kath-ballantyne:

“He ain’t well”

Steve and Robbie, one of the Steve clones from A Little Bit of You, A Little Piece of Me by iamshadow21 

This is from the scene where Bucky first hands over Robbie.

Find the art on On AO3

I think I may end up having to draw another picture of Steve holding Robbie once he’s doing better and with them both smiling because this one makes me sad.

I wish I could work out how to draw proper shadows though.

The gorgeous Steve and Robbie portrait kath-ballantyne was drawing the last couple of days for my Bits and Pieces verse. Be sure to click to see it full size, and to like it and/or go to AO3 to leave kudos. 🙂

Soul Bomb

copperbadge:

Title: Soul Bomb
Rating: PG-13
Summary: Suddenly everyone in Manhattan has someone else’s voice in their head. Tony got Steve’s, for his sins.
Notes: Inspired by a minifest on the prompt of your soulmate’s voice being in your head. Other stories in this impromptu fest are here, here, and here.

Here at AO3 | Here at Dreamwidth

Sam’s fic is now on AO3! It’s awesome.

Just adding to the list of fills, though, I also wrote Pygmalion’s Folly, gen, pre-Iron Man, Tony-centric.

Soul Bomb

kath-ballantyne:

My girl iamshadow21 wrote A Little Bit Of You, A Little Piece Of Me. In the fic there are clones of Steve and Bucky and I found when I was reading it I wasn’t ever sure which one to be picturing so I have drawn them with their names.

A Little Bit Of You, A little Piece Of Me: http://archiveofourown.org/works/2274387

Art on AO3: The Kids http://archiveofourown.org/works/2279904

Summary:

“Who is this?” he asks, torn between frustration and something like fear.

“There’s a warehouse on the bank of the Anacostia river,” a voice whispers. “In exactly thirty minutes, it’ll go up in flames. Coordinates to follow. Bring a large car or a van, something that can seat multiple civilians. Come alone.”

The line goes dead, and his phone buzzes a second later with a text. It’s an address.

Notes:

Based on this Tumblr post (specifically on the drabble by cassandrexx and the head canon by misspryss). Basically, there’s the twelve tiny Steves trope that has had some gorgeous fic and fanart done for it (most recently Raibean’s 12 days of Steve), and this Tumblr post thew out the idea that rather than being mini-Supersoldiers, clones of Steve would turn out more like his re-Rebirth self, ie. tiny, sick and feisty.

My baby did fanart! Give her loads of likes and kudos, and click to get a bigger version.

A Little Bit of You, A Little Piece of Me – IamShadow21 – Multifandom [Archive of Our Own]

Rating: Teen And Up Audiences
Archive Warning: No Archive Warnings Apply
Category: Gen
Fandoms: Captain America (Movies), The Avengers (Marvel Movies), Marvel Cinematic Universe, Iron Man (Movies)
Relationships: James “Bucky” Barnes & Steve Rogers, Steve Rogers & Sam Wilson, Sharon Carter & Steve Rogers, Steve Rogers & Original Female Character(s), Steve Rogers & Original Child Character(s), Pepper Potts & Steve Rogers
Characters: Steve Rogers, James “Bucky” Barnes, Original Child Character(s), Sam Wilson (Marvel), Sharon Carter (Marvel), Pepper Potts, Happy Hogan, Original Male Character, Original Female Character
Additional Tags: I Blame Tumblr, Inspired By Tumblr, Tumblr Prompt, Based on a Tumblr Post, Post-Captain America: The Winter Soldier, Gen Work, Gen or Pre-Slash, Kid Fic, Clones, Hydra (Marvel), references to murder, References to child murder, Arson, references to Non-Consensual Genetic Experimentation, Hurt/Comfort, Emotional Hurt/Comfort, Happy Ending, Captain America: The Winter Soldier Compliant, Harm to Children, Rescue, Rescue Missions, Not As Dark As The Tags Make It Sound, Donuts, Dessert & Sweets, Chinese Food, Breakfast, Pre-Serum, Pre-Serum Steve Rogers, (but not really), Popcorn, Awesome Pepper Potts, Past Child Abuse, Implied/Referenced Child Abuse, Awesome Sharon Carter, Awesome Sam Wilson, Awesome Bucky Barnes, Awesome Steve Rogers, Awesome Kids, everyone is awesome, Steve Rogers-centric, Steve Rogers Feels, Protective Steve, Protective Steve Rogers, Eugenics, Ableism, Chronic Illness
Summary: “Who is this?” he asks, torn between frustration and something like fear.

“There’s a warehouse on the bank of the Anacostia river,” a voice whispers. “In exactly thirty minutes, it’ll go up in flames. Coordinates to follow. Bring a large car or a van, something that can seat multiple civilians. Come alone.”

The line goes dead, and his phone buzzes a second later with a text. It’s an address.
Notes: Inspired by Bucky finds the tiny Steves by cassandrexx.

Based on this Tumblr post (specifically on the drabble by cassandrexx and the head canon by misspryss). Basically, there’s the twelve tiny Steves trope that has had some gorgeous fic and fanart done for it (most recently Raibean’s 12 Days of Steve), and this Tumblr post thew out the idea that rather than being mini-Supersoldiers, clones of Steve would turn out more like his pre-Rebirth self, ie. tiny, sick and feisty.

Ten thousand words later, and here we are. This isn’t to the letter absolutely compliant with the post. I went off at right angles, and explored more the feels than the lulz, and not all of the kids (or even the majority) are based on Steve. But hopefully it’s a worthy tribute.

A Little Bit of You, A Little Piece of Me – IamShadow21 – Multifandom [Archive of Our Own]

Hi, long time reader, fan, and one-time remixer. :) I have a question about Lucy in Fairy Tales and Clockwork Hearts. I’m sorry if someone’s asked this before. (I looked at the Fic FAQ and skimmed through all the comments on the fic, yes all 21 pages, and didn’t see any mention of this.) Anyway, what I want to know is, is the Lucy in Tales of the Bots the same Lucy as in Far Better Things Ahead? Because I didn’t realise until today that they were both called Lucy.

scifigrl47:

And the SciFiGrl47 No-Prize goes to you. 8)

Yes.  Lucy was the girl who took care of the bots in the IM3 aftermath fic, which is, of course, a different timeline/verse.

She changed some, and she’s a bit younger here, but I think she still likes Dummy. 8)

Ahaha, awesome, I accept my Non-Award with pride. I love knowing it’s true, that it’s the same character, just different versions. It makes both verses all the richer for me. Lucy and Dummy like each other in all potential realities!

A misogynist writer, a feminist portrayal and me: why I can’t choose a side

I know there’s a lot of hate about Steven Moffat, and from what I can tell, a lot of it’s justified, but I haven’t really weighed in much on it, because I am incredibly conflicted.

Why?

Because I was a girl in the late ‘80s and early ’90s, and like a lot of girls my age, I found Press Gang. It was such an important, unique, groundbreaking show in so many ways, and it gave me a role model who I still hold in my echelon of favourite female characters. Lynda Day.

She was strong willed.
She was ruthless.
She didn’t care about fashion.
She had ambition.
She advocated for herself and her profession with all her might.
She wasn’t perfect, and at times, she was just plain wrong and unlikable.
She was never punished for her sexuality.
She was willing to use that sexuality if it got her what she wanted, but she was never a slave to it.
She was hard and even cruel to people around her on a daily basis, but she would fight for their job security and for their freedom to tell the truth in their articles.

As a girl who’d spent her life abused, manipulated and shamed into conforming, Lynda Day showed me that you didn’t have to make nice, you didn’t have to play by the rules, and you could carve your own path. And without Steven Moffat, she never would have existed.

I’m not saying that everything I’ve changed about my life and become since is owing to him. It’s not. It’s down to me. I did all that, myself, and I earned all the kudos. I’m not that scared, shamed, traumatised little girl any more because of a lot of reasons. But one of the first female characters I latched onto, that set my feet on the path to being something better, was Lynda. And I can’t wish for a world where she didn’t exist.

I’m not wearing one of my three Neurodiversity shirts, but I am wearing my Irlen tints (always) and my therapy vest. It’s squishy and warm and comfortable, and it leaves my arms and hands free to knit, unlike a weighted blanket or whatever would. And yes, I DO wear it in public. Fuck society and the beauty standard, I’ll wear a squishy pastel rainbow vest if I want to.

Quiet mental MPU obsession of the day:

the-wordbutler:

I’ve talked a little on here (without fleshing it out too much because I’m ages from using it) about how Bucky screwed up his shoulder in the service, how it bothers him now and will bother him worse in the future. But I’ve spent a lot of time recently thinking about Steve and Bucky’s friendship with Sam and Riley, how they hang out together, and how they’re probably that clump of friends who hang out at all the church events to the point where the old ladies serving the punch just call them The Barneses and the Wilsons, like they’re one big unit.

(Steve’s never offended when the old church ladies call him by Bucky’s last name. Riley pulls a face every time.)

But Sam and Riley both served, too, and that led me to the thought of Riley being seriously injured before his discharge. Like, maybe that’s why they left the service: Riley was badly hurt and couldn’t return, and Sam worked as hard as he could to follow him out. Which is maybe why they have a (big, dopey, wonderful) service dog at home, why Sam spends a lot of his free time kicking around the VA (Riley maybe works there, a page from the movie since Sam’s a law student in this), why sometimes Steve and Bucky drop off a crockpot meal or something when Sam sends one of those texts before church on Sunday:  rough night and morning, see you next week.

I’m not sure if Riley’s wounds are physical or not (I play with the idea of a lost limb, maybe a leg), but mentally, it’s rough, sometimes.

And when Dot first notices—because you know she will, she’s smart and observant (like both her daddies)—she just tips her head to the side and asks when Riley’ll be better. “Sick people get better,” she says when Steve blinks at her, exasperation in her tone. “Riley and Sam miss church when Riley’s sick, so when will he stop being sick and be better?”

Steve’s face is soft when he crouches down in front of her. “Remember a long time ago, when we talked about why Uncle Tony’s sometimes so … ” He searches for a good word, and he rolls his eyes when Bucky mouths unglued. “Why Uncle Tony goes a million miles an hour like he’s had way too much chocolate?” Dot nods, and Steve forces a little smile. “Remember why we said Uncle Tony does that?”

“Because his brain’s not always nice to him,” Dot reports. 

“Right. And Riley’s brain isn’t very nice to him, either.” Steve brushes hair out of her face. “And sometimes, that means he and Sam stay home from church and cuddle with Captain Fluffybritches.”

Bucky snickers the way he always snickers at the dog’s name—“He came up with it,” Sam’d exclaimed back when they’d landed the dog, and Riley’d rolled his eyes at him—but Dot frowns. “Do lots of people have mean brains?” she asks.

“More than you’d think,” Steve tells her, and she nods like she understands.

Riley’s a little more grounded by the time they bring over a bucket of chicken and all the sides that night, and Sam invites them to stay for dinner. “Even if this is half a watermelon away from a stereotype,” he criticizes.

“Only for one of us,” Riley calls after him, and then Dot’s sort of tossing herself around his waist like she’s missed him, which is weird for Dot and Riley’s relationship. (Most of the time, they play dress up and engage in very serious meta-analysis of the latest Sofia the First episode.) Steve and Bucky flinch like they want to apologize, but Riley lights up like a sunrise. “What, did you miss my off-key singing this morning?”

Dot shakes her head before she glances up at him. “I just wanted to say that I’m sorry you have a mean brain, and I hope it gets less mean like my Uncle Tony’s did after he went to the Four Trees place.”

Bucky face-palms, Steve blushes, and Sam laughs hard enough that he almost drops KFC all over the floor. But Riley just grins at her and ruffles her hair. “I hope it works that way, too,” he says, and then he leads Dot off to find the plastic flower crown she wears every time she comes over.

I liked this scrap that you wrote about Dot and Riley, I think because as a disabled person, and as the partner of a disabled person, I have feelings about how people talk about disabled people in our society. The line that stood out for me is ‘sick people get better’, because, although it’s a four-year-old saying it, that’s the prevailing view of society, that illness, injury and disability are things you ‘get better’ from, and really, that’s not always the case, but no one seems to want to admit that – that there are people in our society, in our schools, in our workplaces, in our churches and in our culture, who don’t get well, who won’t ever get better, but who are just as human as they are, and who belong just as much as an able-bodied or able-minded person does. People get uncomfortable when you challenge that, too. I went for disability payment after my diagnosis, and the person processing me said something about ‘maybe in the future’ and I corrected her saying ‘no, I’m autistic, it’s neurological, I was born this way and it’s permanent’, and she responded instantly that I was being pessimistic and defeatist. I wasn’t. But no one wants to accept that disabled people aren’t part of some inspiration porn story that ends with them being able-bodied or able-minded at the end or ‘just as good as’. Our society shouldn’t be a club with the worthy being accepted and the rest on the fringes, but it is. And until able-bodied and able-minded people accept that we’re worthy just as we are, without ‘overcoming’ anything, that’s the way it’s going to stay.