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Summary
Tommy’s not ashamed of it - he loves old romantic movies and what he loves the most about them is when the boy shows up to take his love interest for a ride in a nice car. So when his brother buys a classic Mustang and brings it to Tommy to work on it, who would blame him for seizing the opportunity? Not Buck, that’s for certain.
Series
- Part 1 of Classic Mustang Date
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Summary
Tommy didn't hear from Howie often, but when he did he could expect demands of all sorts. What he didn't expect, after a lifetime of frogs, was to meet an awkward prince.
Series
- Part 4 of 9-1-1
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Summary
Jamie and Roy go for a beer and confront some truths they've been avoiding.
(An alternative version of that scene from the finale. Because we know Roy and Jamie and how they've grown, and we know the ending they deserved.)
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Summary
“Buck's here,” he says. Hen and Chim raise their eyebrows in perfect coordination. “Have to make sure he doesn't get himself into trouble.”
“He's been getting himself into trouble since 1992,” Chimney says, pulling out his phone, probably to make fun of Eddie in his and Maddie's text thread. “And I'm pretty sure he's right at home in a bar.”
The unfortunate thing is, Eddie really can't argue with that. It's easy to see Buck, somehow, even through the throngs of people crowding around tables and flagging down the lone bartender for drinks: one elbow on the bartop, head tilted, leaning down with half-lidded eyes as he says something to the short blonde he's been talking to.
in which eddie, very literally, has a brush with buck 1.0.
Series
- Part 17 of in the morning our arms ache (prompt fills)
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Summary
Buck frowns. “What’s wrong?”
Eddie shifts his weight from one foot to the other, then winces.
“Eddie. Are you okay, are you hurt—” Buck steps closer, hands raised to assess Eddie for injury, but Eddie jerks back. Buck stops. “Eddie?”
“I did something stupid.” Eddie’s voice sounds rough, like it does first thing in the morning. His cheeks are somehow even more flushed than they were when he first stepped out. Buck can feel the discomfort radiating from him and he just—wants to make it better.
Buck tries for levity. “Like, tried-to-cook-and-almost-burned-the-kitchen-down stupid or someone-cut-me-off-on-the-freeway-and-now-I-need-help-burying-a-body stupid?”
Eddie huffs. “More tried-getting-off-for-the-first-time-in-months-and-got-a-vibrator-stuck-up-my-ass stupid.”
Buck takes a second while his brain goes completely blank.