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#really helped the whole clinically sad thing tbh happy tears are the best
sardonicsergeant · 6 months
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My brother surprised me with dethklok tickets and I literally cried I was so happy
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kdramachitchat · 3 years
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Hometown Cha Cha Cha Ep 7 - The love triangle (and the bromance too) officially starts and Dusik’s past is slowly unraveling. Hyejin’s role in Dusik’s heart becomes more prominent.
After Dusik’s almost accident, Sunghyun was introduced to the neighbors. Sunghyun introduced himself and informed them that he’s filming a new food variety show that’ll feature Gonjin. Dusik asked how they knew each other and Hyejin said that they both went to college. Hyejin also asked how they each other, Dusik said that they met on the street and that them knowing each other is based on lies. Haha.
He seem to be popular among the older neighbors and finally went to Dusik and Hyejin’s spot at the table, Hyejin tells him that he was also popular back then in college. They started talking about their friendship and said its been 10 years since they last seen each other. Dusik started to feel left out and interrupted the reunion asking for him to explain certain things. Things finally settled due to misunderstanding and they both introduced themselves. I see a bromance coming along, this would be a problem. Hyejin and Sunghyun started talking what they’ve been up to especially the dental clinic she opened up, Dusik inserts himself in the convo and tells Sunghyun that he found and renovated that place himself. He’s becoming a third-wheeler at this point poor Dusik. Sunghyun asked if that’s how the 2 met and Hyejin didn’t really tell him the truth. A neighbor was being nosy teasing both Hyejin and Sunghyun. Hyejin doesnt like to be teased especially if it’s far from the truth so she excused herself for a early night, Dusik tells her that it never was a problem and wants him to shut up.
Sunghyun wants to accompany her going home, while Dusik likely jealous decided to step out of the restaurant and accompanied Hyejin home. Sunghyun and Dusik want to hang out together then they all went to Dusik’s house instead. Hyejin tells Dusik not to discuss anything that happened that night.
Sunghyun decided to ask Dusik to be his tour guide in town. They drink, do bets and games with referencing on actor Kim Seonho’s 2D1N variety program (I honestly didnt get the reference as i dont watch his variety show). It was very chaotic and all of them went to sleep after.
The next day, Dusik is officially the guide for Sunghyun’s production team for sightseeing Gongjin and their next stop is Gam-ri’s house. Songhyun intends on making the house the main shooting location so he brings all the team to her house. Sunghyun is trying to convince Gamri and asked for her permission to borrow her house for 7 days. He falls for the authenticity and the warmth of the house. But sadly, Gamri doesnt allow him to and tells him that it won’t work, despite Sunghyun being so persistent. That’s probably why his shows are so successful because he gets what he wants. Him allowing Gamri to have the time to think and leave her alone, eventually will come back. He also cannot think and work well with a empty stomach. We see his work ethic here. Looks like he eats too when he gets stressed.  
Dusik brings Sunghyun and his team to Ms. Yeo’s restaurant. They try a fish dish which brings both Dusik and Sunghyun to utter bliss, describing the flavors they tasted like a food critic. They both agree on the flavors and their bromance especially over food is in full force. The fish they ate is a wild fish-fresh from the sea that cost 100,000 won in Seoul. Ok i admit this scene was really funny, they were so dramatic over describing the fish like it’s heaven to them. After their meal they meet Hyejin and left right after. Sunghyun and Hyejin continues to talk before leaving, Hyejin mentions Dusik’s fees and he offers Sunghyun to discuss about it.
Dusik notices she sounds different while talking with Sunghyun and later mimicking her way of speaking. After his tummy is happily fed, Sunghyun suggests the whole team go shopping to the market where Dusik struggles to keep up with Sunghyun’s energy and childlike behavior when it comes to shopping. Ok i giggled at this. Sunghyun is like a ball of energy and Dusik acts like an old man.
This is just an extra stop before they all go back to Gamri’s house as presents. Sunghyun will bribe her with these in order to win her heart. So he got a plan. Gamri is not falling for his tricks, smart woman but Sunghyun kept insisting that he’s doing this as a repayment for her kindness to her. He keeps coming back and continues to assist Gamri like helping her lift heavy things, cleaning, continues giving her gifts and even fixing her broken lamp. Looks like Gamri is starting to warm up to him. After his constant visits he stops, Gamri is starting to look for him wondering where he is which ultimately gives some time for her to think before she could make a decision.
Later on, Gamri calls her granddaughter who resides in America for her studies. She happily talks to her and asks her to come to Gongjin for a visit where she will cook all the dishes she likes to eat. Sad to say, her  granddaughter won’t be coming home this holiday since she will be spending the holiday in California with her friends. I don’t like how her granddaughter prefers her friends over family shows her unselfishness, compared to Gamri who is so kind to others. Gamri is shown to be lonely and i thank Dusik for being so kind to her like a grandson.
Meanwhile, Sunghyun suddenly appears at the gate of Gamri’s house bringing a delicious cake. It’s been 5 days since his last visit which makes Gamri sulk. Gamri then offers him to stay and have dinner but he says that he plans on having dinner with his friend who is June the boyband member that Juri likes.
Gamri offers to cook them a delicious dinner in return for the cakes and they all enjoy dinner together. June thanks Gamri and tells that he misses having homecooked meals. Sunghyun added that as a kpop idol member he never stopped working since he was young. A disadvantage being a idol. Gamri shows her warmth by giving a piece of meat to his rice–a small gesture of affection. Dusik gets jealous Hahaha and Gamri tells him he’s grown up. I cracked up. Juri is having the time of her life hanging out with her favorite kpop idol.
After the meal, Sunghyun continues to offer his help to Gamri like to wash the dishes. Hyejin volunteers but Sunghyun tells her not to because of her back problem due to her car accident back in the day. Dusik didnt know about her back problem. This is new information.
Gamri is completely happy at this point and she expresses her happiness. It’s been a while she had a big meal at her house. It’s the liveliest moment she had at her house. This really warmed my heart. Gamri should have more happy moments. Dusik visits Gamri and Gamri tells him that Sunghyun can film at her house. She wants to feel less lonely and Dusik tells her he’s happy as long as she is. They continue to drink their milk together.
The next day, Hyejjin wakes up with Sunghyun’s surprising delivery of food like her favorites. They talked to each other over the phone and Sunghyun is curious and wondered what has she been up to over the 10 years.
Sunghyun is happy to see her living comfortably and happy. He then promises to treat her a proper meal when he’s not that busy and Hyejin agrees. Looks like Dusik will be out of the picture for a while when Sunghyun is around.
Later in the day, Dusik and Sunghyun stops by Gamri’s house. Sunghyun looks around the house and Dusik tells him that he’s not allowed to change anything. He also tells Sunghyun that he should ask Gamri anything first if he intends to make the slightest change on her house. Any without permission he has to return the house to her and even the damages that may happen are discussed to be added in the contract, as well as Gamri’s pay. Sunghyun ask if Dusik knows baseball. Sunghyun says that good pitchers dont throw a ball when they can, they have their energy and control with their power. The player throws the ball at full speed during a crucial moment. Is that a hint on what’s yet to come? He said that he’s like that and doesn’t sweat or stress over small things. Sunghyun finally brings up to Dusik if Hyejin is seeing anyone. Dusik has that change of expression on his face, you can see him close to tears. Dusik was silent for a moment, then responded that she’s not seeing anyone. Sunghyun said that it’s a relief. Dusik looks to him with mixed and pained expressions. I sorta felt bad for him at that moment. Like shit someone’s in the way now. What to do?
During the epilogue, we see Dusik being down and Hyejin drops by with a happy mood. They’re completely polar in terms of mood. Hyejin continues to joke around without understanding the environment’s mood. Hyejin tries to carry him back to his house. Dusik continues to look so broken and with a pained tone he tells her to not go and leave him behind.
Dusik better be quick as someone else who’s fast as a baseball player ready to swing for his pitch. If he doesn’t make the move, Sunghyun will.
Thoughts
I like how this drama focused on Gamri and Sunghyun. We get to know them more with this episode. Also tbh with everyone. I do not like Seonho’s acting. I think Seonho when he's plain and the typical conversational scenes he's very weak but can improve. But i would like to point out when he does crying scenes that’s what he does best. He emoted Dusik’s heartache and pain very well at the epilogue, at that moment you would feel bad for him.
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iphoenixrising · 4 years
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Check, Please WIP: Part 1-4
AHL!Bitty
I’m going to hell, but… Parse, Bitty, and Jack or PB&J as I’ve seen it, have some wonderful stories in the fandom, and tbh I’ve come to look at Kent Parsons very differently thanks to a few. You can probably check them out on my Ao3 bookmarks and such. 
Notes: 
I know shit all about hockey but damn if I don’t love Check, Please! Not everything is accurate and some details are mine. Like, I’m just going to pretend the Bruins aren’t in Providence, and the Pawtucket Rebels are the AHL team. 
But then, what if Jack and Bits didn’t get that kiss at the end of Jack’s graduation? What if they just stayed the best of friends, pining away at one another until Kent Parson comes back into Jack’s life. Now it’s not just Jack pining, it’s Kent too :D
And, well, after winning the Championship his senior year, bringing that back to Samwell, Eric Bittle might just think he hasn’t had enough Hockey after all.
Really, it’s time to put up or shut up.
** Pro
Of all the things on Kent Parson’s Wish List (winning the Stanley Cup, being on a team he loves, playing hockey for the rest of his life, having a pet and Kit meets all those criteria for so much cute and cuddly), getting his friendship back on track with Jack Zimmermann hadn’t moved down from number 1, ever. 
Things changed after that disaster at his college frat house, then later in Zimm’s first season with the Falconers, Kent wasn’t sure it could even be a wish. 
When it came to hockey, things were always too easy. They never had to talk about it, about what they were doing on the ice. All of that just came like breathing. Parse and Zimms, Zimms and Parse. The whole Zimmermann-Parson No-Look One-Timer was never something they discussed, it was something that just happened. 
On the ice, they were unbeatable, just like in Juniors.
Off the ice...was a different story. 
(Sometimes he dreams about it, finding Jack passed out on the bathroom floor of the hotel, foaming at the mouth, panic and adrenaline hitting Kent hard when he’s pretty sure his best friend, the man he almost-kind of-sometimes loves, is going to die on this floor.)
Jack’s problem with pills started early, around the time he and Kent got serious enough to play for scouts that started coming around with the promise of watching the son of Bad Bob. 
(He was always partially to blame for Jack’s downfall. Kent had been the closest to Jack back then, had seen the signs, had tried to pull him back whenever he could, had been the one to ease Zimms down before every game, to be the one sitting in a corner with the bigger Canadian, running his hands over Jack’s shoulders and holding his hands, checking his breathing, helping him work through the anxiety.)
But, but!
That’s all old history, something Jack probably never wants to revisit ever again (because he cut you out of his life so well–), even when he makes it to the Falconers. 
(After that disaster at his school, well, no wonder.)
And Kent just has to deal with that, has to accept it finally, and just move on. 
(He could have been an Ace, just that fast, playing with Kent’s team of awesome guys. And fuck did it hurt when Jack turned him down flat...)
Until this little shit came along.
** 1
Eric Bittle realizes he’s severely messed up when he doesn’t kiss Jack Zimmermann at graduation. 
For two years, they’ve played hard hockey for Samwell, have gotten close, becoming best friends. They’ve held checking clinics, hugged tightly in cellys, watched boring as hell history documentaries on that god-awful green couch, and pulled each other back from the brink of insanity during midterms and finals. They’ve spent time in the kitchen with Bitty cooking and Jack working at the table. They’ve spent time outside in the quad, bullshittin’ like the oldest friends, chirpin’ back n’ forth like they’re two peas in a pod. 
Jack somehow started being his best friend without even trying. 
The last game showed him how close they’d become when he’s going through the empty rink, making it to the loading dock, just a flash of jersey leading him to Jack hunched over, tears in his eyes. 
The utter agony right there had gone through Bitty like lightning, driving him forward to hop up on the pallets Jack was sitting on, and wrap both arms around those wide shoulders, hold on to ‘im as tight as he can. 
“It ain’t your fault, Jack. You did so good with us. I’m so proud of you, honey, you have no idea. You worked so hard, so hard, Jack.”
“Bits,” is soft and sad, Jack choking a little, but those big arms come around him, crush him against Jack’s chest and the pads he��s still wearing. 
“I know, I know. Sometimes it just isn’t in the cards, no matter how hard we fight. You get that, don’t you? Sometimes it just is what it is.”
“I can’t–” accept that is what Jack wants to say. 
“I know it’s hard, but sometimes all the trainin’ and plannin’ and best of intentions just aren’t enough to tip the scales in your favor.”
And Jack seems to get something there, tightens his arms a little more, and holds on. 
It’s a little while later when Jack’s stopped shaking like a leaf, “I wanted to bring home a Championship. Wanted to make my mark on Samwell.”
“Of course you did–”
“Thought after all this time, everything I owe Samwell and the team, bringing me here, giving me this second chance–”
“Oh Jack,” at this juncture, Bittle’s head is under Jack’s chin. 
“I finally felt like I’d stopped fucking up,” is rough and dark in the quiet of the rink. “I thought coming to Samwell was a...a punishment. I dealt with it because I thought my life was going to start after, when I finished up my degree and got back into the Draft. But that’s...that’s not how it happened. My life started the minute I met you and the team and I remembered why the hell I love hockey so damn much in the first place.”
And if maybe a few slow, shameful tears escaped Bitty, well, no one would ever know.
But they got even closer as Jack’s graduation loomed, and Eric Bittle stayed in his own personal hell of loving Jack so much it ached, but helpless to stay away to protect himself. 
Instead, when Jack pauses at his door, Bits knows what he needs and finds space to lounge on Jack’s bed, scrolling through Twitter while Jack talks about the negotiations with NHL teams or works on his last assignments. 
Watching Jack pack his things, preparing for the Falconer’s training camp, getting ready for the next stage of his life, all of it makes Bits so dang proud and so sad at the same time.
But, well, nothin’ lasts forever, now does it.
When Jack ran all the way back to the Haus just to see him, just to pull him in hard for a desperate last hold, it was all Bits could do to stop from sobbing his heart out.
“–and you’re coming to Providence this summer to stay with me for a while, and-and I’ll be down when I can. You’re going to Skype me all the time. Bits, promise me. All the time.”
“Okay, Jack. Okay.”
Something soft in French that he has no idea what it could possibly mean, but he absolutely imagines Jack pressing a kiss in his hair. 
“I’m sorry, Bits, but I have to go. I...I’ll text you, okay?”
“Okay,” is more watery than he’d like, but he can look up in Jack’s blue, blue eyes and at least feel warm that he’s had this man for as long as he has. When Jack’s hands slide out of his, he somehow doesn’t feel like he’s losing anything at all. 
** 2
And just like that, Jack takes a step in his life he never could have predicted. Like an hour away instead of across the hall is enough to keep holding on, enough that Jack comes to Madison over the summer, enough that he asks Bitty to show him how to use FaceTime and SnapChat. 
It’s enough for Jack to pick him up off his feet every time they meet up and bury his face in Bitty’s hair. It’s enough for Jack to Skype almost nightly while he’s tuckered out in his bed, talking about the joys and pitfalls of being a professional athlete. 
It’s enough that he gets to meet the Falconers long before preseason starts, and the amount of pies he brings is literally obscene.
(It all works out just fine in the end because he goes home with the empty pans. Not a single slice left.)
It’s enough when Jack talks more about life than hockey sometimes, and Bitty is utterly helpless to stop any of it. And it’s funny, he thinks, how he was sure Jack would just flitter out of his life after a while. That they would be reduced to a Skype call once a week maybe when they find the time, then once a month, then not at all, moving into texting once and a while until Jack would be nothing more than one of his best memories of Samwell. 
It’s funny how he thought Jack moving into the NHL, moving to Providence, moving out of the Haus, moving on with his life, would mean also moving on from Eric Bittle.
And my, how wrong he was about all that.
Watching Jack play with the Falconers from the stands with the Stanley Cup on the line is not really where he’d thought he’d be once Jack had graduated. 
But, if anything else, they’ve gotten even closer than before. 
And when the buzzer finally sounds and the Falconers win it, he’s among the crowd running out on the ice for the biggest celly of the year. 
Jack spots him immediately, grabs him up with a victorious roar, and skates around people holding Bitty like a favorite toy until Tater scoops him up from Jack yelling about “Nook pies!”
Marty skates by him, ruffling his hair with something twinkling in his eye. Thirdy hauls him up, too, though Bitty has no idea why all these hockey players are just throwing him around when they’ve just won the Stanley Cup, but he still thinks it’s awful nice of them to include him in their celebration.
He doesn’t go back to Georgia for the summer after all or the next one before he starts his senior year, but goes between staying in Jack’s guest room and the Haus instead. His Mama’s not happy about it at all, but he’s a grown man, so that’s all she can say about that.
So Bitty passes the summer of his Senior year training with Jack or at Faber when the ice is up for grabs, works on some chapters for his someday cookbook, and continues his vlog so everyone can see how superior filo is to choux in the right circumstances.
With the season over after winning the Cup, Jack is over at the Haus more than ever if Bitty’s not in Providence already staying in his guest room. 
It should be strange to answer the door at the Haus on Saturday morning during the summer and see Jack there in his trainers, sweats, and t-shirt, wanting to hang out for the day after he’d put in a few hours at the Falc’s stadium already. 
(“C’mon, Bits. Can’t slack during the summer. You’re the captain. Set an example.”
“Jack, it’s summer. Leave me alone until at least nine am for goodness sake!”
“Not going to happen, bud.”)
It should be strange riding the train or in the passenger seat of Jack’s SUV on their way to Providence while he fiddles with the music and Jack doesn’t complain about the selection. 
It should be strange to wake up on Jack’s couch, laying on a broad shoulder with a heavy arm flopped around Bitty’s waist and logs being sawed in his ear.
It should be strange to know Jack’s kitchen better than the back of his hand, and to be giddy every time there’s a new utensil bought with him in mind.
(“Jack, why in the world would you need a dough scraper of all things?” “Not for me, Bits.”
“O-Oh!”
“Yeah. Thank Tater. He went with me this time. He held up that and said, ‘oh does B have one of these? It looks important.’ I didn’t know so I bought it in case.”)
It should be strange to see Jack’s Skype requests almost every night before bed, or have his former captain sprawled out in Bitty’s full sized bed once Lardo, Ransom, and Holster are already moved out and the new Waffles are well into the first semester of his senior year.
(“Good Lord, Jack, scoot over!”
“Mm.” Jack scootches maybe a foot more so Bitty can climb in beside him, already yawning. “Comfy, bud?”
“Gettin’ there,” and he absolutely ignores how much easier he falls asleep when Jack throws a heavy arm over him.)
It should be strange for Jack to whip him on up in a big hug when he admits the boys voted him as the Captain, and Jack breathes out, “damn right,” too close to his ear.
(“I don’t know if I can do this, Jack.”
“Too bad, Bits. Looks like you’re already doing it.”)
It should be strange for Jack to chirp him about his thesis, about his struggle with Whiskey, about why this darn strudel just won’t turn out right.
(“Jaques Laurant Zimmermann, do not make me ground you from pie.”
“Haha. I know you wouldn’t do that, bud.”
“Oh? Don’t be so sure, Mister.”)
It should be strange to get an earful when his new video comes out and Jack had no idea the jam war was that serious while Bitty has been supplying the Falconers for nearly a year. 
(“Are you kidding? Aunt Judy is really that upset?”
“You have no idea, honey. It’s almost World War III down there.”
“Good thing you’re stuck at Samwell.”
“Good thing is right! I don’t want any part of that mess.”)
But somehow it never is. Strange, that is, to have Jack so much. Even though nothing could happen between them (“Never fall for a straight boy.”), Bitty still can’t let go of Jack, can’t deny him, can’t tell him no, can’t be the one that fails to respond when Jack reaches out for him. 
Even when Kent Parson shows up at a Falcs game and cheers himself hoarse, screams for Jack right there on live TV.
And while trying to get through his dang senior year, trying to get his team to the Eastern Conference, he watches how Jack and Kent start to move back in one another’s orbit.
...which is probably why he doesn’t tell Jack anything about the scouts from the AHL coming to see him after the game with Princeton.
** 3
The Pawtucket Rebels manager, Michael McLean, is the one that meets Bitty with a Standard Player Contract the morning he gets back from Jack’s place when they’re going to be starting in the Frozen Four if they win the next two games.
The weekend away was nice, but he hadn’t been expecting Jack’s intention to introduce him to Kent Parson of the Las Vegas Aces. 
“We’ve already met,” Bitty had filled in, still shaking Kent’s hand with a distant smile on his face, “at the Haus party when he swung on by.”
“Not my best moment,” the Captain admits sheepishly, eyes not meeting Bitty’s, and dang it if the boy ain’t at least a little bit cute. 
“I suppose we all have our days,” Bits just drawls out and gives him a wink. He holds out the plate of fresh cookies as some kind of peace offering. 
The weekend was still nice, being caught up in Kent’s manic energy and Jack’s easy acceptance. But, he starts seeing the signs pretty easily, when Jack’s hand goes to Kent’s shoulder after a good joke, the exchanged glances that linger, the slowly dwindling personal space that used to be there for them. How they start finishing each other’s sentences, and oh, doesn’t it just make his heart give a little beat when he sees them both happy. 
(But doesn’t that just break it at the same dang time. Not only does Jack like men, but he’s already got his sights set on his old boyfriend. It’s almost enough to make a grown man cry. Bitty consoles himself after breaking down in his room on Sunday when Jack and Kent dropped him off at the Haus. Only Senor Bun knew how much he’d ugly cried himself out that night.)
When Mr. McLean gives him the contract to peruse and a business card with his information circled in blue pen, Bitty almost picks up his phone to call Jack, talk about what he would need other than a lawyer to go over this thing. 
He thinks about Kent and calls Coach and Mama the next morning instead, promises to send scanned copies of the contract. Mama asks if this is something he really wants to think about doing after graduation. 
“It’s money, Mama, a lot of money, and who knows? Hockey might not be outta my heart just yet. I’ll still have time for everything else.”
He only feels a little bit bad when Jack Skypes him on a roadie, set-up in a hotel, asks how his darn thesis is going, and promises to be at the next home game. 
Kent joins the call while Bits is slid down all snug and sleepy-eyed, kids around with him by making kissy faces. 
“College is brutal, Bits. You aren’t sleeping enough.”
“Well, now that’s life, ain’t it?”
Bitty knows something’s going on between them because Kent is shaking a finger at the screen and lecturing him about procrastination while Kit snoozes on. He’d only known if Jack told him about it.
“Bits, your thesis is basically about baking. Baking is the thing you love that isn’t hockey.”
“That doesn’t make it any easier,” Bitty slurs tiredly, wondering how he’s talking to the man that’s swiping his unrequited crush right out from under him even though he doesn’t even feel too bad about it. Not when he sees how good Kent is for Jack now, even if that hadn’t always been the case.
(Long as it makes Jack happy, I can endure it. It’s tough, but I’m tougher.)
But really. Kent Parson is so different from his image as the Captain of the Aces, Bitty can’t help but genuinely like the man. 
“I’m so jealous. I love peppermint cookies and I’ve never gotten any sent to me!”
Sleepy time Bitty makes a note of that even when the world fuzzes out a little bit more.  
“God, he’s so cute, Zimms.”
“Euh. He really is, Kenny. We should hang-up and let him sleep.”
Or he might of just dreamed that part.
The Aces have a hard game coming up, and he’s got his outline done, so the Haus is finally going to let him alone long enough to bake one single, solitary pie. In the middle of it, he certainly doesn’t expect Jack to show up with a six pack of Molson Blue, apparently assuming they’re going to watch it together and cheer on Kent.
“But I expect you to cheer for the Falcs when it comes down to us and the Aces, Bits.”
“Oh honey, I always root for the underdog anyhow.”
The chirp makes Jack flop back on his bed and laugh hard enough for tears to be in his eyes. Bitty just goes back to the Aces on his laptop and drinks Jack’s awful beer with a smirk.
He stirs a little from sleep to Jack talking softly beside him in bed since “It’s too late to drive back to Providence tonight. Move over, bud.”
He mutters something maybe, sighing instead when fingers comb through his hair. 
“That W was perfection, Parse. You were skating your best life out there, eh?...sleeping right now. Yeah, senior year is a pain in the ass...you bet I miss you. Three weeks, we’ll be close enough to Vegas...yeah, I’ll try to get him to come along, but the Wellies are getting closer to the Championship...he would kill to bring it home for the boys.”
But he probably imagined all that, too. 
Still, he’s got a short break before the next round of games, and just five days until his deadline to let Mr. McLean have his answer when Jack shows up at the Haus and is apparently confused why Bitty isn’t packed for Vegas.
“What do you mean we’re going to Las Vegas, Jack?!” Because this is the first he’s heard about it, and how does Jack already have a plane ticket for him?
“Come off it, bud. If I go there without you, Kenny will never forgive me.”
“How does he even know I don’t have a game?” He frets while putting sleep shorts in a suitcase, wonders if he should bring one of his suits since Jack is already wearing one. 
Jack’s brows scrunch together, “Don’t you talk to him on that–that bird one? All the time? He says he always reads your updates.”
He pauses with a pair of boxer briefs and gives Jack his very best unimpressed expression, “Jack, sweet pea, please tell me you didn’t just refer to Twitter as that bird one?” He carefully does not say anything about Kent Parson checking his Twitter updates.
The soft smile and shrug in reply answers that now doesn’t it.
“I swear, what would you do without me,” he sighs, a little throb of love getting caught in his chest, and he just busies himself right on past it, going for at least one pair of flip flops probably buried under mounds of winter gear. 
“Honestly? If I didn’t have you these last few years, maybe it would have been like what happened when I was in the Q,” Jack leans back on his elbows on Bitty’s bed, right beside the suitcase he’s quickly trying to pack. Being stuck between two button-ups, biting his bottom lip because he’s already bringing so much takes a backseat when Jack mentions the days he was in Juniors, and Bitty feels his eyebrows raise. 
“When we started checking clinics, you and me, that was the most...balanced I ever started feeling after all that. The, ah, overdose. That...that might have been where I ended up if it hadn’t been for you and Samwell.”
With a breath (because Lord, here was Jack finally talking about it, in such a soft tone, his eyes so very blue, and just! Well, he’s not made of stone and this is Jack), he scoots the suitcase back and plops right down on the bed, reaching for Jack’s hand. He carefully looks at the closed door and rubs those big fingers with his thumb.
“You honestly think you would have made those same mistakes without me, Jack?” He tries to be nice about it, “because I sure as heck don’t.”
His fingers tighten around Bitty’s, a squeeze, a soft thank-you.
“I mean, I didn’t know you back then, so I can’t say who you were, but there are some parts of that Jack left in the one I know now. And the Jack I know now is someone that knows how to lead his team, and takes care of them, who knows how to inspire them. The Jack I know got up extra early just to help this hopeless case learn to overcome his fear and be able to play hockey better than he ever could have before. You helped me not just be able to take the check, but I’m a captain, a center, and I earned it because of you. The Jack I know is selfless in so many ways and selfish in just the right ones, and dang it, he’s my best friend, so you better not say anything else like that about him again.”
The bed shifts under him when Jack sits up, a big hand coming up to palm the side of Bitty’s face so Jack can lean his forehead in, look straight at him from just inches away with those stupidly big blue eyes, and be so warm and just Jack. 
“You were never hopeless, Bits,” and with his voice that low, being this close, Bitty feels his cheeks getting warm, his eyes helplessly sliding down to Jack’s mouth.
The errant thought Vegas, we’re going to Vegas shakes him out of the moment, and he pats Jack’s forearm, gently pulling back from the very intense, heart-stopping moment where his brain almost killed him when it told him to just go on and kiss Jack.
But his brain also knows it would probably be the last thing he’d ever do with Jack because Jack has Kent for that now, doesn’t he?
Mentally shaking himself, Bitty stands quickly, goes back to his suitcase, “All right, now for heaven’s sake, Jack, help me here. I’ve never been to Las Vegas–”
And it’s not nearly as hot in Georgia as it is in Las Vegas when they get off the plane, but everything else about it is incredible. 
(He doesn’t think about how nice it was to ride next to Jack on the plane, talking strategy and the team, the upcoming games and new plays they might bring to the ice. It’s nice to hear about the Falcs eating his peanut butter and jelly sandwiches with hollers for more. The pies never last long and cookies are always a favorite.)
He might have worried for about a minute, fiddling with the Uber app on his phone to update his location, but Jack just lays a hand on his back and guides him out of the terminal. 
“Don’t worry about it, Bits, we’ve got a ride.”
And standing by a stunning red Ferrari is Kent Parson himself, grinning wide under his sunglasses.
“Oh my,” even if it’s a little breathless, he gives himself an out here because wow, it’s a nice car. 
(And he is not at all looking at Kent’s bare arms or muscled calves. Absolutely not. He’s already got one heartache, thank-you very much.)
He still squeaks a little when Kent literally picks him up off his feet and swings him around.
“There’s my guys! Falconers and Rebels!” Kent yells for half the airport to hear. 
Jack blinks and Bitty groans softly.
Those blue eyes aren’t accusing him of anything, but it’s that same confused look when he tries to figure out if the next song is Destiny’s Child or Queen Bey herself.
“Rebels?”
He doesn’t wince, but it’s a close thing.
“I’ll...tell you about it later.” He waves off, deflecting perfectly, and snaps up his luggage again now that he’s on his feet.
“Oh,” Kent looks from him to Jack and back to him, and his mouth opens probably to say something else no one else needs to hear.
“Thank-you for coming to pick us up, by the way,” he starts rambling right on, “I’ve never been to Las Vegas before. And we’re even going to watch a game? How exciting! Should I make something for your team? A good luck something maybe? Is there a grocery store close to your house? Can we stop? Maybe I could do a few apple pies and a strawberry one...?”
“You can make me food all day, B,” Kent smiles so wide and white down at him and just swipes his bag right up out of Bitty’s hand like it weighs nothing at all. “My favorite pie is peach, just in case you were wondering.”
Bitty slaps him right on the arm, absolutely offended. “Kenneth Virgil Parson the Third, like I wouldn’t already know what your favorite pie is! Why of all the nerve!”
And that is how Bitty talked himself right out of the AHL conversation with Jack. At least, for the time being. 
**
In the end, he makes two apples, two strawberries, and three peach pies, one for Kenny to keep at home.
Jack mutters under his breath about the Falcs needing a peach pie, and Bitty can absolutely do that once they get back home. 
The boys are wonderful at keeping him company in Kent’s big kitchen while he works, staying out of his way unless he directs them. 
“It’s not going to be a super exciting game. The Schooners are old rivals since before I came to the Aces,” Kenny shrugs, fish oven mitts on, and his own apron is really just Kit’s face blown up on a white background.
But the man’s fish oven mitt is–
Wait for it
– named Fish.
Because Kent is a master at naming things, obviously.
Kit Puurson is laying on the kitchen table from where Bitty banished her from walking along the counters while he’s baking.
“Now, don’t sell it short, sugar pie,” Bitty replies absently, makes the lattice on the last pie perfect. The A in the center is going to be great once the pie finishes baking. “It’s going to be exciting to see you play live no matter what.”
“Aw,” and Kent is smiling all nice at him now that he probably knows Bitty’s not gunning for his boyfr- for Jack, “you’re just saying that because it’s true.”
“Of course I am, Kent. It is true.”
“Any time you get bored of watching the Falcs, all you have to do is call me, Bits. I’ll have you on a plane in a hot minute,” and Bitty has to look over at him for that because it might have been a chirp at Jack, but the tone was a lil’ too serious for his taste.
“Who knows, Mister Parson, I might take you up on that someday.”
(When hell freezes over.)
“I hope so, Bits,” Kent’s eyes go to the masterpieces on the counter waiting for their turn in the oven, “I really hope so.”
*
At the game later that night, before the Aces take the ice, Bitty gets a Snap from Kent Parson. 
All the pie pans are licked clean. Not a crumb in sight.
Bitty sighs in unmitigated relief.
Even though he feels strange not wearing a Falconers or Samwell jersey when he’s at a hockey game, he can’t blame Jack for leaving their home team merchandise back in Providence. 
Earlier, Kent had tugged an Ace's jersey over his head and landed a cap as the cherry on top, winking at him while Jack was busy grumbling to himself about something or other. 
It feels odd to have someone’s name across his back other than his own (or frankly Zimmermann because Jack already gave him two hoodies and several other Falcs shirts, which was real kind of him, and they’re such nice clothes!), but his Mama would fly up from Georgia and whoop his butt good if she knew he’d refused a gift from a celebrity. 
So, even with Jack scowling, he accepts the jersey and hat for the game tonight.
He and Jack find their seats, right behind the bench, and it looks like they can finally settle in.
Jack keeps a running monologue of stats and predictions, leaning in to Bitty while eating the carrot sticks they'd packed in so Jack wouldn't be tempted with junk food.
This boy and his rigid schedule of cheat days. Honestly.
And Bitty is content to talk hockey and the upcoming season, is content to talk about the Samwell team and the next game coming up. 
He gets to watch Kent and the Aces make an opening lap around the rink to wave at their fans, laughs at the finger guns right in their direction.  
He settles on in to watch what will probably be a good game no matter what Kent said earlier, and of course, Jack chooses then to bring it up.
"Are you going to tell me about the Rebels anytime soon?” Jack is watching the game when he finally says it, something in his tone of voice that sounds a little closer to mad.
Bitty looks over, guilty as sin, and Jack looks back, all kind of calm.
“I...I didn’t make a decision or anything–” he starts then turns away from those blue eyes. “I-I should go get us something to drink! Jack, what do you want to–”
He’s halfway out of his chair, but Jack’s hand on his wrist stops him, pulls him back down to his seat.
“Don’t be mad!” Bitty sighs, loud and long, “I didn’t even know what to do when Mr. McLean came to see me.”
Jack hums, “You could have called your best friend who happens to be a professional hockey player.”
“That will be enough chirps outta you, Mister Zimmermann. You were already having a time with the changes to your medication, and I didn’t want to add anything else to your list.”
Jack guffaws at him, “that was two months ago, Bits, and my anxiety is under control. You could have told me anytime since then.”
“Well, I–” and Bitty has a moment where his mouth almost runs right away with him, and he almost tells Jack they ain’t datin’ so not everything has to be out in the open.
“You?”
And even though Kent has the puck, Jack’s eyes are all for Bitty.
“Jack,” he sighs, rubbing the bridge of his nose.
“You can tell me anything. You know that, right bud?” And that line between his eyebrows lets Bitty know Jack is actually concerned.
“Of course, Jack, I...I just. I don’t know, you’ve got your own career to worry about, and I don’t even know if I still want to play hockey after graduation, nonetheless with a team in the AHL.” He shrugs lamely, pretty sure Jack probably thinks he’s an idiot.
“There’s nothing wrong with that, Bits. You don’t have to make a decision right away.”
“Well, I’ve got about five days until he wants to know if I accept their offer,” Bitty rubs the back of his neck, cheeks pink. 
“Oh. Well, you should let me read the contract anyway, eh? At the very least, it could help you make a decision if the offer isn’t for much.”
“If– I mean, if you want to? That would be real nice.”
“Euh. Tomorrow morning after my run, we’ll look at it.” Jack gives a sharp nod like he’s accomplished something, pats Bitty on the shoulder, and goes back to the game, just as pleased as pie.
**
The win was really something for the Aces, and he gets to meet Swoops, Poots, Scrappy, and Gopher when Kent tells them the baker of the pies is at the game.
“Oh my God, I ate like three pieces,” Swoops pats him on the shoulder and laughs.
“I’m so glad you enjoyed it!”
“Oh totally. Gopher can’t help himself around sweets, so you might get a marriage proposal if you aren’t careful.”
“O-oh my! That’s mighty sweet, but I would hate to have to break his poor heart.” Bitty laughs a little and doesn’t notice how Jack’s eyes narrow. 
It’s entertaining as all get out when Jack groans at the amount of chirps he’s already gotten for being a Falc instead of an Ace.
“He’s got important...things in Rhode Island,” Kent had finally said to his team, which Bitty did not understand at all.
(But, it does make sense. Jack wants to stay close to Shitty and everyone from Samwell. He couldn’t be part of their nearly everyday lives if he had joined the Aces.)
They drop by Kent’s house to change clothes, and head out to celebrate the victory with the team, and all that fluttering around his room at the Haus is suddenly worth it when he looks damn good in his button-up with a black tank top underneath and a pair of shorts that look like they’ve been painted on his ass.
When he comes downstairs, Kent wolf whistles and Jack gets red in the face.
“Are you sure–” Jack starts, a little stuttery that makes Bitty preen.
“Mister Zimmermann, it’s best you do not finish that sentence,” Bitty snipes with his nose in the air.
It’s absolutely satisfying when two very cute boys dance with him at the club, grinding on him and having a heck of a good time.
He doesn’t notice Jack’s sour face until the third or fourth song in, and by then, Kent is making his way through the crowd. 
The hand on his arm pulls him out from between two different boys, and Bitty is just about to give whoever it is what for, but Kent just shifts to grip his hips and pulls him in, back-to-chest. 
And Lord help him, Kent is an amazing dancer. How does he even get himself into these things?
** 
Watching his favorite person, favorite people, dance is giving Jack too many Ideas.
He already has plenty when it comes to Bits. Even more when it comes to Kenny since they have history to fall back on, but for Kenny and Bits? His brain might shut down because Jack is even more invested in that. 
(Kenny hasn’t said anything, but Jack knows him, knows what the look in those eyes means when he watches Bitty. Instead of Kenny trying to talk him into asking Bitty for a date, maybe Jack should be trying to do the same. Or-or talking about if all three of them…?)
As is, Jack has a lot more thinking to do after this trip.
“I swear I take care of him as much as he lets me,” Jeff is saying, “it’s not like it’s his first year anymore. He’s way past all that, Jack.”
“I know,” Jack downs his beer, tries not to be too irritated at Swoops because of the attitude. Since he and Kenny have been talking again, he knows more about that first year with the Aces and Kenny’s struggles after the Draft than he’d wanted to know at the time. He hadn’t wanted to focus on the difficulties his best friend was having with a new career as a professional athlete, was more concerned about getting himself through rehab. 
He’s been finding out about those struggles and bad times, feels better knowing about all the things he’d missed out on back then because that means Kenny is talking to him again.
(“You cut me out!” Still haunts Jack sometimes when he thinks about how he did that to his best friend, his other half. At the time, it had seemed like a trade he didn’t have any other choice but to make, give up his best friend for the chance to get better.)
Jeff was the Ace Kenny billeted with his first year, and the two are close. Maybe even closer than Jack and Kenny had been in the Q. 
He doesn’t deserve to be jealous of that, but somehow, he still is.
“I did him wrong when he was in the Draft,” Jack finally admits to Swoops, “and I’m glad he had you and the team there when he needed you. I just...I just want to make sure he’s okay. Kenny means a lot to me.”
Swoops raises a brow over the beer he’s drinking. “He was pretty torn up over you that first year, Zimmermann. If I could have, I would have found you and punched you right in the nose for that kid.”
Jack shrugs a shoulder, “would have deserved it.”
“Yeah, yeah you would have,” but it seems like the salt has gone out of Jeff’s spine, and he slumps down in his seat across from Jack. “I had to tell the team not to mention your name for a long time. Not gonna lie, when you got picked for the Falcs, I drove over to his place and stayed the night in case he had a breakdown.”
And oh does that hit Jack right in the heart. 
“But, he was...not okay but okay? He was happy for you, is the point.”
Jack’s heart twists painfully at that, “Euh. He’s a better friend than I deserve.”
“You know, he told me about going to your college, right?”
Jack looks Swoops in the face, thinks he might get a little more clarity about that night of the Epikegster.
“Yeah, he did,” because Jeff can read the tell me more on Jack’s face, “and he beat himself up about it for months. Told me he ran off at the mouth because he was angry at you. Hell, you weren’t even happy to see him.”
At the time, no. No, he wasn’t. 
“It was...a shock. We both said some pretty harsh things, I think. But, we’ve come a long way since then.”
“I’d say so. He can say your name without looking like he’s going to start crying now at least.”
Kenny…
“I’m not going to do that again,” Jack feels like he needs Jeff to know this. “He’s stuck with me this time, eh?”
Swoops laughs and raises his glass for Jack to tap with his own, “here’s hoping, Zimmermann. Here’s hoping. But hey, at least he has someone to help pick-up the pieces.”
**
Kent manages to get them through the throng of people at the bar and get them bottles of water, bracketing Bitty in with his arms to keep people around from jostling them.
They’re both sweaty and panting after the last song, and Bitty doesn’t even know how he managed to survive pretty much humping a professional hockey player on the dance floor without embarrassing himself.
“That was so fun,” Kent leans down to talk in his ear since they’re so close to the music, “can we dance some more?”
“Of course we can, honey,” Bitty tilts so he’s talking in Kent’s ear, and it presses them closer together, “but do you need to check in with your team?”
The laugh is low against his neck and Bitty almost, almost shudders.
“My guys are big boys, Bits. They’ll be fine without me mother-henning them to death.”
“Well, all right then, handsome. You’d better get me on out on that dance floor before someone else does!”
And it’s another song or so before they get a slow one. Kent manages to maneuver them into a corner, and pulls Bits in for a slow dance.
“Lord, that was fun,” Bitty doesn’t think much of it, his hands around Kent’s neck. “I don’t think I’ve had this much fun in a while.”
“I’m glad to hear it,” and Kent gives him that big ole’ smile that makes his whole face light up, and Bitty can’t really blame just one bit for just how cute Kent is in that moment. “I’m glad you came with Jack, Bits.”
“Me too. I had reservations with how close we’re getting to playoffs, but I’m glad I could take the time.”
The hands on his hips squeeze once, and Kent’s face falls, his eyes darting away.
Bitty moves a hand from around his neck to his face and turns him right on back. “Hey, what is it? Should we go?”
“N-no, no. I was just–” and Kent looks back at him with a frown, leans in a little to talk quieter. “Do you still hate me? From when I came to your college?”
And oh. Oh my.
Well, looks like they’re going to have this talk, aren’t they?
“I mean, it’s okay if you do. I was...a dick, okay? I was a complete and total dick. Zimms and I talked about it some, so-so he gets why I said some of the things I said because I mean, he just–and-and I… There’s a lot is all I’m saying. It was awful, not-not all of it, but therapy kind of helps a little? Sometimes it helps I mean, dealing with it when I found him like that, and then later when Big Bob–”
Bitty gently puts a hand over Kent’s mouth to shush him on up. 
“Kent, honey,” he tries softly, misses how those eyes get wide above his hand, “I understand how someone can say mean things when feelings are hurt, and it seems like you and Jack have mended fences since then, right?”
Kent nods without dislodging his hand, but his eyes are shiny and just oh, that poor boy. Jack had talked to him about those days back in Quebec with Kent Parson as his right-hand man, Bitty knows Kent is the one that saved Jack’s life during that overdose. He knows how quiet and strained Jack’s voice gets when he talks about it, can only imagine how terrified Kent had been finding him, performing CPR, getting him to the hospital in Bad Bob Zimmermann’s car.
He can’t touch that painful past for either of them, wishes sometimes he can give that back when he hears how wistful Jack sounds, sees how Kent sometimes looks like he has regrets. No, Bitty can’t fix their past for them, give them back their innocent days, but he can help the people they are in the here and now, can’t he?
“Well, that’s good to hear. What’s really important is that you don’t do that again, all right? Don’t take your anger out on Jack even if he might deserve it sometimes, and don’t ever say those horrible things to him again. Okay?”
Kent blinks at him and his eyes go softly half-mast. He finally nods with Bitty’s hand still over his mouth.
“Good. Then, we’re all fine, right?”
Another nod and a squeeze to his hips.
“Wonderful. Now Mister Parson, we are going to finish this song and then go back to your boys to celebrate. Maybe if we’re lucky, they’ll play ‘Crazy in Love’ later because that is one of my favorites.” He takes his hand away and grins up at Kent while his heart beats harder at the soft smile looking down on him.
“Good plan, B. If they play it, you can only dance with me, okay?”
“Well, when you put it like that, how can I refuse?”
Sure enough, the DJ plays ‘Crazy in Love’ and Bitty is pretty sure Kent’s the one that asked for it. That absolutely doesn’t mean he gives it any less ass shaking than it rightfully deserves.
**
He’s happy to see Jack laughing with Swoops and Poots when they finally tear themselves away from dancing, and Bitty absolutely refuses to drink whatever fruity thing Kent offers him because he’s not twenty-one quite yet, thank-you very much Mister Parson.
But the Aces are so nice when they leave, thanking Bitty again for his victory pies. He waves them off and doesn’t mind Jack’s hand at the small of his back when Kent guides them out.
(Later that night, he pretends he doesn’t hear Jack get up off the couch and walk down the hall to Kent’s room and softly close the door. But at that point, he’s not sure if he’s still a little jealous, or even who he’s really jealous of if he’s honest with himself.)
He eventually gets a few hours of sleep, and still wakes up god-awful early anyhow.
Since he’s been in this kitchen for three days already, he automatically puts on coffee and pulls out what he’s going to need to feed two big hockey players. 
He doesn’t even register Kent in the doorway watching him until the first cup of coffee is gone and the second is on the way there.
“Oh my Lord!” He fairly screams when he notices Kent watching.
“Sorry,” is totally unrepentant, the ass.
“You sure look it!” Bitty chirps back after his heart has climbed down out of his throat. “Goodness sakes, were you trying to give me a heart attack?”
“Nah, you just look cute in my kitchen, all busy and stuff. I like it.”
And well, that just takes the words right out of his mouth, so he goes back to make sure the bacon doesn’t burn while the quiche cools.
“Bits?!”
Jack is flustered and drenched from the shower, skittering almost right on the ground. He’s only got a towel around his waist and his hair is all over the place.
Bitty can resolutely say it’s the best morning in the history of mornings because that towel is awful short and Jack’s legs are awful long.
“I’m sorry! He just surprised me, we’re fine!” Bitty flaps his hands to shoo Jack out of the doorway. “Go on now and finish your shower. Breakfast is almost ready.”
Jack wipes water out of his eyes from his dripping hair and looks down at him silently.
“I promise, Jack. Go on now. Shoo! Naked is for the bathroom and the locker room.”
The slow grin is really just the nail in the coffin because no man should be that beautiful, it’s really not fair to the gay population. 
A glance at Kent’s shit-eating grin and he has to silently amend that statement. No men should be this beautiful.
While Jack trucks back down the hall, Bitty grabs paper towels to sop up the water he’d trailed, giving them up to Kent when he gets a frown for trying to clean up.
He tisks to himself and pours Kent a cup of coffee, mixing in the right amounts of cream and sugar, hands it to him when he throws away the wet paper towels.
He puts the bacon on another paper towel to get some of the grease while Kent sits down with his coffee. 
“I had so much fun last night. I can’t thank-you enough for taking us.” As he puts the quiche in the middle of the table.
“I had fun, too, B. Most the guys won’t dance no matter what, and you are awesome.”
“You’re not so bad yourself, sugar pie.”
Kent laughs at him, but reaches out to grip Bitty’s wrist before he can go back to the stove, “but, just so I know...you really don’t hate me anymore, right? We’re friends now?”
Oh, this must be the I need to tell you as Jack’s friend that me and him are datin’ talk. Lord, help him get through this conversation.
“Now, Kent. I already told you last night as long as you don’t hurt Jack like that again and have significantly groveled, we’re all fine.”
“Yeah, I know, but I mean, you and me. We’re fine, too, right?”
“Why of course we are.”
“Okay. Okay, good. I just wanted to make sure.”
Bitty pats Kent’s hand with the free one, “and you already know you can talk to me about anything, right? If things like that are bothering you, you can talk them out with me before you go and say something like that again, okay?”
“Yeah. Thanks, Bits.”
“You’re welcome, Kent.”
He retracts his hand with another pat and goes back for the bacon, waiting for the something else that might be on Mr. Parson’s mind.
“Bits?”
Mmhm. There is it. “Yes, Kent?”
“You...can call me Kenny, too...I mean, if you want.”
The bacon plate in hand, and Bitty turns to look at the pink cheeks on Kent Parson, the way he doesn’t meet Bitty’s surprised eye.
(Even with all his team and the press coverage, he’s only ever heard Jack call Kent ‘Kenny.’)
“All right then, Kenny,” and oh is he grinning, thinking about chirping him just for fun. “I think we’re just about ready for breakfast.”
Nothing else comes of it, and Bitty’s not sure if he’s relieved or not.
 **
Jack slowly, methodically reads through the scans of the Rebels contract he’s got back at Samwell. Kent reads over his shoulder, eyebrows squinty in concentration.
Lord, they look so cute like that. It’s really surprising no one else has picked up on the dating yet because these two are absolutely transparent.
“So–”
He gets twin wait a minute fingers. 
“Well fine then,” and he meanders in the kitchen to see if maybe he should make those peppermint cookies after all. 
A batch later and both boys come on in and sit at the table with the tablet between them.
Bitty absolutely puts the cookies in the middle and pours glasses of milk. Kent looks from the plate to him with wide eyes. 
Two seconds later, he’s already demolishing his third.
Boys.
“All right, you two. Give me the low-down.” Bitty waves a hand over his shoulder and starts washing up dishes.
Jack tells him how it seems to be a right fair offer for a rookie hockey player. The money could be better, but well, it ain’t too shabby. 
Bitty sighs because the money is utterly obscene. More than his scholarship to Samwell for all four years.
Kent has no problem finishing Jack’s thoughts when he trails off, longer in the profession than Jack. He gives more examples of what bad contracts would probably be and makes Bitty wonder if this isn’t his first time helping with these sorts of things.
Well, as Captain of the Aces, he probably has. Not to mention how he babies his rookies. 
“So,” Bitty finally bites on his lip, looking down at the tablet, “so if...if I wanted to keep playing hockey after graduation. This is a good opportunity, is what you’re tellin’ me.”
Both Jack and Kent nod at him, serious as a heart attack.
“This is a good opportunity, Bits.”
“But,” Kent looks at him seriously, “we aren’t agents, either. This is from our experience. For a professional opinion, I can suggest some guys, so can Jack, that can haggle the contract for you.”
He stands at the sink with soapy hands braced on the edges, just looking out the window into Kent’s nice backyard. 
Kit is lounging on a dishtowel right there on the ledge to get some sun.
And just like his worst tendency, Jack stands up with a cookie and saunters over to stand beside him, back against the counter.
“It’s a lot to take in, bud,” is all growly and soft.
“I never imagined playing hockey after this year,” he admits, “buying a bakery, sure. Learning under other chefs, maybe taking a turn in another culinary art, yes. But, professional hockey? Hell, I couldn’t take a check without passin’ out a few years ago, Jack.”
Jack munches on his cookie, watching Bitty’s profile with soft eyes. “True. But, couple years ago, you wouldn’t have thought you’d end up Captain, and be on your way to the Frozen Four, eh?”
Kent shuffles his feet a little but boosts himself up on the counter beside Jack. “The AHL is like, our version of boot camp, you know? The kiddie pool before you hit the NHL. And there’s a four-season standard for that reason, B. You’ve got four seasons to play your best game and see if the Scouts are interested. I mean, a lot of guys that get a bad break and don’t make it, they can renew their contracts every four years or join the practice teams. Guys that still want to play hockey, like a lot of the guys on the Rebs.”
“That offer is for one season, though.” 
“Sure,” Jack fills in, meandering back for another, handing one off to Kent. “It’s a chance to get your feet wet, Bits, see if you can make the first year. I didn’t get a four-year from the Falcs until I got through the probationary period.”
“Lucky they didn’t make you billet, Jack. That’s usually a requirement.”
“Nah, I was old enough. Marty and Tater kept up with me, though. And I had Bits,” Jack shrugs and promises himself this is the last one even as he eyes the full plate.
He glances over at the serious expression on Bitty’s face, thoughts turning behind his eyes because now he’s thinking about it. On one hand, yes, he wants his bud to stay close, be on their sister team’s roster. Pawtucket is only twenty minutes or so from Providence, even closer than Samwell. 
(Jack wouldn’t have to lose him if Bits accepts the offer, keeps playing hockey. Jack thinks he’s terrible for wanting that as much as he does.)
For Bitty, the eminent future is looking closer and closer as this year draws to a close. Getting this offer was terrifying because of all those what if’s?
Kent hums around a mouthful, leans around Jack to look at him. “Sure, but you never know, B. You take Samwell to the ECAC, and there might be more people coming to talk to you.”
“Sugar pie, I’ve seen what you and Jack are up against. If there’s one thing I’m absolutely sure of, it’s that I’m not ready for the NHL, no matter how far we go this year. But–” he sighs a little.
“But what, bud?” 
“...the real question is, what if I’m not ready to give it up once the season’s over?”
Kent chuckles at him around the last bite, “then you’ll have a year with the Rebels to figure out if you’re done with hockey, or not.”
He catches his breath a little (could it really be as simple as that?).
“...that’s what I needed to know, thank-you boys.” He pats Kent on the leg and Jack on the arm, taking up the tablet, swinging right around to go back to the stove and wait for the next batch, hip hitched on the cabinets while he reads all over again.
He’s going to call Coach and Mama when he gets back to Samwell. Then on Monday morning, he’s going to call Mr. McLean and accept the offer.
 ** 
It’s not his fault most the people he’s friends with are so much taller than him. 
Really, it’s not. 
So when Kent just grabs him up before he and Jack get on the plane and hugs him tight for long minutes, Bitty’s feet dangle off the ground, but he’s pretty much used to it by now. Shitty broke him of it first, Holster helped.
“I’m going to miss you,” is said against his shoulder because he thinks Kent might just be tearing up.
Because of Jack.
Because Jack’s leaving.
Right?
With his feet still dangling, he pats the back of Kent’s head soothingly. “I’ll miss you too, honey. But, it’s not forever, right? We’ll see you again.”
Kent eventually put him down when Jack laid a hand to his shoulder and turned him in for a hug, and Bitty looks away when Kent wraps himself around Jack like an octopus, shoulders shaking just a little. 
Jack makes soothing circles on Kent’s back, talks softly in French, and just holds on for a few long minutes. Bitty makes himself busy by checking their luggage tags and slips away to get them some coffee from one of the twelve Starbucks in the airport.
A caramel frappuccino helps a little, and Kent just sweeps him on up again.
Jack keeps a hand on the back of Kent’s neck until the very last second, and something in Bitty’s chest tightens a little, but for the very first time, he’s not sure if it’s for Jack touching Kent like that or if it’s for Kent being all upset they’re leaving.
Something to think about another day.
As is, he’s got a thesis to write, a team to take care of, and a pair of professional hockey players that need fresh baked goods. His plate is pretty much full.
** 4
His vlog has always been somewhere to vent when he needed to, and even if he doesn’t have a huge following with millions of subscribers (yet), he didn’t think things would turn out this way.
But, the school newspaper he usually ignores puts it right out there for everyone to read.
Eric Bittle of Samwell’s Own Hockey Team is the First Out Captain in the NCAA
Dex is there to put a hand on his shoulder when he feels like he suddenly can’t breathe.
Someone watched his vlog and picked up on a few things apparently (“Never fall for a straight boy.” Those words are going to haunt him forever). 
He’s out to the team, but not the rest of campus. Good Lord. Hopefully no one pays it any mind, and they can just ride right along to the next game.
It does not go away.
Instead, the news catches fire, and before he knows it, his face is on ESPN as the first out NCAA captain. The rainbow background isn’t doing him any favors, but in between the panic in his brain, he thinks the yellow of the spectrum looks real nice with those shorts.
Chowder is the one that calls him in to look at the breaking story, looking over the couch to take note of Bitty’s face. 
He shows how much his reflexes have improved when he throws himself over the couch and latches on when Bitty’s knees fail and he almost sprawls himself all over the floor. 
His phone is in his hand, and Chowder is talking, saying something. He didn’t know when Ollie and Wicks, Dex and Nursey, Tango and Whiskey and Foxtrot, River, Hops, and Louis all got there crowded around him, but he just seems to blink and there they all are.
“I,” he starts loudly, immediately quieting everyone with a single word, “am going to make a pie. Everyone is welcome to hang out while I am doing so.”
So, he makes a pie and while he does, he makes a plan.
He talks out how this could affect the team’s chances of getting to the Championship, how this could affect how they play, how they plan to win the next few games. Bitty thinks it might be smart to step down as captain, being pragmatic as possible now that he’s not panicking about finishing the season and his senior year at Samwell. 
Whiskey, who he hadn’t been able to connect with all darn season (more n’ likely because he found Whiskey at that party kissing the Lax bro), smashes his fist on the table and says that’s a whole lotta bull. Bitty’s the one that got them this far, and he’ll take them the rest of the way.
(Bitty still has several talks in the next few days. With the coaching staff, with Samwell administration, with the entire gathered team. He gives all of them the same option. He’ll give up being captain or all out quit the team if this would hurt their changes to go to the Frozen Four. He gets the same denial, loud and belligerent from his whole team –which warms his heart, honestly. They’re all such good boys.)
They decide to handle it one game at a time, and break for the night. In his room with coppery fear still in the back of his mouth, he holds his phone and stares at the contact information for Home. 
He’s almost pressed it when a FaceTime request comes from Kent.
Almost at the same time Jack doesn’t bother to knock, but just throws his bedroom door open, looking like he’d run miles.
Throwing himself to his feet, both hands up, he probably looks terrified because Jack scared the absolute heck out of him. 
“Bits,” and now it’s Jack that’s got both hands up, coming at him, “Bits, it’s okay. It’s okay, bud.” And he really means to say something, but he’s just all caught up in Jack. He smells so good and feels so nice, he’s strong when Bitty feels weak and shaky, picking him right on up and sitting down to fold over him like a big Canadian blanket.
“What a horrible way to be outed,” he laughs through the shakes, but his voice is hoarse. “This is absolutely awful, Jack.”
“God, it really is. I’m so sorry this is happening to you, Bits.”
“Lord, I’m making a fool of myself. What’s done is done, I suppose.”
“Still, I want to be here for you.”
“Oh, honey. I appreciate it.”
And he just lets himself sink into Jack a little, burying his face in Jack’s neck, just tries to breathe.
His phone goes off again, and this time Jack picks it up, sees who it is, and taps the top of Bitty’s head with it.
He thumbs the request without looking, just keeping his face right where it is. This is the best he’s felt since that awful ticker tape just laid out his biggest secret, and put a big ole’ target right on his back.
“Hi Kenny,” and he’s proud his voice sounds as steady as it does.
“Hey B,” is so soft and concerned, his heart gives a little patter. 
Jack holds the phone for him with one hand, and squeezes him tight with the other. 
“This sucks so hard, B. I’m so sorry ESPN gives a fuck about college sports enough to do something shitty like this.”
He raises his face just enough for Kent to see half his face out of Jack’s bulk. “One of those silly human interest stories, I guess. Too bad they got a little too interested, huh?”
“You can totally sue the shit out of them, okay? B, I know a guy. He could get you millions.”
“That won’t make everything right, Kenny, but thank-you for being here with me.” He gives a shuddering sigh, “I’m still going to have to deal with the backlash, and as much as I hate it, so will the team. I haven’t talked to the administration or the coaches, but it might be smart if I step down for the rest of the season, maybe quit outright. Then the boys might still be able to make it to the Frozen Four…”
“You’re two games away, B. You can’t give up now!”
“Agree. You got them here, they’ll have your back, Bits.”
“Kenny, Jack this is hockey. Everyone we go against from here on out is going to be gunning for us. The things they’re going to say to the boys–”
“They’ll handle it. Trust me,” Jack soothes, “they won’t let you give up either.”
“Well, I suppose we’ll see come Monday,” he’s tired, but there’s no slowing down right now, even if Kent is petting Kit and Jack’s lap is absurdly comfortable.
“Besides,” Kent continues, “you’re not alone, B. Plenty of us in the NHL. We’re just not like, out out. Maybe to our teams and stuff, not like, outed on ESPN or anything, fuck those guys. You seriously don’t want me to contact my guy for you? He got 6.8 million dollars for a celebrity case–”
“So you’re out to your team then, Captain Parson?” He blinks because the way Kent just came out with it, not a stutter one, shakes him.
“Huh? Well, yeah, of course I am. I’ve been on the Aces for years, Bits. These guys are like my family, so yeah, they know.”
“O-oh.”
Kent blinks at him, pauses. “Ah, I didn’t come right out and tell you, but yeah. Me too, so it’s okay, B. You’re not alone.”
It’s that moment when Jack leans down, shifting so Bitty’s looking up at him. “You’re not alone,” Jack repeats softly, “I kiss boys sometimes, too. None of that changes how good you are at hockey, and none of that changes you, okay Bits?”
And Lord above help him. He throws both arms around Jack, biting his lower lip between his teeth, and shaking like a leaf in a wind storm.
“Jack...Kenny…thank-you, boys. Just when I need you, and there you are.” He chokes a little, and there’s Jack folding down around him, there’s Kent holding Kit closer to the phone, sending virtual purrs and cuddles.
He doesn’t feel that bad wrapping his legs around Jack’s waist shamelessly, locking his ankles in the back, and just not facing the world for a while. 
It gets a little better when Jack tries to squeeze into a pair of his shorts while Kenny is brushing his teeth and talking about the camp they had at a local rink, running drills and plays with some of the high school kids from around the area. 
But everything in the world absolutely pauses when Jack clears his throat awkwardly
And really, God Bless Canada. 
The little sigh that comes out of him is echoed from his phone, and yes Kenny, they do have good taste.
“I can’t sleep in these, Bits, ah, sorry.”
But that color blue stretched taunt against Jack’s big thigh is just the best sight he’s probably ever seen.
“I’m sorry, but that’s all I’ve got to offer. I can go talk to Dex?” Because Chowder has wider shoulders like Jack, but is about a foot shorter.
“Eh, not necessary.”
And well, yes. Bitty knows Jack wears cute little briefs. They were on a team together, have spent time in the locker room, have seen the occasional moment before towels go on. It’s men’s sports for crying out loud. 
But none of that, absolutely none of that, prepares him for Jack shimmying out of those shorts for black briefs that absolutely mold to his behind and cup the front of him. The real coup de gras is that t-shirt coming off, and heaven help him, it’s muscles for miles. 
Only those little briefs between Bitty and what the Good Lord gave Jack, the definition of fine walking across the room like butter wouldn’t melt in his mouth. 
Bitty unabashedly watches, lips parted, cheeks a soft shade of pink. 
Jack closes the bathroom door, smirking where Bits can’t see, muffled noises as he roots around in the bathroom for a spare toothbrush. It gives Bitty can just take a second to himself to take in this whole situation. 
He’s been outed on a national sports network that may or may not take the question of the Rebels right out of the equation
Chances of going all the way to the finals is looking slimmer and slimmer the more he thinks about it
Jack and Kenny confirmed some of his suspicions and it’s an absolute crime and a blessing that they’ve found each other again
Jack has gotten bulkier than Bitty realized in the last year and a half playing for the NHL and his ass should be marked as a dangerous weapon
He hasn’t answered any of the phone calls from home
Still, Coach sent him a text, Call your mother. She’s worried about you.
 And top of the list, Jack Zimmermann is in his bathroom, shirtless, barefoot, after just having verbally come out to him.
If there was ever anyone that deserves to be up for Sainthood, it’s this good ole’ Georgia boy Right. Here. 
With his head in his hands, he groans softly, and scurries to throw on his own sleep clothes, stripping down without a thought more than those short on Jack and those shorts off Jack.
“I absolutely feel you,” a breathy chirp, and he forgot Kenny probably saw the entire thing.
Bitty spins, almost ready to start getting on a boat down that river called denial when he realizes Kenny is giving him the most devilish looking smile.
“It’s really unfair that he’s a hockey God and blisteringly hot to boot.”
“We are the best of friends, I’ll have you know Mister Parson. Jack doesn’t even see me that way, even after tonight. Besides, I’m pretty sure he’s got his eye set on someone prettier than little ole’ me.”
He throws the covers back to busy his hands, but can spare a second to put some charm into it and look back at Kenny with a wink. 
It’s either the best or the worst timing because Kenny gets this look on his face, opening his mouth for something that might have been good or bad, when Jack comes out of the bathroom smelling like mint and looking like a touch could burn you down to the ground.
Kenny looks at him for a few long seconds while they’re climbing into bed, and chirps them about hands above the comforter and hockey bros cuddle like champs before he yawns and finally hangs up for the night.
The sheet gets maneuvered between them so he’s not going to be tortured most of the night with only his sleep shirt and pants between them–
(and those sinful underwear, he’s never going to forget those)
–so it’s suspiciously easy to drop off with Jack’s arm around him and snoring in his ear.
**
The next two games are utterly brutal. 
Ice bags are wrapped around his shoulder while he sits in his spot in the locker room, forearms on his knees to just hurt while Chowder is talking at his right and Dex at his left.
The bruises tomorrow are going to be beautiful, but heck, what’s some bruises when Samwell is officially in the Frozen Four.
Lord, they made it.
And he will start celebrating, right after he can raise up his arm again.
Oh, that’s going to be sore tomorrow. Making pies for the campus captain club is going to be awful, isn’t it?
He manages to get the ice bags off in time to walk with the boys back to the Haus, Ollie already scooping up his bag and Chowder, bless his heart, hovering anxiously right by him the whole walk there.
They don’t make him do a keg stand this time, thank goodness, but the party celebrating their win is well underway in less than an hour.
It’s real nice when the Lax bros bring in a stack of pizzas and slap him on the back in congratulations, like he hadn’t just been outed on national television. (He loves Samwell so much.) Chad L. says a whole bunch of something that Bitty tries to follow and ends up handing him a plate with pizza and accepting a piece of pie in exchange. 
The fire extinguisher is in plain sight to remind the footballers what could happen if they don’t behave, and at least two of his boys hang around him most the night, bracketing him on both sides to keep an eye on him. Ollie and Wicks pop around the corner periodically anyhow.
He catches Chowder taking a picture for social media, has a second of panic, almost tells his sweet son not to do that because everyone knows, but shuts his mouth last minute and straightens up to grin for the next one.
**
The night the news came out, Bitty changed his social media to private, hoping to avoid some of the homophobic comments. Since the morning after (and it’s a crying shame he missed seeing those little black briefs again since Jack was already dressed by the time he got up), he’s been talking to pretty much everyone.
Most of all, his Mama and Coach...and Mr. McLean.
Jack squeezes his hand, and Bitty bites his lip, but still, “I’m afraid I don’t think I should accept your offer after all. This isn’t going to blow over any time soon.”
“Mr. Bittle. I’m interested because you’re fast, you’ve got soft hand, and you’re a good fit for the Rebels. As far as I understand, this isn’t going to change any of that.”
“O-oh!”
“If you want to play hockey, Mr. Bittle, you can do that with us.”
And it’s there when he looks in Jack’s blue, blue eyes, when he thinks about Ollie and Wicks, when he thinks about Shitty being so kind when he’d come out to the first person on the team. It’s there when he thinks about being terrified at that first check practice, when he thinks about how dang far he’s come in four years.
(It’s tough, but you’re tougher.)
“I want to play hockey, Mr. McLean.”
“That’s the spirit Mr. Bittle. I’ll send you training camp information in the next week or so. Welcome to the Pawtucket Rebels.”
If Jack holds him tight while he almost shakes apart once he hangs up the phone, well, only Chowder and Dex will ever tell a soul because they fell on him and Jack like a ton of bricks, hugging him and laughing.
**
Shitty, Ranson, Holster, and Lardo make the trip from Boston to show up on the Haus doorstep before they’ve even finished clean-up from the party the night before.
Before he knows it, he’s got Shitty crying all over him, telling him he’s so proud and Bitty’s just the best little captain there ever was.
It’s so nice because Shitty is silly as hell, but he’s an amazing friend in times of need. 
And he can’t say it isn’t nice when Shitty picks up the loud speaker and starts shooing the rest of the hanger-oners out.
“Frozen Four!” Ransom crows, “our guys are going to kick some ass.”
“You said it, bro,” Holster warmly pats Bitty on the shoulder with one of those big hands while this pie is just coming along easily enough.
The flinch when the bruises ache is enough for more ice bags to get wrapped around him, and Shitty to shake a finger in his face, talking about taking care of himself. It might not be a concussion, but they’ve got serious games coming up, and he needs to be tip top if he’s going to take them all the way.
Bitty takes it to heart and lets them baby him for a few hours.
It does get worse when Dex and Chowder see Holster pulling the neck of his shirt up a little to check how bad it is, and then he’s got more hockey players in his kitchen butting in. Luckily, Dex is getting just as good at making pie as Bitty, and finishes up the lattice work perfectly.
He talks strategy with Ransom and Holster at the kitchen table while Lardo makes another pot of coffee, and Chowder subtly slips the bottle of ibuprofen next to him. Whiskey listen to them strategize for the upcoming games, and my, don’t it feel so normal.
He hugs Shitty again, holds on just as tight as he can, and thanks the Good Lord for such amazing friends.
**
Mama and Coach are more understanding than he ever would have imagined, taken in account what a shock it is just to come across the television like that.
“Dickey, honey, now you know,” and she has to pause because Lord, his Mama is crying, “you know you can always come home. Always. No matter what. We love you. We love you and everything else, we can figure all that out.”
And so, since he’s never said it, only thought about what could happen, he tells her, “Mama… I’m gay.”
“I know, sweetheart. I know and that’s-that’s fine. We can figure it all out. But, you can come home sometime before the semester ends, can’t you?”
“N-not while we’re close to the Championships, Mama. I-I can’t–”
“Junior.” 
And now he’s glad he just called instead of trying to FaceTime. So glad he doesn’t have to look Coach in the face right now.
“You’ve done a heck of a job this year. Been a good captain. You know me and your mama are proud, don’t you Junior?”
And there goes his lip all trembling, his eyes getting hot. Only Jack squeezing his hand keeps him together at all.
“Y-yes, Daddy.”
“Good. You just keep fighting. We’ll be here cheering you on, all right?”
His breath hitches in his chest, “yes, Daddy.”
“That’s my boy. You can do it, Junior. They’re tough–”
“–but I’m tougher,” and he’s covering his eyes, shoulder hunching down. Jack goes from holding his hand to pretty much lifting him up enough to slide on Jack’s lap.
“That’s right, son. You sure as hell are.”
He sighs out, a soft noise. “I am, Daddy. We made the Frozen Four.”
“Go get ‘im. Me and your Mama are behind you all the way.”
And even if Coach gets squicky when it’s time for I love you, Bitty manages to get it out anyhow.
“Love you too, son. Now you gotta stop, or else your mama’s gonna drown me.”
The thick laugh is so much better than crying. Jack thinks so too apparently, squeezing tight while Bitty’s sitting on his thighs.
If he thinks there’s a kiss pressed to the top of his head, well, he’s just going to blame it on being emotionally overwrought and leave it at that.
**
He didn’t bother with pads, just pants, sweatshirt, gloves, stick, helmet, and skates. The ice is quiet as can be in the morning light bouncing off Faber, making it beautiful.
Kenny’s far enough ahead of them that he’s on a break from practice, already home making brunch. “Big Red is going to be killer, B. Cornell is ruthless. Fighting Hawks from North Dakota.”
His skates cut through the ice until he’s gliding, hitting the long stretch, pumping as fast as his legs can take him, cycling the puck. 
He doesn’t reply to Kenny, just listens while his muscles burn, his mind works, he sees the next move like a playbook. 
Over the past four years, he’s gotten stronger, faster. Sure, he’s smaller than the average hockey player, but that don’t mean weak. Everyone they’ve played already figured that one out now didn’t they?
His arms and shoulders burn when he swings high, throws some muscle in it when he slaps the puck right in the sweet spot of the net.
“No fair, B. I want to watch!”
“I’d have to set my phone in the stands, sugar pie.”
“If that means I get to watch you do suicides, I’m on board.”
Bitty laughs out loud because Lord, he sounds like Jack. 
“Trying to kill me before practice?”
“Captain’s prerogative, babe.”
Obligingly, Bitty sets up his helmet, laying on it’s side, throws a t-shirt in it to hold the phone up, and FaceTimes Kenny.
He gives the captain of the Aces a wink and then takes off to the blue line. He’s got his game face on, stick balanced perfectly, moving like his ass is on fire.
After a good turn out, he skates back to the stands where Kenny is very close to the screen. 
“Well, there you go, Captain,” he snickers, scooping up the whole thing so Kent goes around the rink for some easy, cool-down laps with him before the boys start meandering in for practice. “That what you wanted to see?”
“You? Are fast, B. That was incredible.”
“Oh, sugar pie,” he grins down at Kent’s face in his helmet, “you say the nicest things.”
“Hey, I’m not being nice, Bits. I’m saying as a professional hockey player that you? Are fast.”
“Well, so are you. Short guys like us have a tendency to out-maneuver the big guys.”
“I’ve based most of my career on being the fast guy on the team, B, but I don’t know how I’d hold up against you.”
“Mmhm. I also haven’t been playing professionally for the last few years, tearing the fire out of my knee, Kent.” Very serious because he’s counted how many nights he’s seen ice bags over that knee in the last few weeks.
“Also true. It might be surgery for me this summer, but that should do a lot. I’ll have maybe ten years instead of five.”
“So you said. Your doctor is talking about it again?”
“...yeah. He says it should do wonders for where I’m at right now, and this might be the year to just do it and get it over with.”
“Three-time Stanley Cup winner is where you’re at right now, sugar pie.”
The laugh is nice, but now he’s wondering if he can convince Kenny to come to Providence and stay with Jack during his recovery. That’ll let Bitty be close enough to come over and take care of him while his knee heals. He’s already thinking it over when his third lap is coming up.
“B.” Startles him right out of his thoughts.
“Kenny?”
And something is there in the way Kenny is looking at him from the screen. “Be careful at the game tonight. Watch out for the Minnesota D-Men, okay?”
“Thank-you, sugar. You watch on out for those Rangers.”
“I will. Just send me a text when the game is over, even if I’m in overtime, okay?”
“You know it, honey. Now go on and get a nap. We’ve both got a busy night tonight.”
**
This could be the last time he steps out on the ice. This could be it. All of it could end right here right now. 
They’ve got to play their hearts out. He’s got to give it everything he’s got. For himself, for the boys, for Samwell. 
It comes down to this, facing Minnesota’s line like there ain’t no going back.
**
He sits on his bed, faggot and fairy in his head from the game earlier. He doesn’t accept Jack’s call because his face is a mess.  
Well, serves him right because Jack just shows up at the Haus an hour later when Bitty has finally got it together.
**
The check is absolutely brutal. 
He used to be floored by it, curled up in a little ball on the ice, couldn’t move, couldn’t think, could barely breathe. 
But not this damn time. Oh hell no. 
It’s fast when he’s back up on his feet, shoving his way through bigger men than him and stealing that puck right on out from under them. 
He feels like he’s got wings on his feet when he glides by them like they’re just standing still. 
**
Mama and Coach are here because they’ve come down to the last stand. 
This is it.
Jack and Kenny are both there and where in the world they got #15 Bittle jerseys, he will never know.
Number #82 has already been gunning for him, but the last one is the very last of Eric Bittle’s patience running right on out.
His heart is racing, his legs burning, skates cutting ice as he steers around players, gritting his teeth against the ache, and for the first time, he’s gonna stand up, holler out that no, he’s not gonna take that nonsense lying down.
The moment slows down for long enough that he feels weightless when he pushes off, is airborn, shoving all his weight right into #82 just as they’re at the Samwell bench and shove the both of them right in with the boys.
It’s a tangle of arms and legs and skates and sputtering. 
“Try me again, asshole,” Bitty sneers in #82’s face with the face guards the only thing between them. 
“Homophobic prick!” One of his boys shouts.
Coach and the boys pick him up (shocked because he doesn’t usually have a need for potty mouth thank-you very much), want him to go get checked out while the ref blows the whistle just after Whiskey gets the puck, and now it’s all on Samwell.
He doesn’t get a penalty, thank goodness, and argues loudly with Coach to let him back in the game, he needs to get back. It’s not like he lost a tooth, just some scratches from going over. It’s a long look in his eyes before Coach just throws up his hands and shoos him back. 
And Bitty’s not thinking about Jack and Kenny and Shitty and Lardo and Ransom and Holster and Mama and Daddy and everyone else up in those stands screaming for them when he hits the ice again. He’s not thinking about how badly he hurts or the scratches on his face. He’s not thinking about his thesis or graduation or his spot in Jack’s guest room. 
He’s only thinking about the tied score, the next play, and how they’re going to show these away boys exactly who’s house this is.
**
And his arms strain when his stick comes back, when he slams that puck with every ounce of strength he has left. His heart thuds hard in the back of his mouth when their goalie’s hand shoots out, tries to catch the puck, just the tips of his gloves skimming the surface.
The alarm blares and the scoreboard changes so fast, Bitty’s not really sure what happened until his boys slam into him, gather all around him, screaming.
He’s dazed, fingers limply holding his stick, eyes still stuck on the scoreboard even when they lift him up, stick and all.
The crowd takes to the ice, and he gets his helmet off in time to get hugs from Mama and Coach, in time to accept the huge trophy, him and Coach and Dex holding it up with all the boys around them just a hooting and a hollering all over the place. 
Ransom and Holster catch him right up off his feet, crying all over him when they tell him how proud they are.
The interviews shake him out of the daze and he tells the viewers at home that the team fought hard for this and earned it all themselves. He’s proud to be their teammate and captain, he’s proud to be a Wellie, and darn it, their hard work paid off.
Just as he turns, sees Chowder going past with three of their guys behind him, singing the Samwell song at the top of their lungs, he catches Jack and Kenny standing on the ice by the boards, watching him with soft smiles on their faces, and his eyes get hot abruptly, get full as can be.
Center ice, just like with the Stanley Cup. And this ain’t that now. This? This one is all his.
He feels his lower lip tremble just a little, puts his hand up to stop it, but dang it if Jack and Kenny aren’t just easing across the ice toward him with those smiles and his name across the back of their shoulders.
He gets a hand on the back of his neck and a shoulder to hide his face while the whooping and celebrating gets loud, loud, loud.
Lord, he’s going to vlog the hell out of this tomorrow.
**
Shitty is naked. 
While it’s not new (they’ve been to Haus 2.0, and yes, Shitty was naked there too. Good times, really), Bitty has always had reservations about him being skin-to-fabric on that dang couch. Who knows what he might get. Well, all that spilled tub juice probably goes a long way to sanitize. Or so he says to keep his revolution to a minimum. 
Watching Kenny get his ass handed to him from Lardo is hilarious. Watching Jack give in and have a chugging competition is even better. 
He’s lucky the ECAC playoffs beat the NHL by almost a month. Jack and Kenny have another week before they start getting serious. 
Ransom and Holster are talking animatedly with the Waffles, back slaps all around. He’s pleased as can be when Shruti, Sharon, Edgar, Chad L., and some other captains drop by to say congratulations and have a piece of pie. He doesn’t see Jack pause over his shoulder while he talks up a storm, doesn’t see the considering look on Jack’s face.
Something about this Bitty hits him harder than the last four years, makes that perpetual tightness in his chest mean something completely different than anxiety.
He should have realized it long before his graduation, should have been terrified of it all happening again. 
Bitty affects him in so many of the same ways Kenny does, and it’s an amazing yet terrifying thing for Jack Zimmermann. Feeling like this person you’re looking at is literally made for you. 
And just as he starts taking a step forward, pushing himself in to stand at Bitty’s side like he’s done the majority of their friendship, Kenny ducks out of nowhere and takes him by both biceps. His expression is desperate.
“You’ve got to stop her. Zimms. Zimms, be on my team. Right now.”
It’s so absurd because it’s Kenny and also because he knows no one is beating Lardo. 
Ever.
Anything else is wishful thinking.
He casts a wistful look at Bitty, animated with his big win, and if Jack literally has his heart in his eyes until they’re out of sight, then only Chad L. from would have seen it.
**
Later on after the captains have said good night and some of their...guests have started staggering out, cheering for Samwell, for hockey, for tub juice, and for pie. 
For this one, Bits really couldn’t take credit because Dex really made most of them, bless his heart.
Moving around the party-goers with a spare trash bag to pick up a bit, he spots someone sneaking upstairs, pauses to squint up in case he needs to charge on up there and firmly remind people the upstairs is off limits. 
Or break out the fire extinguisher.
Either way.
...but he knows that ass in those jeans, and gasps softly as Jack’s plaid is bouncing up the steps ahead of Kenny. 
And, he can let out a sigh, catch just a little bit of bittersweet. But, if there is anything Eric Richard Bittle prides himself on, it’s being a good friend. If Jack and Kenny needed a-a wingman or whatever, then he’s just going to dang well be that.
He keeps an eye on the stairs for the rest of the night for more than one reason. No one, no one, is going to disturb them when they’ve finally come this far, and even if he silently dreads it, hopes they at least used his room instead of a bathroom for heaven’s sake.
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buckyreaderrecs · 4 years
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So Far Away: Chapter 3/?
Summary:  Bucky Barnes doing what he does best. Saving. Loving. In this particular case, the object of both is you. (Bonus: Bucky Barnes happy, healing, doing really well!) Chapter 1. Chapter 2. 
Chapter 3:  Bridging scene, tbh. 
Pairing: Bucky Barnes/reader Characters: Bucky Barnes, F.R.I.D.A.Y. Additional tags: mostly canon compliant (Infinity War and Endgame didn’t happen, Stark Tower still exists),  possible future smut (who knows, not me), she/her pronouns, more tags/characters to be added with future chapters, hero Bucky Barnes, canon typical violence, warzone/disaster zone setting, Alpine the cat Warnings: possible triggers for anxiety, PTSD, grief
Tag list (open): @animegirlgeeky @bubbabarnes @browngirlmagic @lookalivefrosty @aynaraxas @vibraniumwitch @the--sad--hatter
PLEASE READ:  Hey. So, basically I'm stuck with where this story is going. I have one scene in my head that's kinda like, a few months ahead of where the characters are now. I can probably use that scene in a different fic. If you like this story and want it to be updated, please please please comment with suggestions/ideas. I need so much inspiration for it right now. I love you! Thank you!
EDIT: Accidentally had all the Y/N replaced with my name because of the Chrome extension. Hopefully fixed, but if you see Rhiannon pop up, please let me know so I can edit. Embarrassing lol.
So Far Away Chapter 3/?
Bucky had left you in the bathroom, shower running and a change of clothes on the vanity. Your mind had split in two, and the smart and self-aware part was floating somewhere above your body, watching you not move an inch. The other part was trapped, frozen.
On the other side of the door Bucky was deciding what to do. He knew you'd not stepped under the water. He could translate human sounds, human movement.
"Y/N?" F.R.I.D.A.Y.'s voice spoke to you. "Sergeant Barnes has asked if you require assistance,"
"Bucky," you whispered.
"Yes, Bucky," she confirmed, then waited. She waited some more, then disappeared back into the building.
There was a small knock on the door and it opened slightly. "I'm coming in," Bucky warned.
When you were exactly where and how he'd left you, he sighed and moved to turn the shower off.
"I can-" you tried, but stopped when you realised you had nothing to say. Not really.
"It's okay, Y/N. I know you need sleep, but you'll feel a whole lot better waking up clean… So, let's try this instead, huh?"
You watched Bucky fill the enormously large bath tub with water. It took a couple minutes, and he remained silent. While it was comfortable, you felt useless and that was negating any comfort. You mustered all your energy and managed to pull off your jacket. It dropped to the floor with an anticlimactic noiselessness. The out-of-body part of you could feel the tears sliding down your face. The other part could not.
When the taps had been turned off and the water ready, Bucky stood. "I can get someone else?" he offered. At the confusion on your face, he clarified, "A woman…"
You shook your head. The mere thought of having to interact with someone else was exhausting.
Bucky nodded, understanding how you were felt better than you did. "S'okay. Here. I'll just… help… and when you're ready to be alone, just… let me know."
But the thing was, and you both knew it, that you wouldn't ask him to leave. You let him slowly undress you, help you into the bath and sit. It wasn't romantic and it wasn't making your toes tingle and mind drift. It was clinical and clean.
Bucky sat on the bathroom floor, his back leaning on the bath facing away from you. He planned on staying there for as long as it took for you to begin to move, to pull the washcloth into the water and clean yourself. He would have waited all night, but when the water started to cool and you watched goosebumps rise along your arms, both halves of yourself were pushed back together.
"Bucky," you said when you were ready. "I can… I can get out by myself,"
"Alright. I'll wait outside for you," he replied gently, getting up and graciously walking from the room without looking at your shivering body.
The clothes he had left were very expensive Stark branded pyjamas. They were warm and soft, and made you want to cry again. You tried your best to avoid the mirror's reflection as you got dressed and left the bathroom.
Bucky was leaning against the wall opposite the door when you emerged.
"Bed," he said, holding out a hand.
You took it and let him pull you along, into a room with a sweeping view of New York sleeping while DC was burning.
"In," Bucky ordered, pulling the sheets back, helping you climb in.
He tucked you in like a mother would, kissed your forehead before moving away. Kneeling next to the bed, he watched you for a second. Your eyes closed and you melted into the bed. Maybe you were already asleep.
"Thank you for finding me," you mumbled out. Not asleep then.
"Thanks for waiting."
Bucky sat beside the bed until your breathing regulated.
Out in the dark living space of his suite, he phoned Steve.
"You sound tired," Bucky greeted, worried.
"You know me, Buck."
Yeah, he knew Steve. He'd die of exhaustion before stepping off the battlefield or leaving anyone stranded.
"I know you ain't useful to anyone half dead. You need to get some sleep,"
"I will," Steve replied.
"I'll call Sam,"
"I'll sleep!"
There was a pause in the conversation then.
Steve stared slowly. "What are you gonna do with her?" Bucky thought about it for a moment. Steve continued, "She's got a life… Had a life, at least. We can fix her broken bones but… We're not really equipped to help her if, you know,"
"I know,"
"We barely keep ourselves together," Steve added.
"Yeah, I know… Look, I don't know what I'm doing. She's just- I don't know. I can help her. I did help her. She's-" All the things you were rattled off in a list in Bucky's head; he hadn't realised the list was so long.
"It's alright," Steve said. "Anyway, Sam will be back there tomorrow night. Wanda and I are gonna stick around, see if we can help find anyone under the rubble. Tie up some loose ends. Okay?"
"Yeah, okay. I'll see you soon, Steve,"
"Love you," Steve said, mostly out of habit.
"Love you too. Get some rest, punk."
Steve laughed as he hung up.
Maybe he was right, Bucky thought. Maybe you'd wake up more hurt than he knew. More hurt than he could heal. But, Steve was definitely wrong about one thing. They weren't just barely keeping themselves together. They didn't exist in lonely isolation, drowning in their grief and trauma. They had each other and what that meant, what that did for each of the Avengers was insurmountable.
So, Bucky would be that for you. If your life in DC was still there, he'd help you find it. If it wasn't, he would be your shelter and he would give you everything you needed to rebuild.
And, he told himself, he would do all of that while not thinking about your beautiful softness all the goddamn time. He'd not think about you thinking about him as a hero, as someone truly good.
Bucky sunk deeper into the couch he was sitting on, covered his face with his hands and groaned.
Like he had been trained as an emotional support pet, Bucky's cat emerged from the darkness. Alpine crossed the room gracefully and jumped to sit beside Bucky. Every time Bucky pat Alpine, he was always struck at how fluffy the cat had grown since becoming Bucky's.
"Alpine, man… Gotta stop bringing home strays, huh?"
Bucky chuckled to himself, thought about how outraged Alpine would be if he understood Bucky. He nudged at Bucky's hands happily, though, demanding more pats.
"Alright, fluff. Let's get you some food. Come on."
Chapter 4. 
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canaryatlaw · 8 years
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Alright, it's late and thankfully I don't have to wake up at any specific time but I do still have to get work done and be productive tomorrow (ugh) so I should get this done and go to sleep. Today was pretty good all in all. Alarm went off at 9, got ready and checked my app to see when my bus was coming only to find it WASN'T coming, and the next bus was a full half an hour away and I can't do that shit so I obviously needed an alternative route. So I walked to the red line instead like I was going to school and then once I got to the loop transferred to the blue line and took that the rest of the way to church, so it worked out alright but I was a few minutes later than I would've preferred. Oh well. I was in the nursery for the first service, and thankfully we had ample help show up because there were only two of us signed up online and for the 11 am that could be a bit much. There were a good number of babies, fairly quiet which is always appreciated, no big crying episodes that required texting parents, so that was good. Got to hold a variety of cute babies at different points that did various cute things, lol. Towards the end once almost all of them had been picked up already this one adorable little girl that's almost 2 was getting quite distressed and had me pick her up and just wait by the gate for a solid ten minutes while her parents talked in the lobby haha. A lot of times the babies will actually get anxious and upset when they see other babies being picked up and they haven't been yet, so I could deal with that. We were supposed to have two people signed up for the 12:30 service and one showed up, I can't really blame the other because she's a high schooler and comes with her family so I know when she doesn't make it it's probably not her fault, so I try to stick around enough to make sure nobody gets stranded alone with like 6 babies (and babies legit come in through the like, entire service, so you never know). So I ended up staying through the 12:30 service which was fine. I was a little sad about missing the sermon because I'll be gone next week too, but my tiny girl came for the last service so I got to play with her a lot and just have her generally be adorable, and she's gonna be 2 soon and move up to the 2 year olds room so I'm trying to play with her while I can, lol. She's so cute, she like walks in with her mom and sisters and just opens the gate and walks in all on her own, it's adorable. She'd like, just learning to talk and says a few words, so we were repeating different things to her to see if she'd say it back with like word association and such. At one point I was sitting with her and she looks at me and is just like "mama?" and I was like "no I'm not mama silly" and she just gets this confused look on her face and is like "dada..?" Lol it was really adorable. Whenever I try to get her to say my name she just looks at me and is like "no" which is also very cute and I know Rachel isn't generally an easy name for babies to get down lol so it's all good. The other baby we had had been in the 11 o clock as well and is usually fine but towards the end of the service he had reached his limit and started doing the screaming crying thing where they face gets all red and they sometimes forget to breathe (which scares the fuck out of me) and that didn't seem to be stopping anytime soon when a bottle and the offer of rest failed, so we ended up calling his mom which was fine with her, she knew it was a lot for a 10 month old to be in a different environment like that for an extended period of time. So yeah, overall it was quite the successful babies day. I just really love babies, can't tell? Lol. By the time I was leaving church t was like 2 and I was supposed to be at the mock trial scrimmage starting at 2, they knew I would be late but I said I'd get there ASAP so I got an uber there for the like, 10 minute drive to the school. The driver was a nice guy, he was telling me he had to cancel the one before me because this lady tried to bring her 16 month old into the car without a car seat and he was like no way lady I have kids I'm not doing that, and I was of course appalled that someone would ever think that's okay (if you're thinking well maybe they could afford one the pick up was in the west loop which is definitely one of the more affluent areas, so that's pretty unlikely to be the case). So I was at least happy to hear he was like yeah no way am I letting that happen. Got to school soon enough and ran up to the room. They hadn't started yet and were still kind of setting up, we'd end up waiting a good deal longer because one of the girls that's on the defense for our other team just didn't show and apparently may have gotten a concussion yesterday and didn't tell her coaches or anything???? And like we go to competition this Thursday?? So that can be all sorts of problematic. She didn't end up showing and I missed the final ruling on if she said she'd make it to competition or not, but that would royally suck if she couldn't. So for purposes of the scrimmage my partner got pulled in to be the other defense lawyer but we only got halfway through the case so he didn't end up doing much. The scrimmage went fine, I got to play my witness for the first time and try out my emotional responses and everything. It's weird because I'm playing the witness for the prosecution that I'll end up crossing on defense (obviously against a different prosecution) and of course the case theory is "the other parent did it" and at this point we have both parents being played by women so genders keep getting mixed up lol and like when I'm being crossed on it I'm thinking like what I would want a witness to say if I asked that question which can kind of mess with the answers I should give, lol. It was mostly good though. I was told I seemed to be "on the verge of tears" the whole time which is what I was going for, I'd like to possibly get some actual tears in there but I have no clue if that'll ever actually happen lol. We'll see. The girl who was missing was the one that crossed my character, so I was the only one there that crossed that character and I wanted to practice doing it as the witness so one of the coaches ended up reading my questions to me lol and as said above it was interesting. We stopped at that point though because it was getting late. Headed home and did my best to dive into my LARC work, which I'm still totally frustrated with, but I got a good amount of fixing up the first part with the edits my prof gave. The whole thing now is I have to write the "second issue" in the memo and it's really not clear what that is?? I messaged a classmate and asked and she didn't respond for a few hours so I messaged another one, and a few minutes later they both responded at the same time with totally different answers, haha so that's not terribly helpful but one said she was asking the prof so I asked her to let me know what the prof says, so hopefully that'll help. I spent a little time writing in some supplementary questions for my cross depending on what evidence gets in, and then wrote up a motion in limine to try and get the protective order excluded from evidence on the grounds that the burden of proof for receiving one is significantly lower than beyond a reasonable doubt and it's likely to be both prejudicial and confusing to the jury. I don't expect it to work because it's kind of a novel argument, but I think it's solid enough that it'll score us a few points for being inventive and such. Of course it's based largely on my own experience working with orders of protection at the DV clinic which is why I know all this shit to begin with. The only thing is only one team member can present the motions in limine and my partner is doing it (while I'm responding to the other side's) so I had to send it to him and explain it a bit, and I think he has enough of a handle on it to not mess it up too badly (I'm trying really hard to be patient with him because I know it isn't his fault that he doesn't know what he's doing but he doesn't know what he's doing and it's endlessly frustrating). When I finished with that I turned on crazy ex girlfriend and finished the rest of season 1. I would say I'd do a write up of my thoughts on it soon but tbh there is zero chance I'm going to have the time or energy to do that any time soon so I'll just put a few brief thoughts here. I love the ridiculous songs and how they parody classic musical theatre numbers perfectly, this show is 100% written by theatre people haha and it's great. I feel like Rebecca is me in a lot of ways haha and not just the whole (naturally) brown hair blue eyes, from New York, being a lawyer thing, but she's very relatable overall and I appreciate that. I'm not sure how I feel about the romance aspects. Obviously her romance with josh isn't going to last because then the show wouldn't have any premise to base its second season on, so something will happen there with Josh. Greg is kind of a dick though??? Like I feel like we're supposed to be rooting for him as the "nice guy" (blech) but he's actually so aggravating it drives me nuts. But yeah, overall really appreciate the show and am excited to watch the next season, and that's it for today. Tomorrow I have to get a shit ton of work done, so yay me I should get some sleep now. Goodnight mates. Have a non-sucky Monday.
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