#i forgot to tag madney like an ASSHOLE
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
This fulfills both my BuckTommy agenda and my Chimney and Tommy are besties agenda. It's Fluffebruary Day Eleven: Double Date! Tagging @bucktommyfluffebruary, and you can read this on AO3 over here.
It’s Howie who suggests he and Tommy take their Buckleys out together, and Tommy is happy to go along with it. He and Howie have been occasionally meeting up for a beer or coffee ever since the cruise ship rescue, and they’re currently sitting next to a playground while Jee-Yun goes down the same slide over and over. She lands about four feet from them and waves every time until she runs back to carefully climb the steps back up.
“What are you thinking?” Tommy asks, swirling the last of his coffee in its paper cup to mix it before taking a swig.
“LA County Fair is coming up. You ever go?”
Tommy snorts softly and nods. “Yeah, with Ben.”
“Yeah, fuck that, we’re making new memories,” Howie says, making a face. He’d heard about Tommy’s last serious relationship in all its toxic glory after he’d cornered Tommy in a CVS to ask why the hell he’d been ducking Howie since his and Evan’s (thankfully temporary, then current) break-up. “Just do not tell my daughter, because we’re taking her in a couple weeks and she’s gotta think it’s the first time or she’ll look at me with big, sad eyes.”
“I’ll take it to my grave,” Tommy vows solemnly, and Howie claps him on the shoulder.
They settle back and watch Jee-Yun, happily taking compliments from a couple of other parents and nannies on how sweet their daughter is.
“Yep, we love her, she’s our little angel,” Howie says, putting an arm around Tommy’s shoulders and squeezing.
“Absolutely,” Tommy agrees readily, squeezing Howie’s knee. “Been that way since the day we brought her home.”
“Uncle Tommy!” she shouts, running full-tilt toward them and catching herself on his knees. “Swing?”
“Swing,” he confirms, scooping her up and messily kissing her cheek as she squeals with laughter. “Let’s see if we can get you to go all the way around in a big circle.”
Howie jumps to his feet. “Let’s not do that.”
Tommy turns his own big, sad eyes on Howie as he backs toward the playground. “But Da-ad.”
“Tommaso Gianni, you better not break my daughter.”
Jee-Yun gasps and looks at Tommy. “Uh-oh.”
“First and middle name? I know,” he says gravely. “Okay, we’ll carefully swing.”
She pouts and throws her arms around Tommy’s neck. “Oka-ay.”
He happily pushes her on the swing until Maddie shows up with Evan, both of them having had lunch with their parents. Tommy bites back a grin when he sees the confusion on the faces of the people who’d approached him and Howie as Maddie greets her husband with a kiss.
Evan walks over and waves. “Hey, guys!”
“Uncle Buck!” Jee-Yun shrieks, and Tommy barely has time to catch the chains of the swing to stop it before she launches herself off of it to run to Evan’s waiting arms. He picks her up and kisses her cheeks before settling her on his hip.
He’s listening to her recap about the caterpillar she found when they’d arrived and asking her questions about what it looked like and is in the middle of telling her what kind of moth it’ll probably turn into as he reaches Tommy.
“Hey,” he says, kissing him on the corner of his mouth. “We swinging?”
“Yep, but we’ve been restricted to safe swinging,” Tommy says, and Evan makes a face. “Right? Howie doesn’t know that this girl’s ready to fly.”
“Alright,” Evan says to a captivated Jee-Yun, sitting on the swing. “Here’s how we’re going to do this. You’re gonna hold on real right, okay? And then Uncle Tommy is gonna push as hard as he can.”
She nods and wraps her arms around Evan, and he holds the chain of the swing with one hand and wraps his other arm around her. When he’s settled in, he backs up until he’s almost standing up straight.
“Alright, launching in five, four, three, two, one!”
With that, he pushes off, and Tommy grins when she shrieks with laughter. He pushes them carefully, not wanting to risk Evan losing his grip, but Evan’s pumping his legs to build up a little more height.
“So are you guys poly or—”
The question catches him off-guard, and he looks sheepishly at the nanny who’d been talking to him and Howie earlier.
“No, that’s my boyfriend’s brother-in-law,” he explains. “We were, uh, just messing with people.”
She snorts and shifts the toddler she’s carrying to her other hip. “You guys are going to be the talk of the playground for a couple days. Please don’t clear things up with anyone else, I live for this kind of thing.”
“Uncle Tommy is slacking!” Evan calls over his shoulder.
“Uncle Evan can chill,” Tommy says, stepping back into position.
When they’re ready to hop off, Evan dramatically “jumps” as the swing is coming to a stop, and Maddie comes over to offer her daughter a bag of pretzel chips and some water.
“What’s this I hear about a double date?” she asks, plucking two pretzel chips out of the bag and handing one to each of them.
“Yep,” Tommy says, popping the snack into his mouth. “Tomorrow, actually. Details to follow.”
He gives a meaningful glance down to Jee-Yun, who’s looking up at them as she sips her water. Later, when they’re in Evan’s Jeep and away from little ears, Tommy asks him how he feels about the fair.
“Oh, man, I am so winning you a bear,” Evan says, grinning.
“Uh, I think I’m going to be winning a bear for you.”
“Nuh-uh.”
“I’m one half of the organizing party, it’s my responsibility—”
“To buy me a funnel cake and hold my hand on—actually, no, no ferris wheel.”
Tommy shudders. “Yeah, nothing that, uh, leaves the ground.”
They bicker about who’s responsible for winning stuffed animals for who all the way back to the loft.
His last trip to the fair really had been a disaster. Ben had complained about the price of food, Tommy had ignored every attempt at initiating conversation about them attending Ben’s high school reunion, and they’d ended the night in silence and with headaches.
This time, Maddie is six months pregnant and devouring every bit of fair food she can get her hands on, Howie has had three different face painting artists have a go at him and now looks like Spider-Man/Darth Maul/a butterfly depending on which third of his face you’re looking at, and Evan is carrying a stuffed puppy under one arm and has a weird monkey puppet looped around his neck. Tommy has a pink bear the size of Jee-Yun under his arm, and he feels like he’s going to be sick if he eats anything else that’s been fried.
“Alright, funhouse, funhouse, funhouse,” Evan chants.
“Absolutely not,” Maddie says around a fried Oreo. “But you guys enjoy yourselves.”
They hand off their stuffed prizes to Maddie and Howie and run into the funhouse. It’s very old and mostly full of spinning platforms and moving walkways and some mirrors, and Evan has them stop and take a picture in every single one. After, they spot the haunted house and manage to entice Howie and Maddie into joining them on that one because it involves sitting down.
It’s so much goddamn fun. Howie and Tommy hang back while Maddie and Evan try to do a game that involves rubber ducks, both of them sipping on overpriced beer.
“You know, Maddie told me they never went to a fair when they were kids,” Howie says. “Danny was too sick, then everything after. Isn’t that wild?”
Tommy knows he means that it’s something else and nods. “Means we should probably take them every year to make up for it.”
“That’s exactly what I was thinking.”
They clink their plastic cups together and exchange grins.
“State fair up in Sac when the kids are old enough,” Howie decides. “Or if we can get a babysitter for the weekend.”
“I know a cheap pilot.”
“Oh, don’t call yourself that, honey,” Howie coos, pinching his cheek.
“Stop flirting with my boyfriend,” Evan says, pressing a small, squishy dinosaur against Tommy’s chest. “Your move, Kinard.”
Maddie hands a Minion dressed like a pirate to Howie. “Meet your son.”
“Howard, Jr,” he sighs, petting its goggled eye happily. “Who wants to go scare the shit out of the person running that thing where you swing a hammer to hit a bell? I’m pretty sure they’ll cry when they see these two muscle-bound freaks.”
By the end of the night, they’re tired and all leaning against each other and carrying more stuffed animals than any four adults should ever own. The big, floppy elephant that Evan is hauling is Tommy’s personal favorite. He also has a tote bag over each shoulder with crafts, trinkets, snacks, and random spice and tea blends from vendors.
“We should do a Ren Faire,” Evan suggests.
“Oh, my god, Jee as a little squire or a princess,” Maddie whines, burying her face in her stuffed shark. “Honey, please.”
“Yeah, alright,” Howie says, leaning in to kiss her hair. She’s already got grease paint smudged on it and her face from him, so she’d stopped batting him away hours ago.
They get to Howie and Maddie’s car, since paying for parking twice had sounded like a terrible idea, and they get a ride back to Tommy’s house.
“We’re the fucking kings of double dates,” Howie says, reaching back to bump Tommy’s fist before they get out of the car. “But maybe just dinner and a movie next time.”
“Go big or go home, Han.” He swoops in for a kiss to Maddie’s cheek and climbs out of the back seat, joining Evan in gathering their prizes from the back of the car. “Alright, let’s get them settled into the guest room.”
They arrange their prizes on the bed and Tommy takes a picture of the frankly ridiculous army they amassed, though there’s one more soldier on his side than Evan’s thanks to that game where you shoot water into a hole to win a horse race. They’d been so close to winning a bear as big as Maddie, but he’s a little glad they didn’t. He doesn’t even know where he’s going to keep all of these and imagines the toy drive will be getting a sizable stuffed toy donation once he lets their friends’ kids pick out a favorite to adopt.
The elephant and bear are staying with them, though.
51 notes · View notes