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#sadly neither do ab and lemon
useragarfield · 1 month
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9K MAKE ME CHOOSE:・゚✧:・゚@elevenriver ASKED: Zoe/Lavon, George/Lavon, or Annabeth/Lemon?
Lavon is my best friend! He is the closest thing that I have to family in BlueBell. And I really need family right now.
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pillage-and-lute · 3 years
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Geralt attempts to bake cookies. That’s it that’s the prompt
Hi Cabbage-with-legs!
This is a Modern AU with Tired Dad! Geralt. + bonus pining
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“Geralt? Geralt what’s all this.”
Geralt’s shoulders slumped and he scraped dejectedly at the blackened hockey pucks on the cookie pan. “Cookies.”
“I’ve seen charcoal briquets less black, dear heart. What’s this about?” Jaskier said, leaning his shoulder against his best friend.
Geralt sighed and leaned into the touch, hardly even registering Jaskier’s neon pink Hawaiian shirt. “PTA bake sale. They need me to bake something so I’m trying but, well...” Geralt shuffled a spatula under one pathetic hockey puck and flicked it into the trash.
“Lucky you,” Jaskier said. “I am a world class baker.”
“You burn water.”
“Cooking and baking are very different, my friend.”
“We aren’t friends,” Geralt huffed.
“Not if you keep up that attitude. How much food does the bake sale need?”
Geralt sat in a creaky chair and looked at the ugly yellow wallpaper of his kitchen. “They said anything helps, but the school is really underfunded, they need to make a lot of money off of this.”
Jaskier sat across from Geralt and bumped his foot against his friend’s boot. He smiled sadly. He saw Geralt almost every day, and Geralt never saw him, not really. He never looked at Jaskier and saw him.
It didn’t matter because Jaskier saw Geralt, and would continue to do so until Geralt threw him from his life.
“Alright,” Jaskier said standing up. “It’s Saturday, so Triss won’t have work, I’ll text her, she can bring by some bread.”
“Don’t bother her,” Geralt said.
“She’ll want to help. Yennefer too, she’ll bring something by the bake sale as well.”
None of them had much money, but baking, well, for Ciri they could all do something.
“You and I,” Jaskier said, “We’re going to bake up a storm.”
Geralt stood. “No, Jaskier. Go away.”
“No, you need my help.”
“I don’t need your help.”
“Fine,” Jaskier said, hand on one jutted hip, “Then take a bite out of one of those.” He nodded his head towards the blackened tray.
Geralt growled, but it was acquiescence. 
“Great,” Jaskier said. “Now, lets start this again.” He tidied up the kitchen, loading the dirty dishes into Geralt’s ancient dishwasher and pressing start. He knew Geralt’s kitchen as well as he knew his own. When Renfri had died and left Ciri and Geralt all by themselves he’d done all the cooking here. Geralt had just sat in the chair in the living room and wouldn’t let go of Ciri. Jaskier had practically hand fed him.
Triss had called it sitting Shiva, even though she was the only Jewish person among them. From what she’d told Jaskier, though, Geralt had been doing something similar, even if he didn’t know it.
Now, though, they both moved about the kitchen. Geralt measured flour and sugar as directed and patiently took the bowl of frosting Jaskier pressed into his hands, stirring as directed.
Jaskier moved around him, orbiting Geralt like he always did, adding almond extract and nutmeg and an extra dash of salt because Geralt used too little. At one point their little dance messed up and Jaskier placed one floury hand on Geralt’s chest to keep him from backing up against the open oven door. 
He looked at the dusty handprint on Geralt’s black hoodie, right over his heart. Geralt smiled softly.
“Thanks, I would have fallen right into the oven, there,” he said. 
Jaskier chuckled, “Yeah, Hansel, can’t eat you yet I have to fatten you up,” he poked Geralt in his rock hard abs. “You’d be awfully stringy.”
Geralt rumbled a laugh, deep in his chest. “I guess I’m not prime cannibal fodder, huh?” He crossed to the laptop, open to their recipe. “What’s next?”
“I’m sure there’s someone who’d take a bite out of you,” Jaskier said absently. “But we’re done with the cookies now that they’re in the oven, onto the cake.”
“We’re making a cake?” Geralt said. He looked in dismay at the cookies already in the oven.
“Unless you’d rather make the pies first,” Jaskier said. “And yes, we are. You and I are going to nail this PTA bake sale.” He watched the way Geralt sighed, the rise and fall of his shoulders, the little roll they did to loosen the tension. 
He patted Geralt on one such shoulder, looking into a pale hazel gaze. “Drink some coffee, we’ll be up a while.”
Geralt moved to start the coffee. “Is the--”
Jaskier handed him the little scoop that Geralt used to measure out his coffee and Geralt turned around to face Jaskier.
“You didn’t even know what I was going to say,” he said.
“I did, I know you.” Geralt stepped close and looked at Jaskier with lazer focus. 
Please, Jaskier thought. For once in your life just, see me. 
“You have flour in your hair,” Geralt said, then turned back to the coffeemaker.” 
Jaskier held in a sigh and began pulling up the recipe he liked for chocolate cake. “Do you have cocoa?” He asked. 
“Cupboard,” Geralt grunted. There where multiple cupboards in the kitchen, but Jaskier knew which one Geralt meant.
They descended again into their orbiting dance.
-- -- -- -- -- --
Morning dawned to find a messy kitchen and two men asleep at the kitchen table. Ciri looked around, registered the mountain of cookies and muffins, four pies and two cakes, then got herself cereal. Jaskier woke up, the seam of his sleeve had pressed into his face in his sleep.
“Have you kissed my dad yet?”
Jaskier blinked away sleep to see Ciri, still in her Wonder Woman pajamas, eating a bowl of coco puffs while standing in the middle of the kitchen. He made to stand to give her the chair, but she shook her head.
“Stay put, you must’ve worked hard. When I went to bed Dad had just burned his second batch of cookies. I repeat, have you kissed my dad yet?”
“Um, no.”
“Why not?”
“He doesn’t want to kiss me,” Jaskier said. “He looks right through me.”
“Hmmm,” Ciri said. It was so like her father that Jaskier had to smile.
“Hello darling,” Triss said, closing the door with her foot behind her. “Jas, you’re up, I figured you’d be asleep...oh,” she glanced at Geralt, conked out on the table, then looked at the pile of baked goods. “Nice job, I brought Challah, soda bread, and Irish brown bread.”
Jaskier stood and kissed her cheek. “Thanks, I appreciate it, Triss.”
“Aunt Triss,” Ciri said. “Do you think my dad wants to kiss Jaskier?”
“Of course, why?”
“He doesn’t even really know I exist,” Jaskier said. 
“He does too.”
“He knows I exist but he looks right through me, Triss, I’m a ghost in his life.”
The front door creaked open then slammed, startling Geralt awake. 
“Whazzit?”
“It’s probably Yennefer,” Jaskier said.
Geralt blinked his eyes hurriedly and brushed back his pale hair. 
Yennefer stomped in and set down a tray full of lemon bars. “For the bake sale.” She looked up at Geralt, who was smiling at her. “You have frosting on your face.”
Jaskier stepped into the other room and Triss followed. Ciri stepped out after them, still spooning cereal into her mouth.
“He sees her,” Jaskier whispered.
“You like Yen,” Triss said. 
“I do, she’s terrifying and fun, but I just wish he looked at me like that, like he noticed me.”
“He notices you,” Ciri said. 
“Jaskier,” Geralt called from the other room.
Ciri smirked. “See?”
Jaskier reentered the kitchen. “What’s up.” 
“I’m loading stuff into my car, help.” 
Jaskier promptly took a few trays of muffins and began to walk them out to Roach, Geralt’s ‘84 Chevy Nova. It wasn’t a beautiful car but Geralt loved her, and Jaskier had grown to love her too. The four of them, watched by Ciri, loaded up the baked goods and Jaskier went to get in the passenger seat. 
“You’re not coming,” Geralt said. 
Jaskier faltered but recovered well. “Oh, well of course. And since I’m your very best friend--”
“Not my friend.”
“I’ll stay and clean up the kitchen,” Jaskier finished.
Triss made a sympathetic face at him, kissed Ciri on the forehead, and left. Yen nudged him in a mostly friendly way and swept out after her. 
Ciri watched him clean up, sitting on the counter in the corner of the kitchen. Unusually, neither of them said a word the entire time. When the last dish was put away she said.
“You know, I’m not sure Dad sees many people, not sees them. I’m not always sure he sees me. It doesn’t mean you aren’t important to him.”
Jaskier smiled wanly. “You’re very wise for fourteen.”
“I am. Extremely.”
“He sees her.”
“That’s because he’s slightly scared of her.”
Jaskier leaned with both hands on the counter and stared between them. “Ciri, you know I love you dearly?”
“Yes.”
“And I won’t stop loving you. Not ever. But I might not come around so often. I promise it doesn’t mean that I don’t care about you.”
“Just that you think Dad doesn’t care about you.”
“I know he does,” Jaskier said, looking up and crossing to where Ciri sat. “But he can’t even call me his friend. I can’t do that anymore. I need to...I need to not do that. At least for a while.”
“I’ll miss you,” Ciri said, setting down her empty bowl and hugging Jaskier. “He’ll miss you too.”
“I’m going to miss both of you too, but I need to do this. I’ll still come to every last one of your gymnastics meets. And I’ll still be your Uncle Jas.”
Cir pulled back from her hug, jaw set but her eyes dry. “I wish you could be my papa instead.” Jaskier kissed her on the forehead. 
“Bye Ciri, I’ll see you next week when you get another medal.”
She waved at him as he left.
Jaskier didn’t look up from the bus floor the whole ride back to his shithole apartment. The ugly green carpet on the floor of his room still looked the same. He shrugged and began to work on grading papers. There was no more he could do. 
-- -- -- -- -- --
Jaskier was surprised to find that the day had passed easily. He’d only had to turn his thoughts away from Geralt every time he started to think of him. 
Then there was a knock on the door and Jaskier suddenly couldn’t stop thinking of Geralt. There he was, drenched, from the sudden rainstorm and dripping in his apartment’s doorway. 
Geralt shoved a fist out, holding some supermarket flowers, the daisies they dyed in obnoxious colors. Usually Jaskier found them ugly but these, battered and very, very neon, were the most beautiful things he’d ever seen.
“What?--”
“We aren’t friends I want to kiss you,” Geralt said in one breath.
“What?!”
“I don’t want to kiss friends. I want to kiss you a lot. All the time.”
“You never even look at me,” Jaskier said.
“I do, just not when you’re looking.”
“Why?”
“I don’t want you to catch me staring at your lips I want to kiss you, Jaskier.” He stared into Jaskier’s eyes, unwavering. “I see you.”
“Who told you?”
“Triss. I came home and the kitchen was clean and Ciri was sort of mad at me and you were gone so I called her and panicked,” Geralt paused for breath. “And she told me. I see you. I promise I do. maybe not all the time but I’m not good at noticing people all the time I’m...Renfri could do that. I can’t. You can notice people all the time but I just don’t. I’m sorry. I do notice you though, I see you, I promise.”
“You see me,” Jaskier said. He watched Geralt’s eyes as they looked downwards. At his lips.
“I don’t want to kiss friends, Jaskier,” Geralt whispered. “Please, please may I kiss you.”
Jaskier nodded.
Geralt tasted like the peppermint Chapstick that he bought around Christmas and hoarded all through the year. A kiss had never been so good. 
Geralt pulled back and handed Jaskier the flowers. “You don’t like this kind but I like them because they remind me of you.”
“They do?”
“They’re bright and if you were a flower Ciri said you’d be a daisy.”
Jaskier smiled. “You got her advice, on what flowers to get me.”
Geralt nodded. “She knows these things. There’s cookies, back home. I bought some from the bake sale. Someone made white chocolate macadamia nut and I know they’re your favorite.”
“Fine, Geralt. I’ll go back home with you.”
“You’ll stay?”
“I’m not moving all my stuff in tonight, but yes, eventually I’ll stay.”
“Good.”
“Ciri’s going to have to stop calling me uncle now. It’ll give people the wrong idea.”
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It got away from me. Whoops. Happy ending for all, though.
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