Christopher probably showing off his dads at his school's bake sale and raising the most money in his class.
we all have a hunger on AO3
When Buckâs phone rang on a Sunday morning, he had barely said âhelloâ before he was steamrolled by the tiniest little force of nature in Los Angeles.
âBuck, Daddy and I need your help. Itâs an emergency.â
âChris, whatâs going on? Are you okay? Iâll get my keys, I can be there inââ
âWait, Chris, no, give me the phone!â
Buck was half out of bed, half dressed, and frantically looking for his keys when Eddie finally took over the phone, nearly hanging up in his haste. âBuck, no, thereâs no emergency. Everything is totally fine, weâre fine.â
Buck froze halfway down the stairs, eyes narrowing suspiciously as he pulled his phone away from his head to finish pulling his shirt on. âSee, that sounds like something a hostage would say, youâre really not helping your case here Eddieââ
âWe are fine.â Eddie insisted, clearing his throat as Chris loudly voiced his disagreement in the background. âWeâre just⌠baking. Chris has a bake sale tomorrow at his school, itâs one of their annual fundraisers. Thereâs a bake sale, and Iâm making brownies, and weâre doing fine.â
Buck resumed dressing as soon as Eddie mentioned the work âbakeââit may not have been a true emergency, but he knew enough to know that anything involving Eddie with an oven was a mess and a half, waiting to happen. He hummed, pocketing his keys as he closed his door behind him, already making his way to the garage. âWell, I love baking. Maddie taught me everything she knows. Mind if I swing by and join you?â
Buck knew that Eddie still struggled with asking for help when he needed itâespecially when he was asking someone outside of the Diaz crewâbut thankfully, Buck knew how to work around that. He had learned early on that the best way to ease any guilt that Eddie might feel where Chris was involved was to completely reshape the question. In this case, it was easy; Eddie was no longer asking for help with one of Chrisâ activities, Buck was asking to join them.
Even then, he heard Eddie hesitate. âWell⌠I mean, I donât want to take up your Sunday, butââ
âEddie, youâre not going to seriously deprive me of spending time with Chris, are you?â Buck said, his voice teasing as he slid into his car, delighted to hear Eddie laughing on the other end of the line.
âNo, I wouldnât dare. Weâll see you soon. Drive safe, okay?â
After a quick pit stop at Foods Co., Buck pushed through Eddieâs front door easily, arms laden with grocery bags. Chris was the first to greet him, his high pitched joy never failing to warm his heart. Dumping his bags on the kitchen counter (and looking away from the burned remains of⌠something in a pan), he scooped Chris into his arms, dutifully ignoring Chrisâ cry of âBuuuuck, stoooop!â until he was basically a giggling mess.
Setting Chris back down, Buck was all smiles as he approached a very defeated looking Eddie in the kitchen, giving him a quick kiss of his own. âHey, come on, cheer up. Itâs basically impossible to bake in a bad mood.â Buck said, pulling Eddie into his arms easily. âNow, how about I break open the family recipe book and show you and Chris how to make the world famous Buckley Cheesecake Brownies?â
-
Halfway through the Pixar movie of Chrisâ choice, Eddie had a third batch of cheesecake brownies cooling in the fridge, and Buck had Eddie tucked under his arm on the couch. He was basically on cloud nine, riding out a pleasant sugar buzz, feeling supremely comfortable in his own skin, though he knew that was more his proximity to Eddie than anything else.
His attention strayed from the⌠caterpillars? Grasshoppers? He honestly couldnât follow what was going on, but it didnât matter as Eddie culled closer up to him, angling his head up to press another kiss to Buckâs lips, voice low as they broke apart.
âThanks for today, Buck. We⌠I couldnât have done it without you.â
Buck smiled, a small, soft look that was strictly reserved for his Diaz boys, arms tightening around Eddieâs middle as he buried his nose in Eddieâs hair, pressing a kiss to the crown of his head as Eddieâs head rest on his chest.
âYeah, Eddie, you could have. And you would have, youâd do anything for Chris, and I know that. But you donât have to do it alone.â
-
Let it be known that Eddie Diaz was a fucking snack.
Buck knew it. The 118 knew it. Hell, even Carla knew it.
And the gaggle of moms milling through Chrisâ school gymnasium? Well, they definitely knew it. And if they didnât? Buck was 100% there to remind them.
He had all but insisted on joining Eddie and Chris to the bake sale on Monday, not even bothering with excuses, just happily loading Chris up into Eddieâs truck before he slid into the passengers seat himself. He wasnât going to pass up the chance at scoring some new recipes, first of all, and second of all, he absolutely loved seeing Eddie in full dad mode. And there was no better place to see Eddie in dad mode than in the gymnasium of an elementary school.
Eddie in full on dad mode was fucking hot, okay? Sue him.
Once they had set up Chrisâ boothâwith a full banner Chris had insisted on painting himself, two tiered display tables stacked high with cheesecake brownies, and a place to make donations to the school, like every other booth had. They may not have been able to keep any of the money they raised, but Chris had more than enough incentiveâthe booth that got the most donations won their entire class a pizza party. Thankfully, Chris was adorable, and Buck had a secret weapon in his arsenal⌠the insistence that Eddie wear his LAFD tee shirt, turnout pants, and used an overturned fireman helmet as Chrisâ donation bowl. He wasnât a fool, okay? He knew that the competition was real.
So⌠he may or may not have had slightly less-than-altruistic intentions when he slipped away from the booth, kissing both Eddie and Chris on their foreheads with the excuse of scoping out the competition as he started to make the rounds.
He was having the absolute time of his life, slipping easily in and out of conversation, his worn henley and comfortable jeans better than any disguise as he eavesdropped, making fast friends and faster business as he made his way around the gym.
âI donât know, I saw her tossing a few treat boxes into the dumpster outside. You think those cookies are store bought?â
âOh, Iâd steer clear. I think Maria might have mixed up salt and sugar. I mean, I donated of course, but save your tongue.â
âI just think itâs so great, the things that he does with his son. A single dad and a firefighter to boot?â
Obviously, as much fun as sabotage was, Buckâs real talent was talking up Eddie and Chris.
âHonestly, I feel so lucky to even know them. Chris is such a great kid, and Eddie really does go above and beyond.â
It was so much fun because he wasnât even lying. He got to be as exaggerated and over the top as he wantedâwhenever he got a little over the top with Chris, he was usually cut off by a pained groan and an adorable, blushing boy. Whenever he tried to get in depth with Eddie, well, Buck could barely get a few words out before Eddie found a much better use for his lips than talking (with his own adorable blush).
âThe last fire we were in, Eddie singlehandedly saved a mother and son who were stuck beneath some debris. Heâs an all around hero.â
He was talking now, thoughâand he had an entirely different approach planned out, depending on his audiences. For all the single moms, easily identified as those who couldnât take their eyes off of Eddie? All he had to do was mention the word âfiremanâ and he had them eating out of the palm of his hand; and more importantly, racing over to buy a brownie.
For the parents who were more focused on cooing over the kids at the booths, well, Buck had a trick up his sleeve for them, tooâit was as easy as pulling out his phone, scrolling through any number of the photos he had taken the night prior. His personal favorite was one of Chris, eyes bright with laughter, a blob of brownie batter at the end of his nose. He didnât have to say anythingâas soon as they saw that, they were shoving money into Eddieâs helmet.
Eddie looked more and more pleasantly confused as the morning carried on, but Chris looked absolutely delighted, and that was all that mattered as far as Buck was concerned.
-
âWait, Buck, wait. Youâre telling me you actually conned donations out of people by showing them pictures of Chris?â
Eddie had tears, literal tears in his eyes as he tried to inhale, gripping his half full beer bottle like a lifeline as he wheezed. Buck probably should have looked a little bashful, but Eddieâs laughter was too good to ignore, warming him from the inside out.
The parents had been thoroughly thanked and sent home before lunchtime, and Buck had taken no small pleasure in peppering Chris with kisses before Eddie pulled him out of the gym. They had both taken full advantage of their weekday offânamely, by napping and watching terrible daytime televisionâand Chris had barely made it a half hour after dinner before the day (and the sugar rush) caught up with him, crashing hard as Buck carried him to bed.
âHey, Chris won the pizza party for his class, and trust me, that is a one way ticket to be the most popular kid in class. And I wasnât lying, some of those cookies were store boughtâeveryone else in his grade can suck it.â Was it mature? No. But Buck stood by it. He was team Chris, ride or die.
âBuck, you canât say âsuck itâ about a bunch of kids.â Eddie tried to get out, but he was laughing again, leaning heavily against the wall for support as he clinked bottles with Buck. He still couldnât believe how lucky he was, to get to be in Eddieâs space like thisâso easily bumping shoulders and elbows and touching so casually, physical signs of affection that Buck had never allowed himself before. Eddie finally got a hold of himself as Buck pushed some of the curls back from his forehead, leaning into the touch easily, his expression nothing short of heart-eyes.
âWell, thank you for saving me from myself yesterday. And, of course, for cracking open the family recipes to help Chris and his school.â Buck blushed again as he sputtered on his mouthful of beer, struggling to swallow, looking up as Eddie cleared his throat.
âIt, uh, I found that recipe on the internet.â He said, chewing on his lip, suddenly feeling a little nervous as Eddie smiled at himâand if Buck didnât know better, he could swear that there was a pink tint to his cheeks..
âWell⌠I mean, it could be a family recipe now. After all, we made it together, you me and Chris⌠right?â
Buckâs eyes blew out wide as Eddie laced their fingers together. He hated the way that Eddieâs voice tilted at the end, like he was unsure of himself, and Buck literally had no choice but to pull Eddie into his arms, erasing any doubt from his mind. He had already known that Eddie would be it for himâthat he and Chris were the best thing that he was ever going to get, that he would rather die than give this up, but hearing Eddie call them a family?
Holy fuck, Buck was in love.










