buddienetwork event 13: straightmundo diaz, part 2
we had so much fun last year, we're running it back! for straightmundo diaz, part 2, take your inspiration from queer icons, season moments, colors, or anything else inspires you.
this event will run until the end of june. past events can be found here.
to participate:
đŹreblog this post
đŹcreate something that fits this monthâs prompt
đŹcaption your post with: â @buddienetwork event: straightmundo diaz, part 2
đŹdonât forget to tag us so we can reblog you
if you write something, donât forget to add it to the ao3 collection here.
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Buck takes care of Eddie. Who's been stabbed, did you hear?
âSo youâre gonna, what, stand there and watch?â
Buckâs eyes flick back up to Eddieâs face, where his eyes are still shut in concentration. Not that thereâs anything wrong with checking out your friendâs abs. Especially if that's where he's just been stabbed.
âYeah. I'm really looking forward to the part where you try to bend over and get a good look at everything.â
Eddieâs jaw tics again as they fall back into their stalemate. But it doesnât take long for Eddie to open his big, pleading eyes and unleash them Buckâs way.
âFine.â
AO3 tags: Injury Recovery, Scars, Implied/Referenced Drug Addiction, Implied Panic Attacks, Content Warnings Aside This Is Ultimately Fluffy, First Kiss, Getting Together
Tags Not On AO3: Platonically Putting Your Mouth All Over Your BoyBestie's Body To Quiet The Noise In Your Head, That's A Thing Right?, Buck Buckley Sure Thinks So
buck/eddie ⢠rated teen and up ⢠2.6k ⢠post-8x06
âDo you want to talk about it?â Eddie prompts.
âUh,â Buck says. âIâI thought I would, butââ
âThatâs fine,â Eddie says. He tilts his empty bottle, grinning easily enough that a corner of Buckâs mouth twitches, too, albeit begrudgingly. âDrink up.â
Piaaaaaa "brushing their arm against the other's, hoping the other would finally catch their arm and hold it close" please, we already know they constantly brush arms anyway!
fridaaaa this took me, once again, many months to get to and i sort of only vaguely filled the actual prompt, but i hope you still enjoy it <3
5+1 things, rated t, wc: 4k
[read on ao3]
I.
Eddieâs first day as a probationary firefighter isâŚinteresting. Captain Nash welcomes him with the same warm smile he gave him the first time they talked, then leads him inside and shows him around the app bay.
âWeâll give you the full tour later,â he promises, âafter youâve met the rest of the team. Youâre the first one here, if you want, you can change into your uniform now.â
He points towards the locker room â which has glass walls for some reason â and Eddie nods.
Heâs just finished buttoning up his shirt when Captain Nash ushers a group of firefighters inside. Eddie runs a hand through his hair to make sure itâs tidy and smiles as Hen and Chimney introduce themselves to him with warm smiles and handshakes, welcoming him to the team.
Thereâs a third person with them, hovering in the background and glowering at Eddie. Heâs young, probably around Eddieâs age, tall and very built, and despite his hostile expression, he doesnât give Eddie the impression of being an asshole. Itâs like the expression doesnât fit on his face, like heâs not used to wearing it.
Chim grabs him by the arm and pushes him forward, giving Eddie a commiserating smile.
âAnd this guy is Buck,â he says. âHe was our probie before you.â
âNice to meet you,â Eddie says politely, stretching a hand out to offer a handshake. âYouâll have to show me how things work around here, then.â
Buck glowers down at his hand, and when he finally grabs it, he squeezes it too tightly, like heâs trying to prove something. Eddie squeezes back, amused by the pretense this guy is clearly putting on.
Behind Buckâs back, Hen rolls her eyes, but sheâs also wearing a fond look, which only confirms Eddieâs assumption that Buck isnât half as bad as heâs pretending to be.
From Captain Nash, he knows that theyâre supposed to work together a lot of the time, so thatâs gonna be interesting. He doesnât know why Buck is acting like this, but heâs gonna find out, and then heâs gonna figure out a way to work with Buck anyway.
He didnât come here to make friends, but heâll be spending 50 hours a week with these people, and he has to trust them with his life for a lot of that time, so they at the very least need to bury whatever hatchet Buck is carrying right now.
Eddie lets go of his hand with a nod and a polite smile, and gives himself a week to figure Buck out.
II.
The days between the accident and the funeral are kind of a blur.
Thereâs too much to do and think about, too many decisions to make, too many people to call, too much to organize. He has help â Abuela, Pepa, the entire 118, but it still feels too much.
Shannon was 27, she didnât have a will, they never talked about any of this. How is Eddie supposed to know how she would like to be buried, or if sheâd rather be cremated? What kind of music she would want them to play at her funeral? This wasnât supposed to happen. Not for a very, very long time.
But it did happen, and now Eddie is somehow supposed to know all this about her, his wife, the woman heâs only just let back into his and Christopherâs lives, the woman who asked him for a divorce and completely pulled the rug from under his feet just a day before she died.
Sometimes, he feels like he didnât know her at all.
His parents are here âto helpâ, which should be a relief but really isnât. They never liked Shannon and arenât making a secret of it, even now thatâ now that sheâs gone. So Eddie canât involve them in the funeral planning, and he canât even leave Christopher with them because heâs scared that theyâre gonna take the opportunity to grab him and run, and someone needs to make sure that Shannonâs memory is honored, but she didnât have any family except him and Christopher, and Chris is seven, so Eddie has to be the one to make this funeral beautiful, something sheâd deserve, but he doesnât knowâ thereâs so muchâ
âEddie,â someone says next to him, snapping him out of his spiral. âCome on, breathe with me.â
Eddie stares at Buckâs chest as it rises and falls with exaggerated breaths, trying to match him. When did Buck get here? He doesnât remember letting him in, doesnât really remember what he was doing before he started hyperventilating on his couch.
âChris,â he gasps when he realizes that also means heâs not sure where his kid is. And of course heâs the kind of father who would do that only days after his kid lost his mom, maybe his parents areâ
âIs with Hen and Karen,â Buck says firmly, grabbing his forearm. âHeâs gonna spend the day with them and Denny, probably getting spoiled rotten. I borrowed Pepaâs key when we went over there so they could pick him up, she told me you might not open â sorry for barging in here, but Iâm glad I did. I know youâ I wanted toâ Bobby and Athena are running interference with your parents. And Iâm here to help you with all that.â He gestures towards the couch table thatâs covered in forms, leaflets from funeral homes, and cards from grief counselors. âAfter Abbyâs momâ I helped plan her funeral. So Iâve got some experience.â
Eddie just stares at him, biting the inside of his cheek hard to stop himself from crying. He trusts Buck, but he still doesnât want to cry in front of him, doesnât want to cry in front of anyone. But he does think that maybe he should give Buck his own copy of a key, so he wonât have to borrow Pepaâs next time.
Buck squeezes his forearm and gives him a small, sad smile. âWeâre all here for you, Eddie. I got your back, remember?â
Eddie blinks against the tears in his eyes and swallows around the lump in his throat thatâs keeping him from saying anything.
Instead, he twists his arm from Buckâs grip and grabs his hand instead, squeezing it in a silent thank you.
Buck squeezes back and keeps holding on.
III.
Buck gets to go home earlier than anyone expected, but Eddie has been to his new apartment, so he isnât surprised when Buck texts him a picture of his couch with a sad face. Itâs not ideal, but at least he has a bathroom downstairs and a girlfriend who can help if he struggles with anything.
Until he doesnât have that girlfriend anymore.
Eddie doesnât find out until after his shield ceremony, days after, actually, once his parents have finally gone home to Texas.
Buck says heâs fine, obviously, but Eddie starts going over every day he doesnât have a shift anyway, because he knows Buck and can see how much heâs struggling with the whole situation, with the uncertainty of when and how he can return to work.
He brings Christopher most of the time. Theyâre not having the best summer either, Eddie still worries that heâs not doing enough to help Christopher deal with his grief, when he can barely keep his own head above the water of grief, guilt and fear.
Carla is doing what she can, watching Christopher whenever Eddieâs working, she found him a grief counselor and is even looking into more permanent therapists.
None of it changes the fact that theyâre grieving.Â
But when Christopher gets to hang out with Buck, he lights up every time, and so does Buck, which makes this a two birds with one stone kind of situation. Hanging out with Buck helps them both, too, makes their grief not the first thing on their minds for a little while.
Buck canât move much, so they play board games and try to find one they all enjoy equally â itâs not easy, since Eddie likes luck-based games (he plays poker with his abuela and tĂa whenever he can), Buck prefers trivia and games relying on knowledge, while Christopher likes strategic games most.
But everyone gets to pick sometimes, and when they donât want to play board games, they switch to video games instead.
Eddie knew that Buck and Chris get along well, they have ever since the first time they met, when Buck drove Eddie to Chrisâ school after the earthquake during Eddieâs second week at the 118. But with how much time the three of them are spending together now, he can see them growing closer every day â and he loves it.
Buck is his best friend, and he genuinely cares about Christopher in a way that feels completely independent from Eddie.
One evening, while theyâre playing a few rounds of Christopherâs current favorite video game after dinner, the kid falls asleep between them on the couch.
Buck smiles down at him and lowers the volume of the TV, which means he loses even more clearly to Eddie, but he had the win in the bag anyway, heâs sure.
Buck rolls his eyes at him when Eddie celebrates his victory with big, silent gestures, but heâs smiling, too.
Eddie grins at him, resting his arm on the back of the couch behind Chris, and Buck twists a little to face him. His leg, resting outstretched on the couch table in front of them, moves with him, and Eddie slides Christopherâs glass of water out of the way in a practiced move.
âI know youâre here to keep an eye on me,â Buck says, âand I should probably be annoyed. Iâ I was kind of annoyed, at first. But itâs hard to stay annoyed when heâs here, right?â He nods down at Christopher. âAnd I guess youâre okay, too.â
âWow, thanks,â Eddie says, but he knows his glare isnât convincing. âTo be clear, weâre all keeping an eye on each other.â
âYeah, yeah.â Buck reaches for Eddieâs hand, still on the backrest between them, and squeezes it â just for a moment, like heâs trying to get Eddieâs attention, like he doesnât already have it anyway. âThanks.â
IV.
Everything sucks.
Itâs the uncertainty that gets to Eddie most, the not knowing how to help, how to stay safe, how to keep his loved ones safe. How long this is gonna last.
Every day, they have to see people die from a virus they know nothing about, and canât do anything against.
And afterwards, they canât even go home.
Christopher is part of a high risk group, and Eddie risks exposure at work every day, so obviously, he canât endanger him by living with him. Chimney feels the same way about Maddie, and Hen also wants to keep her family safe, which is how the three of them ended up at Buckâs apartment, where theyâve been camped out for the past three weeks.
Itâs generous of Buck to let them all stay with him, but the loft is not made for four people to live there, and theyâre all feeling it.
Eddie loves his friends, but spending every minute of every day with them is starting to wear on him. They all try to give each other space, using the balcony as an extra room or going for runs outside, but thereâs only so much they can do.Â
He hates being separated from Chris, it makes him feel like heâs breaking his promise to never leave him behind again. Christopher says he understands, but Eddie worries anyway. He trusts Pepa, whoâs working fully remote and offered to stay with Chris, and they talk every day, but itâs not the same as being there.
Whenever he talks to Chris on the phone, he feels better in the moment, but worse the second they hang up. While theyâre talking, he can almost pretend that things are normal, but it all comes crashing down afterwards.
He hasnât hugged his son in weeks, and he has no idea when heâs even gonna see him in person again.
Buck joins their calls most of the time, at least for a few minutes, and he sits next to Eddie on the bed now, shoulders slumped where theyâre touching Eddieâs. In a world where he has to keep his distance from almost everyone, except the patients heâs treating and the people heâs living with, touching and being touched by Buck is a real comfort.
âThis wonât be forever, Eddie,â he says, almost desperately.Â
âBut for how long?â Eddie asks, and it comes out sounding a little wobbly.
Heâs not embarrassed by it anymore â Buckâs seen him in all kinds of situations, and theyâre currently sharing a bed, so heâs seen him cry anyway.
âIâI wish I knew,â Buck says. âI wish I couldâ fix this.â
Eddie wipes at his eye and laughs a little. âThe whole pandemic?â
âIf I could, yeah.â Buck shrugs.
Eddie presses even closer to him for a moment, a gentle pressure of their shoulders, arms and thighs against each other. âI wish you could, too. But even if you canât â Iâm glad youâre here.â
âOf course.â Buck smiles at him and places his hand on Eddieâs thigh, palm up.
Eddie smiles back and grabs his hand, squeezing tightly.
âOkay,â he says, taking a deep breath. âI think itâs our turn to make dinner tonight â you ready?â
âReady when you are,â Buck says, but he doesnât let go until Eddie does.
V.
After Chris has gone to sleep, after Eddie has finally stopped crying, after Buck has wrapped his knuckles and cleaned up the worst of the mess in Eddieâs bedroom â the shards, the pieces of drywall, the fallen furniture, he makes up the couch for Eddie to sleep on. Eddie wants to help him, to tell him that heâll just sleep in his room, but he canât seem to move from his seat at the dining table.
Everything feels like too much, his hands hurt and his head worse, and he canât stand the thought of Buck leaving. Heâs exhausted, but he knows he wonât sleep if Buck goes home now.
But he canât ask him to stay, not after Buck already dropped everything because Eddie couldnât keep it together. He probably had plans, and Eddie ruined those too.
He can already feel the hot burn of tears behind his eyes again and drops his forehead onto his arms, folded on the table in front of him.
Buckâs hand lands on his back, warm, then travels up to squeeze the back of his neck gently.
âYou ready to sleep?â he murmurs, and Eddie makes a noncommittal sound. âCome on, you must be exhausted.â
Eddie shrugs and Buckâs thumb brushes along his hairline.
âYou donât have to go in there, I can get you anything you need,â Buck says quietly. âAnd Iâll be right next to you in case you have a nightmare.â
âYouâre staying?â Eddie asks, lifting his head. Buckâs hand stays where it is.
âOf course, Eddie,â Buck says, like itâs that easy.
And maybe it is that easy, Eddie thinks when they settle in next to each other in the living room, Eddie on the couch and Buck on a makeshift bed next to it. Heâs pushed the couch table to the side to make room for it and it looks like heâs dragged Eddieâs mattress here, so at least Eddie doesnât need to worry about him sleeping on the floor.
Theyâve been by each otherâs side through so much shit, maybe itâs not such a surprise that Buck wants to be here now too. Heâs just not sure he deserves it.
âIâm sorry,â he says, staring up at the ceiling instead of looking at Buck. âYou had plansâ Iâm sure you didnât want toââ
âYou have nothing to apologize for,â Buck says firmly. âOf course Iâll come whenever Christopher calls. Oâor if you need me. Iâm here, okay?â
âI keep thinking about her,â Eddie mumbles, pressing the heels of his hands to his burning eyes. âMills. Last Augustâ I shouldâveâ if Iâd picked up the phone earlierââ
âThis isnât on you.â Thereâs rustling and then Buck is gripping Eddieâs forearms, trying to gently pull his hands away from his face. âI d-donât know what Mills was going through, but I know that you couldnât have known how bad it was. Itâs sad, and itâs unfair, but itâs not your fault. And I know youâre feeling all these things now, but Eddieâ Iâm so happy youâre still here. I need you toâ know that. Okay?â
Eddie finally lowers his arms, but instead of letting go fully, Buck just grabs his right hand and holds on. His eyes are wide and scared, and Eddie has scared too many people he loves tonight.
âOkay,â he says, even thoughâ well. What makes him special? Why should he be the only one to get out? Heâs not a better person than any of them, he doesnât have a right to happiness or whatever heâs been deluding himself into believing he could have.Â
But he knows that he canât tell Buck that now (or ever), knows that itâs a dark road to go down.
Maybe for tonight, with Buck by his side, he can keep the thoughts at bay for a little bit longer. After thatâ he has no idea. But Buck is still holding his hand, and Eddie may not deserve him, but he trusts him.
He thinks it may just give him enough hope to get through this night.
+ I
âThis was nice,â Buck says, holding the door for Eddie as they leave the restaurant. âYou, uh, you really didnât have to pay, though.â
âI wanted to,â Eddie says with a smile, glancing right towards their cars and then left to where the beach is only a short walk away, and finally back to Buckâs face, finding him already looking back. âHow do you feel about taking a walk?â
Buck grins, turning left. âLetâs go.â
Theyâre not on a date, or at least they havenât called it that, but Eddie has been thinking that it feels like one all night. Technically, theyâre two friends trying out a new restaurant together. They drove here separately, no one pulled anyoneâs chair out, they talked the same way they always do.
But Eddie spent half an hour picking something to wear tonight, Buck is wearing a shirt that looks new and gorgeous and fit for a date, and every time their eyes caught across the table, Eddie thought that maybe, Buck wouldnât pull away if he reached out and took his hand.
Itâs not the first time Eddie has thought that. Ever since Buck and Tommy broke up, itâs felt like maybe theyâre heading towards something, familiar touches lingering and turning into something new, gazes catching and then holding instead of looking away.
Buck was upset for a little while afterwards, but he admitted to Eddie that it was more about another failed relationship â and his first one with a man, after he thought heâd finally figured out what was missing, than about Tommy as a person.
He went on a couple of dates, with men and women, but nothing ever stuck.
Eddie was going through his own stuff at the time â he eventually came out to Buck a week before Chris finally came home, and Buck hasnât been on a date since.
Sometimes, Eddie wonders (hopes), if the two things are related.
Still, neither of them has called tonight a date â yet.
Eddie glances at Buckâs profile while theyâre walking, and wonders what heâs waiting for.
Yes, itâs scary because Buck is the most important person in his life right after Christopher, but itâs also not, because this is Buck. Who has been by Eddieâs side through the worst, most painful, most humiliating times of his life, and is still here. Buck, who Eddie trusts with his life, and his son, and his heart.
Buck smiles at him and Eddie smiles back, heartbeat picking up. Heâs doing this, heâs gonna tell Buck how he feels. Any minute now, heâs gonna be brave enough.
âHey,â Buck says, âitâs just me.â
âI know,â Eddie says, and his heart thumps against his ribs. He lets his fingers brush against Buckâs on their next swing and watches as Buck bites his lip, smiling down at the ground. Hushed, like a confession, he adds, âAre you nervous, too?â
Buck looks back up at him then, eyes glittering in the dark. âY-yeah. I am.â
Theyâve reached the edge of the beach by now and bend down to take off their shoes without having to talk about it.
When they start walking again, theyâre even closer than before, the backs of their hands, their elbows and shoulders all brushing with every step.
Eddie keeps stealing glances at Buck, and almost every time, Buck is already looking back.
There arenât many people at the beach at this time of day, so they donât come close to anyone else, and all they hear is the sand beneath their feet and the waves crashing a few feet away. The moon is big enough to be reflected on the sea, a beautiful sight, but Eddie still canât look away from Buck for long.
âSo, this is, uh, kind of romantic,â Buck blurts out after a few quiet minutes. âRight? IâIâm not misreading that?â
âNo,â Eddie says. âI meanâ youâre not misreading it.â
âBut youâre nervous.â
When their knuckles brush again, Eddie stretches out his fingers and catches Buckâs, holding on. Buckâs own fingers tighten immediately, and it gives Eddie the last bit of courage he needs.
âWell, yeah. Buckââ He stops walking, and Buck follows, turning so heâs facing Eddie. Heâs close enough that Eddie can see his expression despite the dark, and he looks terrified, hopeful, nervous and excited at the same time, all of which Eddie feels, too. Eddie takes a deep breath. âIâm nervous becauseâ nothingâŚno oneâs ever been this important.â
A smile spreads out across Buckâs face, slowly deepening the crinkles around his eyes. âSo this was a date?â
âDid it feel like one to you, too?â
Buckâs smile widens. âYeah, iâit did. And IâmâIâm nervous too, of course. Eddie, if we do this, thereâs no going back for me. I canâtâ lose you. You and Christopher, youâre too important.â
He pulls on Eddieâs hand a little, and Eddie takes another step closer, drops his shoes in the sand and places his free hand on Buckâs shoulder, thumb resting against his collarbone.
âItâs the same for me,â he says quietly. He shivers when Buck grabs his waist, the warmth of his hand seeping through Eddieâs shirt. âIâ We donât know whatâs gonna happen. But, Buckâ I love you. I love you so much, I have forâŚway longer than I was aware of it, and I just donât see that going away. And I donât think itâs fair to us to deny ourselves when I really think we could make each otherâ so happy. I know I can make you happy, and I want to prove it to you every day of my life, Buck.â
Buck is just staring at him with a dazed expression, his lips slightly parted, and Eddie suddenly canât stand not kissing him for a second longer.
He slides his hand from Buckâs shoulder to the back of his neck, watches Buckâs eyes flutter shut and feels his fingers tighten on his waist, and then heâs finally, finally closing the distance between them.
Buck makes a soft sound against his mouth, like heâs still somehow surprised this is happening, but he gets on board very quickly, and Eddie stops thinking entirely.
When they pull back breathlessly, Eddieâs hair is a mess â he can feel the loose strands on his forehead â his lips are still tingling, and Buckâs got both arms wrapped around him tightly.
âIn case that wasnât clear,â Buck gasps, and lifts a hand to cup Eddieâs cheek. His thumb brushes over Eddieâs chin and caresses his lower lip, and Eddie presses a kiss to the pad of it. âI love you, too.â
âFine, letâs have it your way then,â Eddie slammed his phone down on the kitchen table. âYou set me up a dating profile then â Hinge, Grindr, whatever you fucking want, Buck. Set me up a dating profile, and you pick which random man I need to sleep with to make it so you feel okay about wanting me.âÂ
in which evan buckley gets dumped, gets drunk with his best friend, realises he's in love with said best friend, and lets his abandonment issues get the best of him. because your first is never your last, right? so buck can't be eddie's first: he needs to be his last.
ao3 link
Buck was driving himself to Eddieâs before he could really even think about it, the autopilot of his brain engaging and getting him behind the wheel, and on the road to his best friendâs house without needing much thought at all. Eddie was who he needed, in that moment â not Maddie, and her sage advice, not Hen, whoâd be clever, and logical about it all. No, he needed Eddie. Eddie, who inexplicably opened the front door in his underwear and a pink shirt. Eddie, who let them sit in silence, a playlist churning out eighties rock for a full twenty-three minutes (Buck checked) before Eddie said anything at all.Â
âSo,â Eddie set his empty drink down, gesturing to Buck for a second. Buck twisted the cap off before he handed it over, adding to the pile on the coffee table. âWhat happened? You said that you and Tommy were going to the movies tonight.âÂ
Buck groaned, the sound loud in the quiet of Eddieâs house. âI was supposed to be,â he slumped back onto the couch. âBut then he dumped me.âÂ
Eddie raised an eyebrow. âHe dumped you?â
âHe dumped me,â Buck confirmed. âBecause I am a deeply unlovable individual who is going to die alone.â
Eddie rolled his eyes. âI think you might be being dramatic there.â
âIâm not!â Buck protested. âEddie, everyone I date dumps me â or leaves me. That apparently doesnât even change when Iâm dating a man. Itâs not â I thought it would be different, with Tommy.âÂ
âBecause heâs a man?â Eddieâs confusion wasnât judgemental â no, Eddie never judged him, Buck was sure of that much. It was sincere confusion, his best friend wanting to understand where Buck was coming from.
âYeah? No? I mean â maybe,â Buck huffed. He wasnât entirely sure how to articulate himself. âI guess â I guess I just thought that now I know who I am, that Iâm like â consciously aware Iâm bisexual â it might be different. That maybe it didnât work out before because there was this part of me that I didnât know, or understand, and that had affected my relationships because I wasnât bringing my like, whole self to the table. But if it didnât work with Tommy, then thatâs not why. Right? Then the problem is me.âÂ
Eddieâs expression softened. âI donât think the problem is you, Buck.â
âIt has to me! Iâm the only common denominator here.â
Buck wanted to cry. He wanted to lie down on Eddieâs couch and cry until he had nothing left â and it wasnât about Tommy, really, because Buck had liked Tommy, but the end of their relationship wasnât what was making him feel so devastated. It was the idea of Tommy, more than anything else â what Tommy represented. A happily ever after that Buck was falling short of all over again.Â
âWhat did Tommy say, exactly? Maybe â maybe youâre spiralling, and he gave you a good reason that youâre not seeing.âÂ
âHe â I asked him to move in with me.âÂ
âBuck.â
Eddie sounded long-suffering. Buck had earned that. He knew that much. âI know,â he knew it had been the wrong move. The words were barely out of his mouth, and Buck knew it had been the wrong move â but that was sort of his thing, to cling desperately to relationships that didnât work because he was so terrified of being alone. âI just â I felt comfortable with him, and the whole Abby thing was weird.â
âReally weird,â Eddie agreed, wincing.Â
âBut not the kind of weird I couldnât get past. Right? He came over tonight, and I told him â why be apart when we could be together. Then, he said he couldnât move in with me, because if he did, I would only break his heart,â Buck sighed. He wouldnât intend to. Thatâs what Tommy had said â but who ever planned to break someoneâs heart? No one was that cruel. Maybe they were â but Buck wasnât. Heâd never wanted to break anyoneâs heart, even if that had been the end result sometimes.Â
Eddie was quiet for a second. âDid he say why he thought youâd break his heart?â
Buckâs beer burned his throat as he took another gulp, the sour taste lingering. âHe said that he was my first, but he wasnât my last.âÂ
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if you love me right, then who knows?
pairing: buck/eddie | wc: 3.4k | rating: E
âFuck,â Eddie groans, hitting his head on the wood. âYou have no idea how beautiful you look like this.â
âTell me,â Buck says, setting up a rhythm.
Eddie hums.
âYour hard cock leaking like crazy because you like it so much, your chest, god, Buck, the way your tits bounceââ Eddie cuts himself off, and Buck can tell heâs afraid heâs said something wrong, but your tits replays like a broken record in his mind, and his hips stutter as he grinds down, pre-come shiny at his tip.
Eddieâs mouth drops in an oh.
âYou like that?â Eddie asks. Buck nods, not able to find the words. âYour tits are so big, baby. I could probably fuck them if I wanted to. Could probably come all over that pretty face, my cock between your tits.â Buck moans, picking up speed as he bounces on Eddieâs cock.
or: buck and eddie stumble upon a feminization kink, and eddie really likes his boyfriend's tits
âI justâŚâ Buck chews on his bottom lip, a deep sigh suddenly making him feel double his age. âI thought itâd be different this time, yâknow?â He wasnât planning on saying anything else, but well, itâs Maddie, and suddenly he finds himself spewing his feelings like a leaky faucet that he canât put a stop to. âIt felt so different with Tommy. He was older and heâd done this before and it was easy with him and heâŚhe was justâŚâ
âOh Buck.â Maddie sighs, placing her box of cookies down and rounding the table to scoop her brother up into her arms properly. âI know how much you liked him.â Her hand strokes up and down between his shoulder blades, just like it always did when they were kids. She pauses for a second, taking a quiet breath before she says, âItâll all be okay, you see. Your special person is still out there somewhere. The universeâŚitâs all going to work out for you, I promise.â
(or, in the wake of baking with jee, buck finally sees the wood for the trees with a little help from his big sister.)
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not as cool as i thought i was (stuck on the stupid stuff)
buck/eddie | 8.5k | teen | crack treated seriously | read on ao3
Buck debated saying something, thinking through how he could put it into words when it hit him like a ton of bricks. Tommy. Heâd said that someoneâs first queer relationship usually wasnât their last, and Buck couldnât do that. He could survive a rejection, but he couldnât survive knowing what it felt like to have Eddie and losing that. He couldnât work next to Eddie, knowing what his lips felt like or what he looked like disheveled in a bed they shared or wrapped around him when they were making breakfast. He wouldnât come back from that.
Heâd let Eddie get his first out of the way, and then heâd say something. Then, he could be the last if Eddie would have him.
Or Eddieâs comes out, but Buck took Tommyâs words to heart, and he wonât stop trying to set Eddie up so he can get his first out of the way. Eddie has plans of his own that Buck is really getting in the way of.