amusement.]
Hey, I never said you were going to! I just gotta make sure you aren't going to rip a hole in space-time and cause a collision between universes or something.
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(Somehow, it's never occurred to him that he's enough of a celebrity to warrant going, that someone might want to create an outfit for him to wear. That kind of thing is firmly in Tony's wheelhouse, not his.)
Steve looks baffled by the mention of nanites, but, well, he's been out of the Tony Stark technology loop for more than half a decade now (actually almost a decade, but who's counting the years hahaha). It's all lumped together under 'science shit he doesn't understand', just like travelling between universes.]
Yeah, that might cause a bit of a traffic jam. Especially if the streets go all M. C. Escher.
[So deadpan. Though at this point, folks in New York might not even blink at something like that, regardless of the universe.]
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Look at you and your art jokes, or is that a Strange joke? Both?
[ look, he doesn't know if what you have seen is the same as what he has seen, but he can make a few reasonable guesses.
maybe.]
I think they would be annoyed more than anything in this place. Ah, anything particularily interesting about where you're from? Anything you might consider ah-- a calling card of sorts? Like, me being female? Or Doom being Iron Man?
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[It's flat, and it slips out entirely without thinking, and after it does, Steve sort of crumples in on himself. He's not a small guy (no matter what this Tony might say), but he seems small - small and lost and sad. He's carefully pushed all his grief to one side till now to deal with returning the Infinity Stones, hasn't allowed himself to think about that last battle against Thanos and the way everything had gone quiet for one second just before Thanos and his armies turned to dust and blew away in the wind. He'd carried himself through the memorial service on autopilot, just like at his mom's funeral Mass, just kept going and putting one foot in front of the other.
And now he's here and Tony's here and it hurts.]
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he seems younger somehow. younger and lost and Tony doesn't know if it's the bruises beneath his shirt that ache or something more metaphorical at this point. maybe both, compounded.
Tony's reaching out to grip Steve's shoulder again, the words he had on the tip of his tongue swallowed down.'better me than you' seems like it wouldn't sit that well here, sit well anywhere really, but less so here with this Steve and his grief that is still raw and open. trying to commiserate in understanding seems uncaring, knowing that not everyone cheats death as many times as he and his. eventually he settles on:] Do you wanna talk about it?
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I would've done it, [he says finally, his voice small.] He used the Infinity Stones and it killed him and I woulda done it, even if it killed me instead. [Maybe especially if it had killed him instead.] After he came back from space, he was so angry, and he ripped the arc reactor from his chest and shoved it into my hands like he was tearing his heart out of his chest, and- [the muscles of his jaw work for a moment] We didn't speak for six years after that. Or two years before. I wasted so much time being so stubborn and I didn't think any of this would happen.
[None of this makes any sense, he's mixing his entire life with Tony together - and most of it is, like he said, defined by his absence, the lack of someone who should have been there, a hole that's suddenly, painfully permanent and there isn't a damn thing he can do to change it.]
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' we didn't speak for six years' might be the most shocking part of it all. but even if they didn't speak for decades, if they never saw eye to eye, or were as close as Tony figured all Tony&Steve's were, he still knows in the marrow of him one true: better him than Steve. it doesn't matter how many fights happened, or how absent they were in comparison, Tony knows that having Steve die rather than him would never be worth it.]
...it wouldn't have been worth it. [ his own voice wavers, the faintest echo, a pale bruising of an old grief in the words.] Trust me, Steve, without you it's never worth it. I made the right choice, and if that anger, that absence, kept you alive, I'm glad for it.
[ it might sound selfish, and maybe it is, but Tony believes what he says. knows that this other version of himself would agree.]
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[That's not the point of the choice - though Steve does think that if he survived crashing a plane into the Arctic, there's a non-zero chance he would have made it through wielding the Infinity Stones with only a light charring. Hell, maybe he and Bucky could've been prosthetic arm buddies. They'll never know.
The point is, Steve's tired, and maybe he would have finally gotten a chance to rest. He's a relic, when it comes down to it. He's an old soldier fighting a war that never ends, and while he'll keep going as long as he has to, part of him welcomes the thought of resting.
(Part of him thinks that he and Tony should have earned the right to rest together, that they should be sipping drinks on a beach somewhere while the next generation of superheroes handles things. But they were never meant for a happy ending.)
And Tony...Tony is the future. Tony figured out time travel. Tony had so much left to give the world, so many ideas that can never be realized now. He could have done more for mankind than Steve punching a million Nazis, left a lasting legacy.
(He did leave a lasting legacy, a voice in his head points out, but Steve, wallowing in his grief at last, ignores it.)]
If there's one thing I've learned from all of this, it's that guys like me are pretty much irrelevant these days. Not that there's any shortage of fascists to punch, but people start getting mad when you do it. I'm not sure I know what I'm doing anymore, Tony. I'm a soldier without a war to fight, and it feels like it would've been better to go out fighting.
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it sparks something protective in him, stupidly enough.
(or maybe not stupidly enough, he will think a little deeper on that later.)
his laughter is hollow, flat, when it falls from his lips, eyes forward.] Trust me, you are never irrelevant. You will see that much while you are here, I'm sure of it.
[ he will make sure of it. because he hates how sure of himself Steve sounds, how he honestly believes what he says, like it doesn't go against some fundamental truth of the world for Steve Rogers to feel useless. it only reinforces the bubbling feeling of protectiveness that Tony has in his chest.
stars and stripes, he cannot think too long on this.]
You are more than a soldier, Steve, you have to remember that too.
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[Six years not just without Tony, who was at least still there, but without Bucky and Sam there by his side. Everything he'd built up in the twenty-first century, gone.]
Turns out, I don't really know what to do with myself when there isn't something to fight.
[Not that he hadn't sought out fights - found jackasses who were taking advantage of the situation with Thanos to screw over the little guy, because there are always people like that - but nothing on the scale he's used to. Nothing with that feeling of doing what he's supposed to that he'd had even when he'd been working undercover after Siberia (not that a super-soldier is ever very undercover).]
Pretty sure I'm extra irrelevant if you've already got a Cap.
[Don't tell him how many Caps you have, Tony. DON'T DO IT.]