#911 6x10 coda
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
i think theres something to be said about the placement of eddie during the sneak peek of 6x11 and what picutures they have chosen to share for next weeks episode
please excuse the quality, im working on getting better screenshots
this is part of the preview that was shown after last nights episode to tease the next episode
in this clip, each member of the 118 are passing the glass doors, something they *dont* do according to buck last season but of course their team was hurt and they keep moving in
however chim, hen and bobby all stop once they see that bucks being wheeled back
but eddie doesnt, he keeps going. his face is full of determination and hurt and most importantly, fear. he cant stop himself from wanting to follow each movement of buck to make sure he is safe. he is at the forefront of the camera, the videography making it clear that him (and bobby) are the ones in main focus right now
and then they gave us this sneak peek for next weeks episode
i think theres alot to be said especially since this is one of only two photos released so far about the episode
we already know its going to be a dream/coma episode, but having this interaction of chris coming to the hospital to see buck during this coma speaks volumes
whether the writers like it or not, buck is chris’s second parent, it’s undeniable and this really shows that
chris has seen both of them in unspeakably terrible situations and has always always been a anchor for their recovery. it’s important to note that while is face is clearly showing that he is upset, he is also pretty neutral
and dont be mistaken, he loves buck to the depths of his soul but after seeing what eddie and buck have gone through when one of them is hurt, he knows he needs to be strong for them both
in general, i think its quite interesting that there is such a focus on this subject in the sneak peeks and i think its worth noting that nothing is unintentional
#911 season six#buddie#911 season sex#buckley diaz family#evan buck buckley#eddie diaz#911 6x10 coda#911 spoiler#911 6x11#911 coda#christopher diaz
69 notes
·
View notes
Text
Fine - 6x10 coda
Words: 1622
Ao3
***
Eddie’s foot feels heavy on the gas pedal, while his hands grip the steering wheel tightly, to prevent them from shaking. He’s driving almost on autopilot, while trying his best to compartmentalize and focus on just getting to the hospital, trying not to think about Buck- about what’s happening in the back of the ambulance right now.
He can do it, he’s great at compartmentalizing, no one does it better. He can focus on this one thing, on driving, and push everything else away for now.
Otherwise he will break down, and he can’t afford to do that right now, not with… not with Buck’s life at stake.
He can barely hear the sounds of Hen and Chim trying to- trying to save- He does his best to shut those sounds out, to ignore them, to focus.
Buck’s gonna be okay, he has to. Eddie can’t imagine a life without him, and he doesn’t even want to try. He doesn’t even know if he’s still- he just caught a glimpse, before Bobby took him away and told him to drive, he only saw Buck’s pale, unmoving face for a split second, and Chim was doing chest compressions, which means- but he doesn’t know if Buck- He’ll be fine. He’ll be fine and in no time he’ll come home to Eddie and Chris, and everything will be fine.
He feels tears well up in the corners of his eyes, but he refuses to let them fall, and blinks them away. Not now. Now’s not the time.
He can’t fucking think about it now. Compartmentalize, Diaz, for fuck’s sake. The hospital. Getting to the hospital, that’s the priority right now.
He tightens his grip on the steering wheel, jaw clenched. If he wasn’t driving, he’d be losing his mind. But he can do that later. For now, he has to keep his shit together.
So, he focuses on taking even breaths, trying to keep the panic, that he feels arising, at bay. He focuses on the feeling of the steering wheel in his hands. On shifting gears when necessary. On controlling the speed, trying to drive as fast as possible without an accident. On the cars around them, that make way for the ambulance. On taking the right turns – even if knows the way to the hospital all too well now, and could drive there in his sleep.
He’s silent the whole drive, tuning out all the sounds, until all he hears is his own breathing. When they get to the hospital, and Hen and Chimney get Buck out of the ambulance, and Bobby jumps out to go with them, Eddie doesn’t move. He doesn’t know for how long, it could be a few seconds, maybe a minute, an hour, maybe longer, it’s like time doesn’t exist anymore. His breaths become more shallow, while breathing starts becoming a challenge, his hands shake, his chest feels heavy, his heart hammering against it, and he feels dizzy, while tears start falling down his face. He can’t- he can’t see Buck like this. He’s not ready. He’ll never be ready. They’ve had their fair share of near-death experiences, but this is…
He needs to keep it together for just a while longer. He needs to get out of the ambulance, he needs to make sure that Buck is- but what if he’s not? Eddie’s not sure he’d survive that.
“Eddie?” he hears Bobby, who comes up to the driver’s side, probably to check on him, after they gave Buck over to the doctors. The doctors, who will help him. Right? He’ll be fine. He has to be fine. “Eddie, you need to get checked out, too.” Bobby’s voice is soft, tentative, as if Eddie was about to break. Well, maybe that’s true. Eddie feels like he’s about to crumble into a million little pieces, and the only person who’d be able to piece him back together was just wheeled into the hospital, unconscious, maybe possibly even- Bobby opens the door, and reaches out for Eddie to take his hand. “Come on, let’s get you some fresh air.” he says, clearly seeing the state Eddie’s in.
Eddie nods, gripping Cap’s hand so tightly, as if his life depended on it, and jumping out of the car. Bobby’s touch grounds him a little, but the world still spins, and he stumbles, but Bobby catches him and helps him stand on his feet.
“Eddie, look at me. Hey.” Eddie finds Bobby’s eyes. “Hey, breathe. Let’s breathe, together, alright?” Eddie feels even worse. Instead of being in the hospital with Buck, finding out if he’s- Instead of being there for, let’s be honest, basically his son, Bobby’s stuck out here with Eddie, because he can’t keep his shit together. Now is not the time to lose it, not yet. He still needs to go home, he needs to tell Chris- he hears himself sobbing, almost choking on air. He’d managed to keep himself from thinking about it until now… “Eddie. You can do this, come one, breathe. I’m right here with you.” his grip on Eddie tightens, and starts taking deep breaths, and Eddie tries to follow, tries to focus on Bobby, but the whole world is blurry and he feels like he’s dying, like he should be dying, because if Buck- his breath quickens again. “Eddie, hey, can you talk? Can you tell me what you need?” Bobby asks, continuing to guide Eddie’s breathing.
“Buck.” he whispers, barely audibly, it feels like he’s been saying nothing but his name since- since it happened. He’s not sure he’ll be able to say anything but his name ever again. He needs to see him, he needs to-
“Buck’s inside, being taken care of by doctors.” Bobby’s voice is calm, somehow, he’s keeping his feelings in check, and it helps Eddie calm down a little, too. “They got his pulse back, he’s alive.” he adds, and even in his frantic and panicked state, Eddie can hear what he’s not saying. ‘For now. But he’s still unconscious. But he’s in critical condition. But he doesn’t have much time.’
There’s a part of Eddie, a part of his heart, that’s in this hospital, fighting for his life. And he’s still here, by the ambulance, barely holding it together, instead of going where his heart is being pulled to. He needs to calm down. He needs to go and see him, he needs to go home to his kid- to their kid. Shit, he can’t believe this is the first time he consciously thought this, and he might never have the chance to let Buck know what role in this family he really occupies, that he already has a kid, and that Eddie- that Eddie wants to spend the rest of his life by his side, if Buck will have him.
It takes a few minutes, or longer, or shorter, he’s not sure, he feels like he’s outside of his body right now. But finally, he gets his breathing under control. He’s still not able to utter even a ‘thanks’ to Bobby, who finally lets go of him, and claps him on the shoulder, when Eddie nods to indicate that he’s fine. Well, he’s not having a panic attack anymore, but he’s certainly not fine. He doesn’t know if he’ll ever be, if he’s not able to look into those lively, cheerful, beautiful blue eyes again.
Without saying anything, he follows Bobby into the hospital, where they wait. They wait, and wait, and wait. Eddie’s pacing, he can’t sit in one place, he feels restless, his whole body longs for Buck, he needs to see him, touch him, make sure his heart is beating. He’s almost certain that if Buck’s heart stops, so will Eddie’s. He has to be fine. Has to, there’s no other option, because the world without Buck- the world without Buck would lose all its color, light, and happiness. And Eddie would have to- he’d have look into their kid’s eyes, and tell him once again, that his parent is-
He feels like he’s going to throw up. He can’t even think those words.
He doesn’t know how long it takes until he can see Buck. It might be hours, maybe days, maybe weeks, hell, he might as well have spent years just pacing this corridor, waiting for news about his- about his Buck. It feels like it, at least.
Buck’s in a medically induced coma. And when Eddie finally sees him, lying there, a tube in his throat, plugged into all the machines that keep him alive, he loses it again. It’s not a panic attack this time. He walks up to the bed and, with shaking hands, takes one of Buck’s lifeless hands into his, and then promptly falls to his knees, onto the floor. He starts crying, sobbing, bawling, and he doesn’t stop. He doesn’t care if anyone sees him, he’s not even sure anyone else is in the room right now, no one else exists but Buck and him.
“Buck.” he whispers shakily, then repeats it a bit louder. “Buck.” His voice is hoarse, and he notices that his throat is sore. He remembers screaming Buck’s name at the top of his lungs earlier. He wants to keep screaming it, keep saying it, keep whispering it, keep repeating it, until Buck finally hears, and opens his wonderful eyes, looks at him, and flashes him the most charming of his smiles. But all he can do is sit here, hold Buck’s hand, and pray, pray to whoever’s listening, that his heart comes back to him, to them, to him and Chris. That his love will be fine. Because if he doesn’t… Eddie’s not going to be fine ever again.
#911 fic#911 spoilers#buddie fic#911 6x10#911 6x10 coda#6x10 coda#episode coda#buddie#angst#hurt/no comfort#panic attack#this is a mess#fanfic#my writing#wikiangela writes#buddie fanfic#eddie diaz pov#I think I hurt my own feelings with this one lmao why is this so sad
18 notes
·
View notes
Text
hope is a four letter word
diaz boys - rated g - 2k - 6x10 coda/6x11 spec
Buck’s been in a coma for three days, and Eddie hasn’t slept a wink.
None of them are sleeping well. It’s obvious from the dark circles under each and every eye he can’t quite bring himself to meet. But he knows they’re sleeping. He saw Hen conked out on Karen’s shoulder in the waiting room they’ve commandeered as home base for those not taking their turn with Buck. He overheard Chimney telling Athena he and Maddie haven’t managed more than a few hours total since the accident. He found Bobby at Buck’s bedside, head bowed, perhaps initially for prayer before the inevitability of sleep overtook him.
Eddie hasn’t managed any of it. It’s not for lack of trying. His brain just won’t shut down. Which is funny, really, because it feels like his brain isn’t actually functioning. Today Hen asked him if he wanted a sandwich from the cafeteria and he just stared at her. Couldn’t fathom what a sandwich even was, much less if he wanted one. Ate it when she brought him one even though he didn’t know if he was hungry, or what it tasted like.
All of this to say it’s no surprise to him when he’s on hour four of staring at his ceiling and sleep is still eluding him.
read the rest on ao3
133 notes
·
View notes
Text
throw a line out (i am on the way down)
7.2k - m - read on ao3 five times buck answered when eddie said "talk to me," and the one time he didn't
“Buck!”
He’d know that voice anywhere.
God, he loves hearing Eddie say his name. There’s something about it, something in the way that Eddie makes it sound special. Reverent. Like a promise.
He’s heard his name on Eddie’s lips more times than he can count, but it’s never sounded like this.
“Buck!”
Something’s different. Hazy. Buck’s body feels heavy, but his head feels light. He’s warm– not hot, but warm. Almost as if someone lit a candle inside him, like something’s aglow beneath his skin. He floats in the haze for a moment, content to let it sweep him away.
“Talk to me!” It’s Eddie yelling again. But he doesn’t sound like himself. Something is different.
There’s something in his voice Buck isn’t used to hearing. Something that takes him a moment to register, to put a name to.
Fear.
Eddie’s scared. But why? There’s nothing to be afraid of. Everything is warm and floaty and good. Everything is good. Eddie’s nearby. No, wait, Eddie’s here. Eddie’s hands are on him now. Buck knows that touch better than he knows his own.
And he hears Bobby, too.
Eddie’s here. Bobby’s here. There’s nothing to be scared of. He tries to open his mouth, tries to get the words out, to tell Eddie that it’s okay. That he doesn’t have to be afraid. But his mouth won’t work. The words won’t come. They swim around in his head, fighting the haze that grows thicker with each passing moment until they disappear.
“Talk to me!” Eddie yells again. Buck’s heard Eddie say that before.
Memories wash over him, pulling him deeper into the haze.
1.
“Metro Dispatch, this is Firefighter Eddie Diaz, Public Service Officer.” Eddie answers his cell phone on the second ring.
Buck’s not sure what he was expecting, but it sure as hell wasn’t that. “Firefighter Eddie Diaz?” he repeats, laughing. “What happened to hello ?”
Eddie sighs, and Buck doesn’t have to be in the room with him to know that he’s rubbing a hand over his forehead, trailing it down his face as he laughs alongside him. “Oh my god,” he groans. “I– I don’t even– I’m…” he stammers, clearly flustered.
Buck can picture the look on his face, can imagine the blush creeping up his neck and settling on the apples of his cheeks. God, the things Buck would do to be able to run his thumbs over his flushed cheeks, to kiss away his bashful grin. To have the privilege of knowing Eddie– of having Eddie– so intimately.
Eddie clears his throat. “Sorry. Guess I, uh, I’ve gotten a little too used to answering the phone at work.”
It’s been a month and Buck’s still not used to the fact that he and Eddie don’t work together anymore. He thought it would get easier the more time that passed, but the dull ache in his chest hasn’t let up since the day Eddie told them all the news.
And if Buck is being completely honest, hearing Eddie say ���work” and knowing that he doesn’t mean the 118 hurts a little more than he thought it would.
Buck opts for levity in an attempt to push past the pang of sadness. “I mean, if you want to change it up, there are plenty of other options.”
“Oh yeah?” Eddie asks. “What do you suggest?”
“What about ‘Howdy?’” Buck has to fight to keep a straight face. “Y’know, honor your roots and all that.”
There’s a pause, and Buck doesn’t have to be in the room with Eddie to know that he’s rolling his eyes.
And Buck could be mistaken. Maybe it’s a case of synchronicity, of Buck hearing what he so desperately wants to. But he swears Eddie sounds fond as he says, “Maybe not.”
“Okay,” Buck concedes. “Forget your Texan blood. You could go more authoritative.”
“More authoritative? Eddie echoes. “Like what?” he drops his voice lower, more serious. “Talk to me.”
Buck laughs. “Definitely a contender.”
“I’ll take it under advisement.”
“As you should.”
“Might be a good idea to switch it up,” Eddie says. “I’m on the phone all day. Only a matter of time until I lose my mind.”
“More than you already have,” Buck ribs.
“Yeah,” Eddie agrees. He keeps his tone light, but there’s something serious hiding beneath it, something Buck picks up on from the single syllable alone. Before he can press, Eddie continues, “So… to what do I owe the pleasure?”
“Well,” Buck begins, heaving a sigh. “Remember how I saved your life?”
“Which time?”
“You pick,” Buck quips. He can hear Eddie moving around. Putting things away, opening and closing the refrigerator door. He recognizes the sound of Eddie’s dishwasher kicking on. A sudden and overwhelming sense of longing hits him over the head without warning. Which shouldn’t make any sense– who longs to clean up the kitchen? And yet he aches for it. Putting dishes away and taking out the trash. Dumping clean laundry on the bed and matching up socks.
Something about being with Eddie makes even the most mundane task feel like sacred privilege.
“I’m calling to see if I can cash in a favor,” Buck says.
He’s expecting a smart response, something witty or sarcastic. Maybe a playful ribbing. What he gets instead is a simple “Anything.”
There’s something about the way Eddie says it that has Buck feeling warm inside. It’s simple and it’s easy and it’s honest. Eddie means it. Anything.
Anything.
It’s welcome and it’s appreciated and it means more to Buck than he thinks he could ever put into words. But it’s equal parts disarming, and it takes Buck a second to recover from the unexpectedness of it all. “Uh, well, my– washer’s broken,” he explains. “It’s been busted for a few days now and it’s something with the water lines cause all my neighbors’ are broken too and my landlord said he’d have someone come take a look but that was on Friday and it’s Tuesday now and he still hasn’t gotten anyone out and I don’t want to bug Maddie right now since she just got back and I–”
“Buck,” Eddie cuts in.
“I’m rambling,” Buck realizes.
“You’re rambling,” Eddie confirms. This time Buck is absolutely certain he isn’t imagining the fondness in Eddie’s voice.
On a totally unrelated note, there are butterflies in his stomach.
He takes a breath. “Sorry.”
“No need,” Eddie assures him. “Come do your laundry here.”
“You sure?” Buck asks, all but holding his breath as he waits for Eddie’s response.
He doesn’t have to wait long, as Eddie answers without so much as a second’s hesitation. “Of course.”
“Thank you,” Buck says. “I tried to go to the laundromat around the corner yesterday but I guess everyone in the building had the same idea because all the machines were in use and when I called just now they said everything is still taken and I’m out of clean work shirts and I don’t think anyone at the 118 would appreciate it if I showed up for my shift tomorrow in last shift’s clothes and I–”
“You don’t have to explain yourself,” Eddie assures him. “The offer stands. Even if your landlord has it fixed by the time you get your clothes off the floor and into a laundry basket.”
Ah, yes. There’s the gentle teasing Buck had been expecting.
Buck scoffs, feigning hurt. “What makes you think my clothes aren’t already in a basket?”
“I’ve seen your bedroom floor. Or rather, the lack thereof,” Eddie says. “Worse than Christopher,” he muses.
There’s a long pause. Buck can’t really argue with that. “Fine,” he concedes. “You win.”
“Chris is at science club until six, but if you get here by then you can come with me to pick him up?” Eddie says. It has the workings of a question, with the way his voice ticks up at the end. There’s something hopeful there.
Buck’s smile stretches so wide, he wonders if Eddie can hear it through the phone. “Done.”
2.
Traffic is the third certainty to life when living in L.A.
Death, taxes, and bumper-to-bumper on the 405.
Buck knows this to be true. He used to hate it, used to sit in traffic longing for his old motorcycle, imagining weaving through the slow-moving cars and feeling the wind in his face.
But lately, he hasn’t minded it so much. Not when Eddie’s beside him, drumming his fingers on the steering wheel and humming underneath his breath, stealing glances at him across the center console and listening to him ramble on about whatever’s on his mind.
Sometimes, Buck finds himself wishing for traffic– hoping that their twenty minute drive might turn into thirty or forty, that he might be lucky enough to steal those extra moments with Eddie.
And he’s grateful– so, so grateful for these moments, for this time with Eddie– he’ll never not be grateful when Eddie’s beside him. But if everyone could get a fucking move on today, that would be great.
“We’re going to be late,” Buck mutters, craning his neck in an attempt to see around the cars in front of them.
“It’s fine,” Eddie assures him, seemingly unbothered from where he sits in the passenger seat.
Buck huffs out a sigh, tightening his grip on the steering wheel. “No it’s not.”
“Baby,” Eddie says gently. “It’s okay. They can wait for a few minutes.”
Buck can only imagine the things that Eddie’s parents could be thinking– could be saying to each other– while they wait outside of LAX for the two of them to pull up. He’s met them before, and they were fine, but that was when he was just Eddie’s partner. Now that he’s Eddie’s partner, things are different. He doesn't want them thinking he’s irresponsible. Or unreliable. Or worse, that he doesn’t respect them.
He doesn't know what exactly they think about him and Eddie being together. It only happened a couple of months ago, after Eddie got back from visiting El Paso for his dad’s retirement party. Buck had driven this same route, had picked him and Chris up outside of arrivals when their flight got in. It was late and they were exhausted– Christopher was asleep in the back seat by the time they hit the freeway– and Eddie was unusually quiet the whole way home.
When they got to Eddie’s, Buck carried a still-sleeping Christopher inside while Eddie got the bags. They put him to bed and Eddie pulled two beers from the fridge and said, “Stay.”
Buck took the bottle from his outstretched hand and said, “Okay.”
Eddie held his gaze, something soft and vulnerable and a little hopeful in his eyes. “Forever.”
Buck’s breath caught in his throat, his heart hammered in his chest. Eddie had somehow given him everything he’d ever wanted, offered him everything he’d ever dreamed of, in one single word. Buck swallowed around the sudden dryness in his throat and dug his fingernails into the heel of his palm hard enough to leave crescent-shaped marks. But he didn’t wake up. It wasn’t a dream.
His eyes shone as he looked at Eddie. “Okay.”
“Okay,” Eddie repeated, taking a step forward and closing the gap between them. Buck can’t remember who moved first, who kissed who.
All he remembers is the slowest, sweetest, most perfect kiss of his life. How Eddie’s lips tasted like beer and his hands felt like home. How something inside of him instantly settled, how for the first time in his life, his brain felt quiet and his heart felt whole.
“Forever,” Buck breathed, the word lost on his lips as Eddie kissed him again.
And so it was.
Eddie told his parents a few weeks ago. With Christopher’s birthday coming up, he was hoping they’d be willing to make the trip. He’d called to see if they’d let him fly them out for Christopher’s birthday. Between Buck and Pepa, his birthday party was shaping up to be the event of the decade. He knew the only thing that could make his son happier than the cotton candy machine, video game truck, and four (yes, four ) piñatas already hidden in Eddie’s closet was a surprise visit from his grandparents.
So he called and asked. They were on board before Eddie could even get to the details, which had Buck sighing with relief from where he sat beside Eddie as he spoke to them. He had placed a reassuring hand on Eddie’s shoulder, his chest swelling as Eddie all but melted into his touch.
Eddie went on to tell them about their relationship, and Buck waited with bated breath for their reaction. Not that it would change anything about how he felt for Eddie– nothing could– but he knew how important this was to Eddie, how even though his parents had let him down so many times before, there was still some tiny, hopeful part of him eager for their approval. Buck knew the feeling.
“Are you happy, mijo?” Eddie’s dad had asked. Eddie looked up at Buck, smiling as their eyes met.
“Yeah,” Eddie answered, holding Buck’s gaze as he spoke. “More than ever.”
“Then so are we,” Ramon said.
And now they’re here. Well, they will be if Buck and Eddie ever actually make it to the airport. His stomach churns with anxiety as the traffic inches forward.
It’s crawling so slowly that he hasn’t even used the gas pedal in the last few minutes, just lifts his foot off the brake every time the car in front moves forward another half a foot.
The reality of the situation is that Buck spent the last two hours tracking their flight, watching the little airplane icon make its way across New Mexico and Arizona and into California. He announced it was time to leave for the airport a half hour before the Diazes even landed. Eddie had pushed back, pointing out that the airport is only twenty minutes away and it would be at least an hour before his parents landed, deplaned, and got their luggage.
“But what if they didn’t check a bag?” Buck had asked. Eddie had dropped a kiss to his forehead, smoothing out the worry lines. He didn’t dig his heels in, didn’t insist they could wait. He just walked to the front door and pulled his shoes on, and Buck loved him for it.
“Your car or mine?”
And it was a good thing they left when they did. They’ve been in the car for almost an hour, and they still have another two miles to go. Eddie’s parents texted ten minutes ago that they were off the plane and heading to baggage claim, which did absolutely nothing to calm the nerves buzzing beneath Buck’s skin.
“Let’s go!” Buck shouts at the cars ahead of them, slamming his hands on the steering wheel in frustration. “Should’ve taken La Cienega,” he mumbles, to himself more than anything.
Eddie places a hand on his thigh, squeezing reassuringly. “It’s okay. You know how many times they were late picking me up from things as a kid? We could show up tomorrow and it still wouldn’t be even.”
And okay, that does help a little bit. It doesn’t make Buck feel better completely, but it does help to untangle the ball nerves that’s formed behind his chest.
“How are you not going crazy?” Buck asks after a minute, tearing his eyes away from the long line of cars in front of them long enough to glance over at Eddie.
Eddie shrugs. “Nothing we can do about it.”
Practically speaking, Eddie’s right. Technically speaking, though, Buck could pull into the shoulder and speed around the congestion. But Eddie had shut that idea down about twenty minutes ago. And again ten minutes ago when Buck looked over at him with what could only be described as mischief in his eyes.
Buck groans, rolling his eyes and knocking the back of his head into the headrest.
Eddie looks at him for a long moment, nothing shy of completely smitten. “You done?” he asks after a beat.
“No,” Buck says, groaning once more, even louder than before. “Okay, now I am.”
Eddie shakes his head fondly. “Patience is a virtue, Buck.”
“Well, I think hurrying the fuck up should be a virtue,” Buck grumbles.
Eddie snorts, reaching for the radio and flipping through stations until he finds one that’s playing music instead of a commercial. “Oh, this is a good song!” he says excitedly, turning to Buck expectantly.
Buck gives him a blank look in return. He doesn’t think he’s ever heard this before.
“Wait, seriously?” Eddie asks incredulously. “It’s Stevie Nicks!”
Buck shrugs. He’s already grinning like an idiot, enjoying every second of watching Eddie get all excited over a song on the radio. But nothing– nothing could prepare him for the wave of adoration that crashes over him as Eddie starts to sing along.
“You can talk to me,” Eddie sings. “T-T-T-Talk to me.” He draws out the last word, smiling as he looks over at Buck. “Come on, you know this song!” he insists.
“I don’t!”
Even if he did, Buck wouldn’t admit to it now. Not if it meant he’d lose his front-row seat to this epic performance.
“This is the best part,” Eddie says, reaching for the dial and turning it louder before turning to Buck. “Let the walls burn down, set your secrets free.” He grins, reaching for Buck and cupping his chin in his hands. “You can break their bounds, cause you’re safe with me.”
And god, if that isn’t the truth. Buck has never felt safer with anyone than he has with Eddie.
When he was growing up in Hershey, there was this game all the neighborhood kids used to play at the town pool. They’d take turns swimming out in pairs to the middle of the deep end, reaching up and grabbing opposite edges of the diving board. Then, they’d hang off the edge for as long as they could, until someone dropped into the water and the other was crowned the victor. Buck has vivid memories of dangling there, knuckles white and muscles burning, determined to hang on longer than the kid opposite him.
Most of his friends would drop off the second they beat their opponent, but not Buck. He’d stay on until he physically couldn’t any more. Until his face would burn red, his muscles would ache, and no matter how hard he tried, he couldn’t hold on any longer.
So much of his life has felt the same– like he’s hanging on the edge, desperate to just keep holding on, to get a better grip on it all. And then he met Eddie. And suddenly, it was like the first summer where they started playing in teams instead of one on one.
Everything was easier.
He was still hanging there, still on the edge, but it was easier. He wasn’t on his own. When it got to be too much for him, there was someone beside him ready to tag him out, ready to share in the burden.
And it didn’t hurt anymore. He felt like he could hold on forever.
3.
Buck loves Eddie’s house.
He loves his own place, too– the loft has been good to him– but it’s not the same. It’s never felt like home. Not in the way that Eddie’s house does.
It took him a while to realize that’s what the feeling was. He spent the first two and a half decades of his life never really feeling at home anywhere. The feeling was so foreign to him that he didn’t recognize it once he had it. He knew that the ever-present current of anxiety thrumming beneath his skin suddenly quieted each time he was at Eddie’s. It was the same thing that happened every time he walked into the 118.
He just didn’t realize the feeling had a name at first.
Eddie’s house feels like home in a way his loft never has. In a way Abby’s place never did. In a way that his old apartment and all of the places he lived before landing at the 118 never did.
In a way his childhood home never did.
Not that Buck’s loft is all bad. It’s the first place he truly ever felt was his. It was the backdrop for some of the best moments in his life. Some of the worst, too. The loft is where he told Eddie he loved him for the first time. The loft is where Eddie said it back, not even a heartbeat later.
The loft is where Eddie first squeezed Buck’s hand three times, an unspoken I love you that quickly became woven into the fabric of their everyday lives. Three squeezes across the center console in the car just because. Three taps on the knee in the back of the engine as they pull up to a call. Three kisses stolen as they stand at the stove in their pajamas, flipping pancakes on Saturday mornings.
I love you. I love you. I love you.
And the loft does feel like home sometimes. It hasn't always, not the way that Eddie’s place always has. But sometimes. Like when when he wakes up to slow kisses and the smell of coffee as early-morning sunlight pours through the windows. When contagious laughter and video game sound effects echo off the high ceilings. And when his eyes catch on the second toothbrush beside his in the cup next to the bathroom sink.
And on nights like these, when he and Eddie are here together. Alone together. When Buck’s laid out on the bed, sheets that smell like Eddie balled up in his fists as breathy moans fall from his lips.
They’ve been caught up in each other since the day started bleeding into night, since pink and purple streaks crept into the blue sky, melting away into a deep, inky nighttime. Moonlight flooded through the windows, painting the walls in shadow as they held onto each other hard enough to leave marks and swapped bruising kisses that somehow still felt reverent.
It’s perfect. It’s absolutely everything.
Buck doesn’t know how he ever lived without this.
He’ll be the first to admit he’s had a lot of sex. Like… a lot of sex.
He’ll also be the first to admit that sex with Eddie is the best he’s ever had. Tenfold. By a landslide. No competition.
The first time was a revelation. It was different than any of the sex Buck had ever had, better. Beneath Eddie’s touch, Buck felt awake and alive and whole in ways he never had before.
It was slow and hot and absolutely perfect.
Buck spent the first few days waiting for the bubble to pop, expecting the initial flame to snuff out. Surely it was too good to be true. There was no way sex could be this good all the time, right?
Except it’s been months now, and it’s still just as good. Better, even, if that’s possible. The spark beneath Buck’s skin that was fanned into a flame beneath Eddie’s touch has only managed to burn brighter since that first night.
He can’t get enough.
He’s on his forearms and his knees tonight, Eddie draped over his back. He’s long since lost track of where he ends and Eddie begins, lost all concept of anything except the hot, filthy drag of Eddie’s cock inside him as he falls apart beneath each languid thrust.
Eddie drops a kiss to Buck’s shoulder, and every nerve ending in Buck’s body feels like it fires at once. He gasps, pants, dissolves into broken-off moans and hushed cries of please and Eddie and baby . He feels like he’s glowing, ecstasy shimmering in his veins.
“More,” Buck whines. He doesn’t mean to sound like he’s begging, but it comes out needy and desperate. He turns his head, hiding his face in the pillow as a blush creeps onto his cheeks.
The next thing he feels is Eddie’s hand on his face, his fingers on his jaw, a warm and welcome weight as he turns Buck’s face to the side.
“Talk to me, sweetheart,” Eddie murmurs, pressing a hot kiss to Buck’s temple. His breath is warm against Buck’s skin, and it sends sparks dancing across Buck’s skin. “Tell me what you want. Let me hear you.”
Buck wants to be closer, wants to feel it tomorrow, wants to forget everything except Eddie inside him. Eddie’s fingers on his hips. Eddie’s lips on his neck.
“Want to see you,” Buck breathes. “Want you to turn me over and fuck me like I’m yours.”
Eddie doesn’t have to be told twice.
4.
They’re standing in the cereal aisle when Eddie’s phone rings. Buck has a box of store brand Cheerios in one hand and a box of Frosted Flakes in the other. Christopher loves them both equally and the grocery list they made during a slow stretch on shift last night says cereal in Eddie’s neat capital letters. But it doesn’t specify which kind, but it doesn’t have to. They both know what Christopher likes. Buck can’t eat either one of them without thinking of the week Eddie spent in the hospital with a bullet hole in his chest. But Christopher loves them.
Buck holds the boxes up to Eddie as if to ask which one?
Eddie looks between the boxes, considering the choices.
“Both?” Buck suggests.
“Both,” Eddie nods, taking the boxes from Buck and placing them in the shopping cart. Buck would be lying if he said he was fully present. As much as he loves this– running errands with Eddie after a slow, quiet shift together– his mind is elsewhere today. He hopes it’s not obvious, but he suspects it is, if Eddie’s lingering looks are any indication.
He’s about to say something when Eddie’s phone rings. One look at the caller ID has him swearing under his breath, picking up the call immediately. Buck can only hear Eddie’s side of the conversation, but it’s all he needs. “Hello?... Oh, no… Yeah, of course. We’ll be right there… Is he doing alright? … We’re on the way now… Can you let him know?... Yeah, thank you.”
“What happened?” Buck asks the second Eddie pulls the phone from his ear to hang up the call.
Eddie sighs. “Stomach bug.”
The rest of their list is abandoned in favor of getting through the checkout and out of the store as quickly as possible, with only a quick stop for crackers and Pedialyte on the way to the register.
A couple minutes into the cross-town drive to Christopher’s school, Eddie’s hand comes to rest just above Buck’s knee.
The familiar touch pulls Buck out of his own mind. It’s only then that he realizes he was staring out the window so intently his vision had begun to go blurry. He blinks slowly, his vision returning to normal as he looks over at Eddie behind the wheel. Eddie’s looking at him expectantly. Shit. He must’ve said something when Buck was zoned out.
“Hmm?” Buck asks, blinking again. “Sorry.”
Eddie looks over at him as the truck rolls to a stop at a red light. “What’s going on in that head of yours?”
Buck shrugs. “Tired,” he lies. Well, technically, he is tired. They just got off shift, after all. But he and Eddie both know that’s not the reason why he’s been quieter than usual.
“That all?” Eddie asks gently.
Buck hesitates. He wants to talk to Eddie, longs for his advice and his assurances and the way he always manages to hear even the things Buck doesn’t voice out loud.
“It can wait,” he says. At least that’s closer to the truth. It can wait. Until Christopher is better.
Eddie raises an eyebrow. “Why should it have to? Whatever it is, it’s bothering you.”
Buck shrugs. Hesitates. “Christopher is sick. It–”
Eddie shoots Buck a knowing look, cutting him off. “So?”
Buck sighs. “I don’t know. I don’t want to be dropping a burden on your shoulders when you already have a sick kid to take care of.”
“First of all, we have a sick kid to take care of,” Eddie points out. “You’re on vomit duty this time. Or did you forget that you owe me one after November First?”
Buck can’t help but laugh at that. “In my defense, I was sick too!”
“You’re thirty years old,” Eddie reminds him. “You should know better than to eat that much Halloween candy in one sitting.”
“Christopher is smart for his age,” Buck points out. “Maybe he’s the one who should’ve known better.”
“Maybe you both need supervision when candy’s involved.”
“Maybe,” Buck concedes, a smile tugging at the corner of his lips.
“Second of all,” Eddie continues, steering their conversation back on track. “You are never a burden.” His voice is more serious now, more matter-of-fact. He’s not leaving any room for interpretation or argument.
Buck tries anyway. “But–”
“I’m serious.” Eddie squeezes Buck's knee reassuringly. Once. Twice. Three times. “Baby,” he says, his voice soft, gentle. “Please talk to me. Let me help.”
Buck absolutely melts. Between the pet name and the soft look in Eddie’s eyes, he folds almost instantly.
“My parents want to come and stay for a bit,” he says. “My dad texted me last night when we were getting back from the car fire on Wilshire.”
Eddie nods slowly. He makes a valiant effort to hide the disdain that creeps into his expression at Buck’s mention of his parents. He doesn’t quite succeed, but it’s successful in reminding Buck just how much he loves this man. As if he could ever forget.
“How do you feel about that?” Eddie asks, turning back to the road as the light turns green.
Buck shrugs. “I don’t know if I’m ready to see them yet.” He expects the truth to burn on his tongue, but it doesn’t. The sky doesn’t come crashing down on him, the ground doesn’t open up and swallow him whole. Eddie doesn’t give him a disgusted look and tell him he’s a terrible son and an even worse human being for thinking such a thing, let alone saying it out loud.
“No one could fault you for that,” is what Eddie says instead. “You’re still healing.”
Eddie’s response is so simple, so genuine– as if it’s the most obvious thing in the world. It splits something in Buck’s chest wide open.
“I– I’ve talked to them on the phone a couple of times since their visit last year,” Buck says. He’s been working really hard in therapy, and to their credit, he knows his parents have been trying on their end, too. But still, the thought of seeing them again has uneasiness curling in his gut and anxiety thrumming beneath his skin. “But… I don’t know. In-person is different.”
“Definitely,” Eddie agrees, pulling into the school parking lot. Buck can tell he’s trying his best to push past his own personal grudge against Phillip and Margaret for Buck’s sake, and something about that makes Buck love him even more.
“I– I’m just…” Buck’s voice trails off. He sighs. “I’m not sure what to do.”
Eddie pulls into a visitor’s spot and shifts the truck into park before turning to face Buck properly. “That’s okay,” Eddie assures him. “You don’t have to have all the answers.”
He brushes his thumb over Buck’s jaw, which is when Buck realizes he’s chewing on his bottom lip so hard it’s a miracle he hasn’t drawn blood. He releases it, sighs, and admits, “I wish I did.”
“Can I tell you what you do have?”
Buck nods. There’s not a thing on Earth that Buck could ever deny him. Beyond that, too. Eddie could ask him for a piece of the moon and all the stars in the night sky and Buck would find a way.
“You have great instincts,” Eddie says. “Trust yourself.”
“I distinctly remember you telling me I lack basic survival instincts,” Buck points out.
Eddie rolls his eyes fondly. “Certain instances notwithstanding,” he amends. “You should trust your gut.”
“You also have time,” Eddie continues. “You don’t have to give them an answer yet.”
Buck nods. Eddie’s right. He doesn’t have to rush into a decision– potentially the wrong one– just because some part of him feels like he owes his parents a quick response. He doesn’t owe them much of anything. And he certainly doesn't need to take on discomfort to ease theirs. He knows that. Eddie is quick to remind him any time he forgets.
“And you have a family here who loves you and who will support you no matter what you decide.”
Buck wonders how Eddie does that. How he always knows exactly what to say, exactly how to say it. How he isn’t scared of the darkness that sometimes swirls inside Buck’s mind. How he always manages to ease his way inside, to chase the darkness away and let the light in its place. He’s fearless in the face of the things that bring Buck to his knees and Buck has never loved anyone in the way he loves this man.
“Eddie,” Buck breathes. He’s not sure he could find any more words if he tried.
Eddie’s hand on the side of Buck’s face is a grounding weight, a welcome touch tethering him to this moment and keeping him from floating away or melting into the seat, especially when Eddie tips his chin up, seeking out his gaze, and says, “We’ll figure it out together.”
“Thank you,” Buck says, meeting him for a kiss. They keep it quick, lest they get carried away in the school parking lot about to pick up a vomiting child. “Let’s go,” he says, pulling back and unbuckling his seatbelt. Eddie smiles at him fondly as they get out of the truck.
Five minutes later, Buck is holding the front door of the school open as Eddie carries a very sick, very tired Christopher to the car. Buck knows for a fact that his next 24 hours are going to be filled with vomit and thermometers and disinfectant and reminding Eddie to breathe through his mouth so he doesn’t gag. But they’ll be together. They’ll figure it out together.
There’s nothing in the world that sounds better.
5.
The tension began rising as they headed out of the firehouse and across the parking lot to Buck’s Jeep. Silence stretched between them, hanging heavy in the air as Buck pulled onto the main road.
Around the corner from Eddie’s, he decides he can’t take it anymore. “Okay, what?” he asks, turning to face Eddie as they wait at a red light.
“What?” Eddie asks. Buck can’t help but notice how tired Eddie looks. It was far from the longest or weirdest shift they ever had, and their last call had them back at the station and in their bunks a little after two o���clock. Bobby had sent everyone to wash up and get some sleep as soon as they got back, but the alarm never rang again. Buck had slept straight through until Eddie nudged him awake a few minutes before shift change at seven. He had assumed Eddie had done the same, but he’s wondering now, given the sunken-in circles beneath Eddie’s eyes, if he’s mistaken.
"What ?” Buck echoes, pulling into Eddie’s driveway and parking behind his truck. “What do you mean what? You’ve barely said a word to me in twelve hours.”
He gets out of the car, and it’s possible that he closes the door a little harder than he needs to.
“That’s not true,” Eddie slams his own door, too.
“Yes it is.” Buck’s well aware of how petulant he sounds, but he can’t find it in himself to care. Eddie unlocks the front door, holding it open for Buck before following him inside and closing the door behind them.
Buck doesn’t miss the significance of it. How even when they’re fighting– even if Eddie won’t admit that they’re fighting– Eddie still holds the door for him. He still holds out a hand to take Buck’s coat and hang it up beside his own. He still stomps over to the thermostat and kicks it up two degrees because he knows Buck runs cold.
Not a day goes by when he doesn’t feel like the luckiest man in the world, having the privilege of knowing a love like this.
“You’re mad at me,” Buck says, following Eddie into the kitchen. “Aren’t you?”
He doesn’t mean to sound so needy, so desperate. An older version of himself would hate that, but he’s never felt like he’s had to pretend around Eddie.
Eddie heaves a sigh, opening a cabinet and pulling the can of coffee grounds down. “Drop it, Buck.”
“That’s not a no.”
“Buck,” Eddie warns, stabbing at the buttons on the coffee pot like they’ve personally offended him. As soon as it starts brewing, he opens the dishwasher and starts pulling out clean dishes. Buck starts putting plates away as Eddie reaches for the silverware basket.
“Be careful,” Buck warns, having visions of Eddie accidentally impaling his hand on a fork in his haste.
“Don’t talk to me about being careful after you chased a drunk driver last night,” Eddie shoots back.
There it is.
“I wasn’t in any danger,” he says. He’s not sure why he thinks that line will work on Eddie. It definitely didn’t work on Bobby, who laid into him as soon as they got back to the station.
Eddie scoffs. “What were you thinking?” he demands.
“I don’t know,” Buck says with a noncommittal shrug. He knows Eddie’s not going to like that answer. But he’s not going to lie, either.
“You weren’t thinking!” Eddie all but shouts. “You got on that bike without any regard for your safety.”
Buck hasn’t seen him mad like this in… god, he doesn't even know how long. Maybe since the day he got all broody and finger-pointy in the grocery store during Buck’s lawsuit. He’d be lying if he said it didn’t turn him on a little bit. But a quick read of the room determines it’s neither the time nor the place to dig into that a little more.
“My safety?” Buck scoffs. “It’s a bike, Eddie, not an infantry tank.”
“A bike that had already been hit once by the driver you started chasing after!” Eddie argues. “Or did you forget about the broken fibula and the four totaled cars he left in his wake?”
And– well, okay. Eddie has a point there. But it’ll be a cold day in hell when Buck gives him the satisfaction. “It’s not a big deal,” he insists.
“Not a big deal,” Eddie echoes. “Not a big deal? You could have died!”
“But I didn’t,” Buck points out.
“But you could have. And then what?” All the fight is gone from Eddie’s voice. He looks absolutely destroyed.
It’s now, in the light of the morning, that Buck notices just how heavy the circles beneath Eddie’s eyes are, confirming his suspicions that he hadn’t slept much last night– if at all. His hair is sticking out, broken free from its gelled-down hold more than it’s ever been at the end of shift. Buck’s never been a betting man, but he’d put every penny to his name down on odds that Eddie spent much of the night pulling at his hair, tugging on it in the way he tends to when big feelings swell up inside him like waves at high tide, threatening to consume him.
Touch has always been Eddie’s anchor, the thing that grounds him when his mind starts to drift away. He needs to feel something, feel grounded. It makes sense to Buck that Eddie tugs at his own hair when it all gets to be too much. But he’d be lying if he said there wasn't a pang of guilt in his chest knowing that he’s partly to blame.
It hits twice as hard when he thinks about how he spent his night— sleeping soundly in the next bunk, without a clue that Eddie was lying awake beside him, his sleep held hostage by his own thoughts.
“I’m sorry,” Buck says. There are silent promises in his apology, unsaid vows behind the two small words. I’m sorry. I won’t do it again. I’m sorry. I love you. I’m sorry.
Eddie knows. Buck can tell from the way his face softens, the way that tears fill his eyes as he holds Buck’s gaze. Eddie knows.
“I– I can’t,” Eddie begins. “I can’t lose you. Okay? I–”
Buck nods, cutting him off and pulling him into a hug. “I know,” he murmurs. “I know, baby. I’m sorry.”
“I can’t lose you,” Eddie says again, his words muffled against Buck’s neck.
Buck takes a long, deep breath. He holds Eddie close, presses three tiny kisses to the top of his head, and makes the one promise he knows isn’t his to keep.
“You won’t.”
+1
Eddie’s voice is the first thing he hears.
He’s not sure where he is, or why everything feels so heavy. He can’t lift his arms. Can’t open his eyes. Something’s beeping steadily in the background. But everything’s okay. Eddie’s here.
“You’re gonna be okay, Buck,” Eddie says. His voice is wobbly. Unsteady in a way it never is. “You’re gonna wake up.” He clears his throat. Sniffles.
It sounds like he’s been crying, and something about that has Buck feeling like his heart might split in two.
“You’re gonna wake up,” Eddie repeats. “You’re gonna wake up and you’re gonna talk to me about psychedelic fish off the coast of Indonesia and the newest moon they found in Jupiter’s orbit and the chances of being struck by lightning. You’re gonna be fine, baby.”
“I’m not gonna lose you,” Eddie says, brushing Buck’s hair back and letting his hand linger, cupping the side of his face gently. “You promised.”
Buck registers the weight of Eddie’s hand in his own, their fingers laced together.
It takes all of his strength, everything he has. But he squeezes.
Once. Twice. Three times.
#my writing#take a shot every time i use the word 'fond' in this fic#also every time i make a swimming pool reference#yeah i know#i'm just as confused about that one as u are#if you've been on my blog before it will not surprise you to know that princessfbi enabled me and is to blame for this#buddie#buddie fic#911 6x10#6x10 coda#kinda??#coda adjacent#evan buckley#eddie diaz#this is pretty soft i'm not gonna lie#there's also a lil bit of sex so be warned if that's not your thing#minors dni#buck x eddie
141 notes
·
View notes
Text
Weep, and call it singing
Buddie | 6x10 coda | 1200-ish words | not rated
Now posted on AO3 here.
Title from "Call It Dreaming" by Iron & Wine
On the third day of Buck’s medically-induced coma, Eddie wills himself out of the hard, plastic hospital chair and announces that he’s going to check on Buck’s apartment.
He doesn’t do it to be helpful or because he needs something useful to do. Going through the motions of living is almost more than Eddie can manage at the moment. He’s too exhausted and numb for much else. Time has slowed to an impossible degree. Every breath pushed into Buck’s lungs, every beep of the monitors around his bed, seems to mark another hour gone by rather than a few seconds. Every night stretches out like an endless void.
No, Eddie offers to go because, after three days, he really needs a break from the other people keeping vigil in Buck’s hospital room.
There’s a rotating cast of Buckleys and Hans here every minute of visiting hours, at least two and sometimes more. When it’s Chimney or Maddie or Albert, Eddie gets these indecipherable looks—of sympathy, definitely, but also a knowingness that’s starting to get on his nerves. Buck’s parents are worse. They seem to view him as some kind of intruder in their family crisis. Watching them at their son’s bedside, stoic and silent, fills Eddie with low-simmering rage. Why are YOU here, he wants to ask them. You don’t know him like we do. You don’t love him like we do.
So even though Eddie doesn’t want to leave Buck’s side, he volunteers for a task that will take him to a place where he knows he belongs—and back to a time when he didn’t question exactly how Buck fit into his life. Because Eddie has been asking himself some pretty damn uncomfortable questions since that lightning strike.
The Buckley parents frown when Eddie assures Maddie that he has his own key to Buck’s place. He takes great pleasure in firmly declining Margaret’s offer to come with him. To the best of Eddie’s knowledge, Buck’s parents have never visited his apartment. He might not want her there, in his safe space, Eddie reasons. Secretly, he also wants to keep as much of Buck as he can for himself right now.
The air in the apartment already feels stale, with a hint of trapped humidity from the rain that’s long gone. Midday sunlight illuminates the white marble floor, so bright that it’s painful. After opening the door to the balcony to let in some fresh air, Eddie falters. The apartment feels as hollow as an empty nautilus shell.
Buck’s going to come home again, Eddie tells himself. There’ll be more dinners around the big table, more game nights—well, assuming Buck ever gets around to buying a new couch. Buck will bustle around the kitchen, his and Chris’ laughter will fill the echoing space, and Eddie—
Eddie will never, ever take any of it for granted again.
Swallowing against the tightness in his throat, he squares his shoulders and gets to work. He goes to the fridge first. There’s not much there, but then again, Buck was probably eating at Maddie and Chim’s house a lot once his parents arrived. Eddie finds a small carton of oat milk that he knows is especially for his and Hen’s coffee. It smells like it’s starting to go bad, so he pours it down the sink, along with a plastic takeout container of hot and sour soup that Buck must have ordered when had a cold last week. The softening berries and browning lettuce go in the garbage can next, followed by the half loaf of multigrain bread from the cabinet. Once the food is taken care of, Eddie washes out the coffee pot and empties the dishwasher.
And then Eddie has to stop, because it feels too much like cleaning out someone’s house after they…
No. He won’t let himself think that way. There’s nothing to grieve about. There’s hope to hold onto. There are still prayers to be said, if one is inclined. Just yesterday, Bobby and Athena sat beside Buck with their heads bowed and hands clasped together, and Eddie could almost hear the echo of his abuela’s voice as he watched them. Padre nuestro, que estás en el cielo… Eddie hasn’t been able to bring himself to try it, though. It’s been a long time since he found comfort in prayer, or believed that help might come simply because he asked for it.
He knows too damn well that sometimes help never comes.
Eddie is saved from his thoughts by a small, galvanized steel watering can on the windowsill above the kitchen sink. That’s something else he can do. It will be as if Buck went out of town and asked Eddie to water his plants while he’s gone—ignoring the fact that Eddie is possibly the least qualified person for the task. He can’t even keep a cactus alive. Eddie has a feeling Buck would have faith in him anyway.
The plants on the balcony don’t need watering, thanks to all the recent rain. There are a few small ones scattered around inside, so Eddie circles through the kitchen and living room and dutifully gives each of them some water. Hopefully not too much. He’ll just buy new plants to replace any that he accidentally kills, that’s all. Buck will probably laugh about it later if it comes to that.
He can’t remember if there are any houseplants upstairs, so he climbs the stairs to the bedroom. At the top, he stops, immobilized by the sight before him: Buck’s unmade bed, last slept in four days ago, before their disastrous shift. Eddie sets the watering can on the floor.
Was Buck running late that morning? Was he in such a hurry that he didn’t have time to flip the duvet back over the mattress? Eddie can almost see it in his mind: Buck rushing around, pulling on a jacket and patting his pockets to make sure he has his phone and his keys, the way he always does when he’s about to leave someplace. What was he wearing when he showed up at the firehouse that day? Eddie can’t remember. It feels like a month ago.
With a sigh, he goes to the bed and attempts to shake the wrinkles out of the duvet, but apparently wrangling duvets is another thing that Eddie is bad at. He only manages to make it somewhat smoother than before. The effort leaves him drained, and he sits on the edge of the bed—undoing all his work, no doubt—to rest a minute. God, he’s so tired.
Twisting to the side, Eddie starts straightening the pillows that are piled up in front of the headboard. Beneath them, he finds a black hoodie. It must be the one that Buck last slept in. Eddie holds it up, intending to fold it, but finds himself pressing the fabric to his face instead. Oh. It smells like…
Buck.
He was right here, safe and well, asleep. Eddie’s eyes fill with tears as something cracks open inside him.
Buck.
His chest felt so solid and warm under Eddie’s hands when he took over from Chimney. Please. Please. Please. Twenty times he silently begged, once for each compression. Then paused, so Hen could give Buck two breaths. Then twenty more compressions as the gurney was wheeled into the ER and the raindrops ran down Buck’s lifeless face. Please. Please. Please.
Not a prayer. A plea: Don’t leave me. Don’t leave me yet.
With a shuddering gasp, Eddie tips onto Buck’s pillows and weeps.
41 notes
·
View notes
Text
Hold on
Eddie's control over his emotions had been integral to his survival in the past. But the second Eddie's eyes fall on Buck's limp body suspended mid air, the second his brain has caught on to what this means, to what this could mean, all the control in him evaporates. Buck's name tears from his throat without his doing.
Read on AO3
3,2k words, 6x10 and 6x11 coda
They know. They all know the second Buck's limp body comes into their view.
Eddie knows, too. And Eddie knows that Hen, Chim and Bobby know what this sight means just as much as Eddie does.
But Eddie refuses to accept it. He lets the reality ricochet off himself and throws it back at the universe.
No. This is not acceptable.
He doesn't accept the harsh statistics cause this is Buck and Buck always comes out ok at the end.
It doesn't HAVE to mean that… Buck's heart is strong, stronger than most. The lightning must've simply knocked him out. Just for a moment.
The thing is that ever since that day where he had found out about Mills, ever since everything crumbled in him, ever since all that control he so desperately had hung on to exploded into blind rage and despair and fell apart and landed onto nothing but fear; ever since then something in Eddie has been cracked open. Just like Frank had said. The box he'd built around all the pain had exploded.
He knows what it is. He's talked around it in therapy and when Frank asked him, "What did this control serve? Why did you feel the need to hide behind it?" he finally understood.
Growing up, it was always expected of him. To be the strong one, the one to keep his cool and to fill in the role of his father when he wasn't around, or even when he was.
Thinking about this, it might've already moulded him for the army: Bite down, swallow the emotions, carry on.
It's what he needed to survive.
To survive the news that Shannon was pregnant which meant that he had to let go of the hopes and dreams he'd stored away somewhere in the back of his heart, to make room for Shannon and a kid and do what was expected of him.
To survive the news that their son, the only person he allowed himself to fully open his heart to, has CP.
To survive the tours.
He needed the control in order to make the decision to move to LA so he could give Christopher a better life.
Chris was all that mattered.
And then came Buck.
Buck who, after a short-lived misplaced hostility started to have Eddie's back like no one else before.
Buck who saw his son and directly made room for him in his big heart.
Buck who learned about his struggle and introduced him to Carla.
Buck who had saved his son.
Buck who goes to the zoo with Chris and makes homework with him and has running jokes with him which Eddie doesn't understand.
But even with Buck there, Eddie still had to hang on to that control.
He couldn't afford to pause and think about things.
He couldn't allow himself to break into the bad things of the past when the present demanded all of his attention; when his son and team needed him to function.
But somewhere in a hidden corner inside him, he knew he had it coming.
Maybe that's why he listened to others and asked Ana out.
It's easier to just do what's expected of you or even what people expect will be good for you rather than following your own heart.
Especially if it leads you to a place or a person that deserves the full you and not the you that's so desperately grasping the last bits of control to their chest.
He had known that the shield he had built around him had become thin and fragile with time.
Being shot gave it a crack he wasn't able to mend anymore. Then the panic attacks and Chris' worry rattled it so violently that he could feel the control slipping and slipping.
But control is what had allowed him to survive.
Until it all imploded and he found himself crying on his bedroom floor with a bat in his bloody hands.
And then Buck was there, willing to pick up the pieces and ready to give him reasons to replace the surviving with living.
That's how Eddie slowly found the courage to loosen the desperate grip he had on his control.
Eddie didn't lie when he told his father that he wants to become better for himself.
His life has been exhausting. Always keeping up the facade, always the strong one, no weakness allowed; not in front of anyone else anyway.
But then he watches Buck, how he loves and feels so freely and so much.
He witnesses Booby taking care of his kids and his team in every way possible.
Feels the enormous strength and compassion Hen holds for every patient and every person in her life.
He laughs at Chim's remarks and silly jokes and his heart warms when he sees the unconditional love he has for his daughter and partner and family.
And Eddie wants this for himself. He wants to feel free and not anchored to the ground by his self made chains.
He wants to be open, wants to share and wants to let in.
And it's Buck who's made this possible. And it's Buck who he's let in first.
Eddie knows he won't ever be able to wear his heart on his sleeve like Buck does and that's ok. But he wants to fill that hole inside him that the ever present control had ripped open and left him with. He wants to heal.
It's not that the habit of controlling his own emotions just vanished. But overall it somewhat softened.
His survival doesn't depend on it anymore.
He's still able to keep it together though, in order to do his job. He'd be a bad firefighter and paramedic if he wasn't able to keep a basic level of control.
But the second Eddie's eyes fall on Buck's limp body suspended mid air, the second his brain has caught on to what this means, to what this could mean, all the control in him evaporates.
Buck's name tears from his throat without his doing.
His body is almost too slow to follow his frantic brain as he scrambles to get up the ladder.
A bitter rational voice in him tells him that he should prepare himself in case he's too late, that he can't save him, that the lightning took Buck from him.
But Eddie doesn't care. He shuts that god awful voice up and counters it by shouting for Buck as loud as he can.
His only focus is to get to Buck and his name leaves Eddie's lips in a desperate mantra.
When he's finally at the top of the ladder the frantic thoughts in his brain tumble over themselves. His first instinct is to bring Buck closer to him, so he tries to pull him up but the rain makes everything slippery and he doesn't have enough leverage from this angel to pull Buck's dead weight up to him.
And Buck doesn't move, doesn’t respond to his frenzied shouts.
He needs him to move, to do something.
Eddie knows he won't respond. But he has to try, has to reach him somehow, has to remind Buck to fight.
"Can you hear me?" He feels like his brain is falling apart trying to understand what he sees and doesn't see in front of him. It's like his mind is melting when he tries to force Buck to answer through the sheer power of his will. Come on, talk to me, talk to me. Please.
But he's not moving. He's not moving.
"Buuuuck!!!" His name rips from Eddie's throat again. He puts his all into it. Desperate to reach Buck, to wake him up.
He knows he has to lower him to the ground. Everything in him recoils at the thought of letting Buck out of his proximity but he's not answering and as frantic and free falling as he feels, Eddie knows what he has to do to give Buck a chance. So he shouts for more slack and does his best to lower Buck down at a steady yet fast pace.
All the while he's trying to persuade Buck in his mind to 'Hang on, hang on, please hold on.'
As soon as Buck is transferred to the gurney, Eddie hurries to make his way down to him.
Telling himself that Buck is ok, that he'll be fine.
When he finally makes it to the ground, he's even more frantic. Before he has properly reached them, he yells at Bobby, Hen and Chim, begs them to give him Buck's status, "Talk to me, talk to me!"
But as soon as he's at Buck's side, Bobby pulls him away.
But it's too late. Eddie's seen him.
Eddie's seen his too still face, no bright eyes glinting at him, no crooked mischievous grin on full lips, no familiar voice reciting to him all the facts there are to know about storms and lightning like it had done the rest of the day.
It's not right. This is not right.
It's all so wrong.
The silence on Buck's lips is breaking him as Buck's name falls from his own.
But Bobby pushes him away, pulls him along and tells Eddie to drive and forces him to move.
Eddie feels wild as they're walking back to the front of the ambulance.
He'd never fight Bobby, doesn't question his commands but oh how he wants to right now.
He knows that Hen and Chim will do everything they can, that they won't give up, that they're good at what they're doing. Yet, all he wants to do is push Bobby away and get in the back of the ambulance to do something.
He should be with Buck. He owes it to Buck to save his life and he just can't bear the thought of Buck being alone right now.
Eddie knows he's not being reasonable. Buck isn't alone; people who love him are taking good care of him at this very moment.
But they're not Eddie. It's his place, his responsibility to be at Buck's side.
He promised Buck. Buck is his partner; they are supposed to have each other's back.
And he once promised Chris, too; to always look after Buck.
And he's failed. Eddie has failed his son, has failed Buck. He didn't see it coming, couldn't even pull Buck up to him.
Eddie knows that Bobby was right to push him back and make him be the one to drive. He's at least doing something that way while Chim and Hen are working on Buck.
And Eddie can feel it; feel it all crumbling around him at the edges and he's sure Bobby can see him falling apart.
Somewhere in the back of his mind, Eddie knows that Bobby is suffering, too. Buck is like a son to him.
Eddie has to control himself enough to get to the hospital as fast as he can; for Bobby, for Buck.
So he wipes his mouth which feels like it's foaming and pulls himself together enough to be able to climb into the driver's seat.
It's really funny how life plays out, isn't it? A lightning strike was the reason why he was buried alive; the reason he made Buck Christopher's legal guardian in case something happened to him.
Because Buck loves Chris like he's his own.
And now Buck is about to have an actual biological child which really will be less his than Christopher is and the lightning hits again;
possibly taking Buck from them, robbing Buck of the chance of being a father.
Somewhere out there someone probably would call this all poetic and theorize about the universe and destiny.
Eddie, however, is angry.
He's angry at the universe, angry at the storm, angry at himself.
Cause he didn't plan for this. It's never been a question to him if Buck would still be there in case something happens to Eddie himself. It was always a given.
After all, it's been Eddie who's had multiple brushes with death. Buck was always supposed to live, to survive.
Eddie, though…. If he's honest with himself he's been anticipating death's cold claws closing around his heart ever since they went down in that chopper.
And he wouldn't care much if it wasn't for Chris.
But when Buck had told him that day, that it would've been better if it had been him who was shot, when he so clearly revealed how little he values his own life, Eddie had to tell him. He had to make sure that Buck would fight, for himself and for his son.
It gave him a certain kind of peace knowing Buck would be there, Buck would survive.
He never planned on the possibility that Buck wouldn't be there.
Buck has been their safety net. He's saved Chris, he's saved Eddie. He's been their friend, confidant, partner.
He's always had their backs. And now, now Eddie had failed to have his.
And that's just not acceptable. It's not what Buck deserves. It's not enough.
Eddie really had thought he loved Shannon and he did and it hurt when she died.
They were friends once and she's Christopher's mother, how can he not love her?
But he understands now that this love wasn't the love he wanted it to be or that he thought it to be.
No. That kind of love is something that has grown over the past few years. He didn't even understand or realize it at first but as he sees Buck's lifeless body on the gurney, he knows. He's known it before somewhere deep down and he's been content with leaving it there. But now it's risen to the surface and he can't push it back, he doesn't want to. Because it belongs to Buck and he's not going to deny him this, he's not going to withhold it from him. Buck deserves this kind of love.
Eddie doesn't care if it's reciprocated. It's his to give and Buck's to receive.
The second he brings the ambulance to a halt, he's out of the door and at its back. As soon as the door is opened and the gurney is being moved out, Eddie's hands are on Buck's chest to keep the compressions going.
When Chim motions to take over again, he doesn't budge.
This is his place. This is where he needs to be right now. It's him who has to pump the life back into Buck's heart.
Opposite him Bobby rattles down the facts of who they're bringing in and what happened before Chim orders to shock Buck. Eddie barely lets go, leaving only the smallest bit of space between him and Buck. He watches Buck's chest being lifted off the gurney by the force of yet another electrical shock coursing through his body. The second Chim needs to press his fingers against Buck's pulse points doesn't seem to pass and Eddie feels like he's sinking into tar like nothingness.
But then Chimney declares, "He's got a pulse!" And Eddie's knees almost buckle.
He doesn't care about the tear falling from his eyelashes.
The doctors and nurses take over and Eddie almost grabs for them, for Buck. He knows though that they are the ones who are more qualified now.
So he lets go and just watches Buck being wheeled into the ER.
Eddie doesn't quite pay attention to what Bobby is telling the nurses beside him but when the doctor says, "We do our best" as they’re disappearing around the corner with Buck he can't help himself.
His anger and own helplessness push the words up his throat before he can think about it, "Do more!"
Because that is what Buck deserves. Best is not enough. Because Buck is always doing more than 'best' and somehow Eddie needs to fix this imbalance right there and then. 'Best' can’t ever be enough. Not for Buck.
Buck deserves the world because he is so integral to Eddie's world and to the lives of the rest of their family that it would all crumble and burn without him in it.
And then Buck vanishes out of his view.
For a moment Eddie can't move, his eyes fixed on the corridor in front of him, his brain not able to process any of it.
But when Bobby moves he forces himself to do the same.
None of them is able to say anything. The shock and horror of what just happened clearly written on all their faces.
Eddie drags himself a few steps back struggling to not completely break right there and then. A few more tears fall from his eyes as he's trying to blink them back while he wraps an arm around Chim who in turn pulls him into his side and Eddie takes a deep breath in to keep himself from falling apart when Bobby places his arm around Eddie's shoulder from the other side.
For a long while they just stand there arm and arm. None of them able and maybe not willing to accept the reality that Buck's life is now in the hands of strangers behind closed doors.
That their Buck is not with them.
That they all just had a lifeless Buck under their hands, his dead body.
The horror of this sudden realization knocks the breath out of Eddie's lungs and his knees buckle.
Bobby and Chim catch him and Hen is in front of him in an instant.
He can't decipher any of their words over the rushing noise in his ears.
His uniform suddenly feels too tight and he tries to pry it off with his hands. The hands that just had to pump blood through Buck's heart cause it wasn't doing that on its own anymore.
Black spots start to dance in his vision. He feels hands on his cheeks and suddenly Hen's face comes into a blurry focus.
Somehow her words make it through to him, maybe it's her tone, so gentle and warm, "Eddie, you're having a panic attack. I need you to breathe with me."
And Eddie?
Eddie laughs. Of course he has one right now. Of course.
They're about to call for someone to bring another gurney but the images of Buck's body unmoving in front of him flash up before his eyes and he croaks out a, "No. No. 's ok."
And for some reason they don't argue with him. Instead, Bobby and Chim guide him sideways, sit down on the ground with him and don't let go while Eddie does his best to follow Hen's instructions and to pull himself back together.
In the back of his mind he thinks of Chris and then a rapid sequence of half formed thoughts rush through his brain and it feels like his heart is shattering.
He feels like a little boy crying for his mother when all he can think is that he just wants to be at Buck's side, wants to hear his laugh, wants to see his smile, wants to watch him and Chris getting excited over one of the animals in the zoo; he wants to hold his hand.
His still uneven breath hitches and it's all he can do to turn into Bobby's chest when he starts crying as Buck's name leaves his throat in a choked whisper for one more time.
#buddie#fanfic#fanfiction#evan buckley#eddie diaz#911 on fox#bobby nash#6x10 coda#6x11 coda#at least I think so#6x10#i hope this all makes sense#cause I'm so sleep deprived#but I wanted to get it out before 6x11 aires#Chaos writes#Chaos' fics#Chaos' Buddie fics
33 notes
·
View notes
Text
Three Minutes
Rated G | 462 Words
He barely remembers it.
There are only bits and pieces of that day that have stuck with him.
Come on, Eddie!
Stay down! I'm gonna come. I got you!
Eddie, hang on.
Eddie…
Here, we got you. We got you.
I got you. Okay.
Hey, just…you just stay with me, okay?
You just hang on.
Just hang on.
You're so close.
We're so close, I just…
I need you to hang…
I need you to hang on.
Come on!
Come on, come on!
Eddie shakes himself out of the memory as he presses the gas pedal down to the floor. Bobby said they were three minutes out, but Eddie knows he can get them there quicker. He has to. Buck has already been down for too long.
Please hang on.
The city flies by, the siren and lights the only things breaking through the dark, rainy night.
We're so close. I need you to hang on.
He rounds the corner and pulls into the ER lot, straight to the door as quickly and safely as he can.
Please just hang on.
He throws the bus into park and flings himself out the door and into the downpour. The back is already open, and the gurney is being lowered to the ground.
Please.
He shoulders his way in next to the gurney and starts compressions before Chim or Hen have the chance.
Please.
“Come on, Buck. Stay with me,” he pleads as the gurney moves through the doors, Hen rattling off Buck's stats to the on call staff.
Please.
“You need to stay with me, Buck. I need you to stay with me,” Eddie keeps going. He can't stop, not until he fixes this.
Please.
“Buck, please,” his voice cracks a little, “I need you to stay with me.”
Please.
There are hands pulling on his shoulders, but Buck’s heart still isn't beating, so he can't stop yet.
Please.
“Eddie, we gotta move. Let them do their jobs.” Bobby is right, of course, but he doesn't understand. Eddie needs Buck’s heart to beat.
Please.
The hands on his shoulders are more insistent, and he's pulled off of the gurney.
“No! I need… I need to keep going! I need his heart to beat!”
Please.
The gurney continues to roll away, and Eddie realizes he's been crying when a tear lands on his shaking hand.
“Please,” he begs, “I need him.”
The gurney bursts through the doors.
But he can still hear it.
Even through the chaos and the general panic, he can hear it as the doors close, leaving him on the wrong side.
He can hear it.
Beep. Beep. Beep.
The monitor starts beeping steadily as Buck’s heart starts back up.
Eddie breathes a sigh of relief just before he collapses.
#buddie#buddie fanfic#buddie ficlet#911 fox#911 fanfic#911 ficlet#6x10 coda#evan buckley#eddie diaz#bobby nash#chimney han#hen wilson#jules writes
21 notes
·
View notes
Text
A buddie 6x10 coda
And it doesn't feel real. Because a second ago Buck was smiling at him, laughing and joking about the weather. And now he was hanging 40 feet in the air, his helmet cracked on the ground.
"Buck!" Eddie hears someone scream, maybe himself? Maybe Bobby.
None of that mattered right now. Buck.
Only Buck mattered right now.
"Cap! What do we do?" Someone screams, and Eddie wants to throw up. Because. Because Buck had flinched, he had tried to grab the line before hanging on to life by a threat.
So it doesn't matter what they choose to do.
The fire truck is slick with rain Eddies boots slipping ever so slightly as he runs up the ladder. None of that mattered right now. All that mattered was Buck. The top of the ladder made this all seem so unreal. Like this was just another ones of Eddies nightmares where everyone he cares about dies. Except it isn't. And if he doesn't hurry up, Buck will die. After everything Buck did to finally be happy, he doesn’t get to die, not if Eddie has a say in the matter.
"Eddie! Eddie get down! It's too dangerous!"
His radio crackled with Hens frantic voice. It doesn't matter.
His hand reach for the line connected to Bucks harness. Pulling until his arms burn and his feet slip. This is not how it's going to end.
Eddie needs Buck. More than ever. He can't just leave him hanging not after the amount of times that Buck saved Eddie.
The rain had soaked through the line, making it slip from Eddies hands. For every inch he pulled up he lost two. It wasn't fair. He has to save Buck.
"Hen! Get a ne-" The sky lit up brightly as Eddie lost his grip.
No, no no no. He had slid down half way, barely hanging on. No no no.
Eddie had to get back up, he had to.
Buck was counting on him. He had to be useful.
His radio crackled Bobbys voice cutting through the thunder "Diaz, do you copy?"
Eddie felt his arm ache barely holding on. Barely. His glove had fallen off at some point his hand wet and cold.
Another rumble from the sky and suddenly all he felt was unspeakable pain, in his entire body. He lost his grip and the last thing he heard was his head hitting the metall of the truck.
#911 fox#eddie diaz#evan buckley#buddie#911#911 spoilers#911 season 6 speculation#6x10#coda#911 speculation#6b speculation
21 notes
·
View notes
Text
This is the Moment of Just Letting Go
“Talk to me!” Eddie’s own voice rang in his ears as the sound of his heartbeat melded into the steady, unrelenting downpour around them.
His voice was raw, mangled, torn from chest in a way he couldn’t control. He wasn’t confident he sounded like himself anymore, but he didn’t care. It didn’t matter. He wasn’t sure anything could matter more than hearing Buck’s voice again.
If he didn’t focus on the way that Chimney was on top of Buck, if he ignored the hands that pushed down on his chest again and again, and just looked at Buck, it was almost like he was sleeping. Without Chimney’s hands, Buck’s chest moved on its own - just as it always had. Without everyone else around the gurney, it was like Buck had merely fallen asleep on them - like he did so often on Eddie’s couch after a few beers and some family time. Without the pouring rain, the lightning that came back in roaring bouts of thunder, the shouts of their team, and the turning of the wheels that led Buck into the back of the ambulance, Eddie could pretend that they were running a drill, that Buck was merely playing the part of a victim on the scene for some new training exercise that the department needed them to do.
But Eddie couldn’t ignore any of that.
The lightning flashed on in vicious mockery, the squeaky wheels on the gurney turned as they approached the doors, Chimney’s voice pleaded for Buck to come back to them, and Eddie’s voice began to fail him.
read on ao3
#I am so sorry for this#my brain just kind of got away from me and then this happened okay#buddie#911 spoilers#911 6x10#coda#fic#fanfiction#buddie fanfiction#I wrote this in a frenzy so please forgive typos 💀#Hailey writes
23 notes
·
View notes
Text
clarity of catastrophe
buck/eddie | 1.5k | Teen
“It came out of nowhere,” Chris says.
“It’s called dry lightning.” There’s a shiver of excitement under your skin. You love learning new things, getting up close and personal, working with your hands, pulling apart the universe one discovery at a time. You never really know something until you’ve reached out and touched--
My 6x10 coda / coma buck fic
#buddie#evan buckley#coma buck#eddie diaz#Christopher diaz#911 fic#911 coda#911 6x10#911 fox#mixed media#poetry
14 notes
·
View notes
Text
for a whole week I've been trying to write a fic where Buck's parents are still over and he has a new couch that his mom bought, and Eddie and Chris come to visit unexpectedly and basically let themselves in and are like at home (and Buck's parents are very confused) and Eddie's like passive aggressive towards the Buckleys lol
but I got sick and didn't have the energy to write anything (I barely worked on my wip but at least it's going better now lol)
maybe this week I'll finally write something again idk 😂
#after 6x10 I literally wrote like 3 codas or whatever#and now I've just been exhausted this past weeks lmao#911 fox#fanfic things
11 notes
·
View notes
Text
911 6x10 coda - 561 words
AO3
I’m getting in on the action 😂
He looks like he’s sleeping.
That’s the worst part— that it looks like he could open his eyes at any moment.
Eddie stares at Buck through the window into the room. He’s not supposed to be here. He’d followed a nurse at Bobby’s insistence he get checked out, and after being cleared hadn't been able to face returning to the waiting room.
He hadn’t made the conscious decision to go looking for Buck, but now that he’s here, he can’t bring himself to leave.
He stares, eyes tracing the mechanical rise and fall of Buck’s chest. He clenches his fists, remembering the feeling of Buck’s rain slick skin beneath his hands. In all his years as a medic, then a firefighter, nothing could have prepared Eddie for the sick crack of Buck’s ribs as they caved beneath his hands.
The gown hides the bruises that must be blooming across Buck’s pale skin, just like it hides the vivid branching marks that claw across his chest.
Eddie has a matching mark on his hand, feathering up from where he’d been gripping the side of the ladder. It doesn’t seem fair. They’d both been there on that truck, and all Eddie had to show for it was a burn and a few bruises, while Buck…
He looks like he’s sleeping.
“You’re not supposed to be here.”
Eddie jerks back from the window. “Sorry, I didn’t— he’s—” He doesn’t have an excuse ready and the words fail on his lips.
“You’re Eddie?” The nurse's expression softens at Eddie’s nod. “They’re looking for you downstairs.”
“Yeah, I’ll go—” he trails off, turning back to the window, his feet making no attempt to carry him away. “How much longer,” he asks instead, “until he can have visitors?”
The nurse makes a soft noise beside him.
“I’m about to go get his sister.” She turns to Eddie, her expression fixed into something unreadable. “You can sit with him for a minute, just until we get back.”
“Thank you.” Eddie’s already reaching for the door, before she can change her mind. The door swings shut behind him, and the busy hum of the ward fades beneath the beep and whir of the machines in the room.
From the bed, Buck looks like he’s sleeping.
Eddie crosses the room with short, uncertain steps, his shoes squeaking on the linoleum.
Up close, the illusion is shattered.
Buck’s chest rises and falls, with the slow even tempo of the machine counting his breaths.
“Hey.” Eddie almost chokes on the word, clearing his throat to start again. “Hey Buck.”
He reaches out, his fingers hesitating over Buck’s limp hand. He wants to grasp it, feel the warmth of Buck’s skin, the proof he’s still alive.
“I need you to wake up. I can’t—“ he gives in to the urge, his fingers squeezing around Buck’s, careful of the IV lines that disappear beneath his skin. “I need you Buck.” The words that have been playing in the back of his mind come spilling out. “Chris needs you, we— fuck—“ Eddie drops his head down to rest against their joined hands. “You need to wake up.”
He glances up, breath caught in his throat, hoping for some kind of sign that Buck can hear him.
But Buck doesn’t flinch. He doesn’t shift. His fingers stay limp in Eddie’s grip.
He looks like he’s sleeping.
56 notes
·
View notes
Text
911 Season 6
sofa, so good (6x01 coda)
a mile further (or ten) (6x02 coda)
walking around with your heart (i think this was 6x05 spec)
buddie hoover missing scene (6x04)
plenty of time (6x06 coda)
these tangled threads (6x11 spec)
different now (6b spec)
6x10 coda
they don't call it texas hold'em for nothing (6b spec)
untitled 6x11 spec
on couches and the universe (6x11 coda)
thirteen threads (6x12 companion)
everything, always (6x13 spec)
a fraction of everything (6x14 spec)
nothing's the same except everything (6x15 coda)
0 notes
Text
911 Fic Masterlist
Warmth (Ao3 | tumblr)
Evan Buckley/Eddie Diaz | G | 699
A tiny little fluffy snapshot of a Buckley-Diaz family camping trip and a chilly night out by the campfire.
Buckley-Diaz family, established relationship, fluff, ficlet, prompt fill
Quiet (Ao3 | tumblr)
Evan Buckley/Eddie Diaz | G | 1,311
Christopher leaves, and everything is endless quiet. 7x10 coda.
angst with a hopeful ending, hurt/comfort, 911 spoilers, canon compliant to 7x10, episode coda, Buckley Diaz family, pre-relationship buddie
Of Coffee and Crushes (Ao3 | tumblr)
Evan Buckley/Tommy Kinard | G | 1,362
Buck asks Tommy out for coffee, but he orders Eddie's usual. 7x05 extended scene.
911 spoilers, canon compliant to 7x05, bucktommy, minor background buddie implications, fluff, extended scene
I got nothing to believe (unless you're choosing me) (Ao3 | tumblr)
Evan Buckley/Eddie Diaz | T | 2,324
Things don't go to plan when Eddie has a little too much to drink on a boy's night with Tommy. Buck takes care of him.
911 spoilers, minor Evan Buckley/Tommy Kinard, canon compliant to 7x04, pre-relationship, emotional hurt/comfort, s7 speculation (kind of)
Rest Easy (Ao3 | tumblr)
Evan Buckley/Eddie Diaz | G | 592
Maddie calls Eddie when she can't find Buck during his lightning strike recovery. 6x12 missing scene.
Season 6, canon compliant, 6x12 missing scene, POV Maddie Buckley, protective Maddie Buckley, protective Eddie Diaz, pre-relationship, ficlet
say (don't) go (Ao3 | tumblr)
Evan Buckley/Eddie Diaz | T | 20,402
Eddie starts dropping hints he wants more kids. Buck assumes he means with Marisol. Buck spirals about it. Eddie does not mean with Marisol. AKA the Eddie wants kids fic.
season 6, canon compliant to 6x18, sperm donor Buck, fluff, domestic fluff, light angst, pre-relationship, mutual pining, getting together, Buckley-Diaz family
You were bigger than the whole sky (Ao3 | tumblr)
Evan Buckley/Eddie Diaz | T | 3,020
When Buck wakes from a vivid coma dream, he feels like he's lost everything he's ever wanted, and he doesn't know how to get past it and go back to living his reality. 6x11 spec fic.
911 spoilers, season 6, canon compliant to 6x09, 6x11 spec fic, angst with a happy ending, hurt/comfort, Buckley-Diaz family, getting together, questionable mental health probably, buck/ofc, also there's a baby that is not real (i don't know how to explain this one. it's weird. and much of it is a dream.)
And if I'm on fire, you'll be made of ashes, too (Ao3 | tumblr)
Evan Buckley/Eddie Diaz | T | 4,409
When Buck is gravely injured in a lightning strike on a call, Eddie is left to deal with the immediate fallout, including breaking the news to a devastated Christopher. 6x10 spec fic.
911 spoilers, season 6, canon compliant to 6x09, 6x10 spec fic, angst with a happy ending, hurt/comfort, Buckley-Diaz family, pre-relationship, medical inaccuracies probably
Home (Ao3 | tumblr)
Evan Buckley/Eddie Diaz | T | 2,883
Nine weeks after he and Eddie ended things, Buck finds the ring. Post break-up au.
Post Break-up AU, Canon Divergent, Buckley-Diaz Family, Angst with a Happy Ending, Oneshot, Self-hate, Mild Suicidal Ideation (it's not actually intended this way, but could be read as such)
Uncertainty (Ao3 | tumblr)
Evan Buckley/Eddie Diaz | G | 1,322
Buck has a decision to make, and he seeks Eddie's help in deciding. (Spoilers for 6x04)
Buckley-Diaz Family, Canon Compliant to 6x04, Pre-relationship, Fluff
Hide and Seek (Ao3 | tumblr)
Evan Buckley/Eddie Diaz | G | 2,670
Buck has a bad call. Eddie takes care of him. Christopher watches. AKA the Christopher POV fic.
Buckley-Diaz Family, Canon Compliant, or maybe Canon Adjacent?, Christopher's POV, Hurt/Comfort, Pre-relationship, Angst, Fluff
You drew stars around my scars (Ao3 | tumblr)
Evan Buckley/Eddie Diaz | G | 5,175
When Buck has a close call brought on, at least in part, by his parents' visit, Eddie finds himself unable to contain his frustration with the Buckley parents. AKA the 4x05 episode tag no one asked for featuring protective!Eddie.
Buckley-Diaz Family, The Buckley Parents, Canon Divergent, Canon Compliant to 4x05, Protective!Eddie, Feelings Realization, Getting Together, Multiple POV, Episode Tag (kind of)
On the Outside (Ao3 | tumblr)
Evan Buckley/Eddie Diaz | G | 5,380
After Eddie's breakdown, Buck takes a week off to help Eddie get back on his feet, and a spontaneous visit to the firehouse leaves Lucy confused over just how little she apparently knows about her new team. AKA the Lucy outsider!POV fic.
Buckley-Diaz Family, Pre-relationship; Canon Compliant to 5x13, Fluff, Outsider POV
Breaking News (Ao3 | tumblr)
Evan Buckley/Eddie Diaz | T | 3,876
While in Texas, Christopher happens upon an L.A. news story about a dangerous paramedic and firehouse 118, and he's left to enlist Eddie's help when Buck doesn't pick up his phone.
Episode tag, canon compliant to 5x17, pre-relationship, fluff, Buckley-Diaz family, POV Eddie Diaz, slight pining!Eddie
The jury's out, but my choice is you (Ao3 | tumblr)
Evan Buckley/Eddie Diaz | G | 9,493
When Buck agrees to watch Christopher and Jee-yun both for the day, Maddie sees a side of her brother she'd never actually witnessed before. It leaves Maddie curious, and Buck a little off balance. Based on this headcanon.
Canon compliant to 5x13, pre-relationship, fluff
Just stay here and be right now (Ao3 | tumblr)
Evan Buckley/Eddie Diaz | T | 5,217
When Eddie accidentally breaks Buck's heart at the 118 Christmas party, he knows he needs to make it right. Buck's just trying not to fall apart.
5x10 coda, pre-relationship, getting together, canon compliant, oneshot, light angst, emotional hurt/comfort
Believe in one thing, I won't go away (Ao3 | tumblr)
Evan Buckley/Eddie Diaz | T | 5,204
A broken promise and a missed outing with Christopher leave Eddie worried enough to bridge the distance between them.
Canon compliant to 5x09, pre-relationship, angst, emotional hurt/comfort, oneshot
Warnings: depression, self-worth issues, suicidal ideation, implied/referenced self-harm
Would it be enough if I could never give you peace? (Ao3 | tumblr)
Evan Buckley/Eddie Diaz | T | 1,220
After the shooting, Eddie convinces himself everything's okay. Until it's not.
Hurt/comfort, angst, pre-relationship, canon compliant to 4x14, oneshot
The snaps from the same little breaks in your soul (Ao3 | tumblr)
Evan Buckley/Eddie Diaz | T | 1,441
When Maddie leaves, Buck breaks, and Eddie pulls him back.
Pre-relationship, hurt/comfort, canon compliant to 5x03, one shot
Warnings: postpartum depression, implied/referenced self-harm
#figured i'd make a masterlist and pin it sine tumblr search sucks and i can never find my fic posts when i'm looking for them#fic masterlist#buddie fic#my writing#my fic#911 fic#ordered by most recent#for now#*since#repinning for now might take it down again later
66 notes
·
View notes
Text
My fics:
You can also find all of those on my Ao3 - wikiangela
Edit: added word count, and ratings wherever they apply, if a number of chapters is not specified, it's a oneshot
MCU (sambucky):
sounds like an angel (he might be a demon) - only Ao3 (rating M, 80 chapters, 150k words)
June 14th, 2025 (I've been waiting for you my whole life) - sounds like an angel bonus oneshot (rating T, 3.5k words)
When you smile (I melt inside) (3 parts, 14k words)
[untitled mcu defenders fic nobody asked for] - Ao3 (6 parts, 7.9k words) - WIP (not updated regularly, all parts can be standalone)
Merry Christmas (I love you) (2.6k words)
Heartbeat (1.7k words)
I chose you - Fictober22 (768 words)
Nobody warned you about me? - Fictober22 (750 words)
We all have our reasons - Fictober22 (985 words)
It's my name on the line. - Fictober22 (713 words)
I don't want you to do that. - Fictober22 (412 words)
I don't think this is your problem. - Fictober22 (867 words)
I'm not alone and neither are you. - Fictober22 (1k words)
911:
For a holiday (and forevermore) - only Ao3 (M, 30 chapters, 94k)
There’s no way that it’s not going there (with the way that we’re looking at each other) (6.8k words)
All I need is to call you home (rating G, 2.1k words)
burn for you (8k words)
“I will never leave you" (2.6k words)
"You being there was all I needed" (2.3k words)
1071 (1k)
I think he knows (3k words)
How would that even work? - Fictober22 (1k words)
No, anything but that. - Fictober22 (600 words)
Check that again, are you sure? - Fictober22 (925 words)
Sounds like a you problem. - Fictober22 (725 words)
Think! For once! - Fictober22 (1.1k words)
You're making my head hurt. - Fictober22 (1.2k words)
Yes. No. I don't know. - Fictober22 (1k words)
What are you doing? - Fictober22 (726 words)
You're looking but you don't see - Fictober22 + part two (2 chapters, 2.2k words)
Do we have a deal? - Fictober22 (1.4k words)
I never said that - Fictober22 (768 words)
Who said this is a good idea? - Fictober22 (rating M, 1.6k words)
Not on my watch! - Fictober22 (1.1k words)
Is this safe? - Fictober22 (523 words)
You know I'd do anything - Fictober22 (759 words)
I'm doing it, shut up - Fictober22 (1.4k words)
That's not why we're doing this - Fictober22 (635 words)
You love this, don't you? - Fictober22 + part two (rating M, 2 chapters, 3.4k words)
I know what this looks like - Fictober22 (1.1k words)
what the universe is trying to tell you (1.2k words)
You're my greatest gift (rating G, 2.6k words)
The one with groceries and bad coffee (G, 1.k words)
Fine - 6x10 coda (1.6k words)
don't know what I'd do if your tomorrow never came (1.9k)
we got time (but we're only human) (1.6k)
I can't love you any more (than I do now) (2.6k)
I don't mind a detour (as long as I still get to be yours) (G, 1.4k)
me and you only equals love (E, 6.6k)
you're the one I want (G, 1.4k)
kiss it better (G, 1.5k)
stuck with each other (G, 2.5k)
I'm free in salt water (embrace the deep end, leave everything) (612 words, tw suicide, Maddie pov)
I'd marry you with paper rings (G, 3.4k)
Do I really have to tell you how he brought me back to life? (G, 2.9k)
what a mighty good man (G, 3.4k)
me, you, our kid and a dog (G, 4.7k)
you been looking for love (let me show you how it's done) (E, 12k)
I could get lost in the feelings (just say that you belong to me) (E, 15k)
baby, you drive me wild (E, 11k)
the next best thing (E, 9k)
I wanna spend my forever like that (G, 8.6k)
#sambucky#buddie#fanfic#my writing#fanfics#masterlist#destiel fanfic#sambucky fanfic#buddie fanfic#decided to make a new pinned post with all my fics#including the shitty ones lol#will be updated#wikiangela writes#fanfiction#my fanfic writing#if i messed up the links I'll fix it if I notice hah#the defenders#idk I'll be updating it with any new works I guess#fanfic masterlist
37 notes
·
View notes
Text
Seven Sentence Sunday
Thank you so much for tagging me @shortsighted-owl
The tag was perfect timing as I just posted my fic "Hold on" to AO3 that you can read here
He's angry at the universe, angry at the storm, angry at himself. Cause he didn't plan for this. It's never been a question to him if Buck would still be there in case something happens to Eddie himself. It was always a given. After all, it's been Eddie who's had multiple brushes with death. Buck was always supposed to live, to survive. Eddie, though…. If he's honest with himself he's been anticipating death's cold claws closing around his heart ever since they went down in that chopper.
Tagging @finduilasclln even though it's already Monday in our time zone but who cares.
#Buddie#Fanfic#6x10#6x10 coda#With a little bit of#6x11#911 on fox#seven sentence sunday#We all saw Eddie breaking#So naturally I had to write about it
4 notes
·
View notes