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#zimbits – @whoacanada on Tumblr
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Peach Bud + Sweet Pea

@whoacanada / whoacanada.tumblr.com

onawingandaswear on Ao3, writer of general OMGCP weirdness -- Thanks to @omgpieplease for amazing banner art
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(Hey, look! That Zimbits AU where Jack goes into PR after retiring from the NHL and NHL!Bitty comes looking for advice about coming out!)

“Your ten-o-clock, remember?” April gestures to the conference room with her pen. “The cutie the Hurricanes coughed up for Pride Night outreach? He’s here.”

Jack tugs down the blinds with a cautious finger and zeroes in on the handsome blonde sitting awkwardly at one end of their large conference table, conspicuously alone. “There’s always suits for outreach talks,” Jack hazards, looking back at his receptionist over his shoulder. “They never send players alone.”

“It’s what we’ve got on the books. Eric Bittle, Carolina Hurricanes. No plus ones.” April whispers, checking her calendar. “Well? Get in there, Boss; and buckle up, he’s got an accent.”

.

Eric Bittle looks up, his dark brown eyes wide and unfairly attractive as Jack extends his hand, Bittle rising to take it. Everything about Bittle is polished and perfected; suit tailored, hair coiffed so neatly Jack would posit he’d gone in to have it trimmed before he’d arrived this morning. He’s pulled together so tightly, in fact, that Jack can’t find any loose threads, and if he remembers his time in The Show correctly, no loose threads means Mr. Bittle’s probably hiding something.

“Eric? I’m Jack Zimmermann. It’s great to meet you.”

“Oh, I know who you are,” Bittle chuckles, and Jack’s heart would skip a beat if he wasn’t so certain there’s a huge piece of context still missing from this meeting. “It’s still very nice to meet you in person.”

“So, tell me about Pride Night,” Jack pops the button on his suit jacket and settles down across the table. “What, exactly are the ‘Canes thinking about doing that involves you coming to see us?”

Bittle bites his lip briefly, gaze darting off before coming back to settle on Jack, and Jack is reminded of so many media training sessions it’s like he’s back in Vegas again.

“I may have, ah, fudged the reason for my visit a bit. Yes, we have Pride Night coming up, yes I’m the designated sacrifice, but I’m more here on personal business.”

Jack eases the tip of his pen from the legal pad, recognizing an off-the-record admission is coming. “How personal?” He questions. “Are we talking potential legal trouble or just potential social trouble? Or no trouble at all.”

“I’m gay.” Bittle says plainly. “Whatever trouble that may be. My team knows it, my family knows it, and I want to come out — I need to come out — and I can’t mess it up.”

Jack is grateful for his game face, reaching for the coffee carafe near him to couch his surprise and no small measure of his excitement. “Oh, you mean like I did?” Jack jokes, earning a soft smile.

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Oh, these snippets are so nice! Can I ask number 2? Doing heroin under the aurora borealis has cartrip/runaway vibes and I'm here for it even if it isn't that

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Heylo! Did you see my other post about #2? Even so, here’s a little more of that Bitty as a househusband / Jack as a crime boss au <3 

Eric steps into Jack’s personal space, tucking himself between the open flaps of Jack’s peacoat, wrapping his arms around his waist, stealing body heat, implying much more than he could possibly say.
“This is mine,” Jack breathes, clutching him tightly. “What I have with you isn’t for public consumption.”
The garage is not the place for declarations of anything, let alone romantic overtures so close to a minivan, but as Jack nudges Eric’s chin up with gentle fingers — takes in his red-rimmed eyes, the determined furrow between his brows — he finds the courage to voice his feelings from somewhere deep, honest, and true.
“I love you.” Jack says softly, watching Eric’s features relax as Jack’s words register, anger abandoned. “I do. More than is healthy for a man in my position. I love your fire,” Jack presses a kiss to Eric’s cheek. “Love the way you talk in your sleep,” he kisses the other cheek. “I love how passionate you are about your family and I love all the snacks you make me.”
“Ugh, sweetheart,” Eric giggles, ducking his head so Jack’s next kiss lands on Eric’s nose instead of his lips. “Oh, my lord, I’m sorry, I love you, too!”
“So rude, what are we going to do about that?” Jack wraps his coat around Eric’s body, trapping him.
“I love you — don’t murder me,” Eric’s muffled voice vibrates against Jack’s chest. “Please let me go, I have money.”
“Not enough money,” Jack teases gruffly, inching toward the mudroom door as Eric shuffles blindly with him, giggling. “Watch your step, eh?” Jack can feel where Eric’s breath is dampening his shirt and he’s suddenly, irrationally afraid Bittle might bite his nipple. “Don’t trip.” Jack opens his coat and looks down at Eric’s winsome, smiling face; his hair is mussed: the carefully styled, faux disheveled look devolved into something actually disheveled, courtesy of Jack’s wool coat and lack of boundaries. He’s beautiful, the most singularly perfect thing to happen to Jack in years, if not his entire life —  and this perfect man’s husband is currently zip-tied in the back of Alexei’s truck, awaiting a much less enjoyable evening.
“What, not playing the bad guy, anymore?” Eric teases, toeing off his boots. “No chance of ravishment?”
“Thought we should have dinner first,” Jack explains, patting the wet spot on his chest. “Before you eat me.”
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I can hardly choose, but I'm a sucker for identity porn and/or supernatural shenanigans (watch this turn out to be a gay Jack lookalike being media trash in Vegas.) Doppelgänger AU?

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Actually, this is the overarching file for my habs!jack au! if you’ve been following me for a million years, this started as a halloween prompt where Jack meets a ‘perfect’ version of himself and that double tries to kill him and take his place. Fun right? That evolved into the much more stable habs!jack au — but the homicidal drama of the original lives on.
There’s seriously about 70k of various versions of this au floating around on my computer. Once I throttled back the murder and started thinking about the practical applications of a Jack that ended up playing for the Habs and an Eric that kept skating, things just kind of steamrolled. Unfortunately this led away from my main goal of writing a story where Jack confronts a version of himself that has ‘succeeded’ and has to deal with the emotional fallout, and turned more into a deep character study of what would have happened to Jack Zimmermann if he’d never truly gotten the support he needed to overcome his vices.
Of course, now the beast of the project is editing because there are so many raw versions I’ve tweaked a little here and there. Supportive Bob vs. Distant Father. Substance Abuse vs. Alcoholism. A dozen different takes on how Jack could crater a secret relationship with Bitty (usually sacrificing Bitty’s public image to save Jack’s). 
It’s definitely my favorite project and it’s almost too big, now to be stitched into a Frankenstein’s monster of a fic, but I’m trying. In the interim, here’s version one from all the way back in 2017:

Bitty looks up and finds Zimms watching him intently, eyes pale as ice chips, gaze sharp and calculating. “You’re beautiful,” he says coldly. “You’re beautiful, he’s out, and you’re his.”

A shiver runs up Bitty’s spine, because the other man’s fingers are twitching and ‘beautiful’ doesn’t sound like a compliment; not to this Jack. However, his tone is as foreign as it is familiar, reminding Bitty of his freshman year and a Jack Zimmermann who couldn’t seem to process his emotions.

"I need your help to understand because I think you’re why I'm here."

“I am?” Bitty swallows, startling when he realizes he’s backed himself against the counter. In a heartbeat there are hands on his neck, a pair of recognizable lips hot against the curve of his cheek.

“I could have given him everything,” Zimms whispers, softly enough that the stubble catching on Bitty’s cheek feels like a threat, “You don’t even know, do you? You’d never have to work a day in your life.”

“I have everything I want,” Bitty presses a firm hand to Zimms’ chest though the action does nothing to dislodge the larger man. “I don’t need his money, or yours. I’m happy.”

This isn’t the answer Zimmermann wants.

“No, see, you think you’re happy, because you don’t know anything else,” Bitty flinches when Zimms rests his cheek against the top of his head. “You don't even know what you could be." 

“That’s enough,” Bitty gets his palm against Zimms’ ribcage, the sensitive spot left over from an injury in Juniors, and shoves, hard. Zimms stumbles back with a breathless curse, and refocuses on Bitty with a wounded expression.

“Please,” he begs. “I want to know what I’m missing, what I did wrong — why does he get to have you and I don't?”

The version of Jack Zimmermann with three Stanley Cups and a substance abuse problem currently cornering Bitty in his own damn kitchen does not deserve affection. Not if this is what it does to him.

Bitty's rearing up for a fight when a thought stops him cold: "Wait, do you know me?"

Of course this is the moment Bitty's true Jack steps in from off the balcony with an excited flourish. 

"Papa had a few ideas on how to resolve this and he's heading to the airport now. He should be here in a few hours."

Beside Bitty, Zimms stiffens.

“You called Bob?”

.

Bob moves in for a hug, or a handshake, or something, and Zimms leans away from the touch, sliding back a few inches. Bob's smile falters and Zimms seems to immediately realize what he's done and laughs it off. 

"Sorry, sorry, just, ah, worried about making this worse," Zimmermann stumbles, clapping his hands together to wring his wrists.

"Of course, of course," Bob says cautiously, "better safe than sorry, eh?"

Bitty leans into Jack's side and whispers, "What just happened?"

“I don’t know.”

.

Jack frowns, his expression too harsh for Bitty’s liking, and he says something hurried, accusatory, in a language Bitty still hasn’t quite learned to speak. He catches Bob’s name, the Canadiens, and possibly something about leadership? No, wait, it’s  ‘management’— Then Jack scrubs a hand through his hair and paces like he wants to be angry but can’t find the energy. Bob isn’t doing much of anything but he’s pale and there’s an unfamiliar furrow between his eyebrows.

Jack notices Bitty staring and explains, carefully, in English, “The Canadiens asked my father to be the GM in 2009 — he turned it down when I dropped out of the draft.”

It takes a moment for Bitty to understand the issue at hand, but when he gets it, the realization comes with an unfriendly twist of concern in his gut. 

“Zimms plays for Montreal — isn’t that a conflict of interest?”

“That’s not the point,” Jack stalls out, trying to find the right words and failing long enough that Bob takes the reigns. 

“It took a lot to make me change my priorities when it came to my legacy, my family,” his father’s voice is thick with regret. “If those events didn’t happen, the other, ah, me, is still chasing glory.”

Jack leans in, nudging his father with a sympathetic shoulder, and Bob knocks him back with a tight, wavering smile, clearly unable to continue. There’s a lot of history here, more than Jack ever thought he’d need to share because most of it had been buried and forgotten. Or so they’d thought.

It’s Jack’s turn to pick up the thread of the conversation, at least while his father pulls himself together. “If Zimms is playing for the Habs —” he starts, drawing Bitty’s attention away from the hockey legend tying himself in knots, “— and his father is the GM, he’s not getting the support he needs. It’s not possible.”

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cancel clear delete? 🧐 (@parvuls)

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This one I think I misnamed, but more cup magic tropey goodness. Adult!Jack has a chance to talk to himself pre-OD and realizes he still needs to forgive himself for what happened in Juniors. 
Had a hard time with this one and that’s why it never really went anywhere.

“He’s in the middle of something terrible that’s going to change the course of his life, and I can’t tell him anything?”

“You’re not supposed to tell him anything,” Bitty offers gently, running a hand along Jack’s arm. “But you can talk to him.”

Jack is looking at himself. Hair floppy and unkempt, familiar blemishes from sweaty helmet straps, and his eyes — not the eyes of a seventeen-year-old with his entire life ahead of him. Younger than the dumbest rookie Jack’s had to shepherd. Younger still than all of the incoming Freshman who gawked at Faber’s high ceilings and challenged Jack to become a better person.

“God, he’s just a kid.” Jack breathes, grief cresting like a king tide. “I was just a kid.”

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15. Recluse Jack :)

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Recluse Jack! Not going into full details because there’s definitely some triggering ideas that lay the groundwork, but the premise was that more than just anxiety and career pressure led to the OD and in the years since Jack has completely retreated from the public eye. Bitty answers a want ad and ends up hired by Alicia to maintain a property off-campus and do grocery runs for the home’s unseen tenant. As expected, Bitty falls for the soft-spoken mystery-man he’s working for.

“Well, if we’ll be working together, I guess we should get to know one another,” Eric offers, trying not to look up at the kitchen camera as he carefully slices two ambrosia apples to go with the small wheel of baked brie. “You could tell me a little about yourself, or I could tell you about me?”

There’s no response for a long while; long enough Eric thinks Jack has simply ignored his attempt to break the ice, but when the oven timer sounds and the brie is ready for plating, Eric hears the hiss of the intercom.

“Do you cook like this all the time?”

Eric ducks his head to hide his relieved smile from the camera.

“Well, I’ve always loved to bake, and I seem to find myself with much more time on my hands, now that I’m not spending every free moment practicing, that is.”

The golden crust around the brie is steaming and Eric doesn’t quite manage to slide it from the baking tray to the platter without catching some molten cheese on his finger. Hissing through the burn and well aware he’s being surveilled, he resists the urge to stick his finger in his mouth. One of Alicia’s short-list warnings about cleanliness still crisp in his mind.

“Are you okay?”

“Oh, did you see that?”

“I’m not spying, I just saw you —” the voice cuts out, as if he’s accidentally killed the  intercom, but he soon comes back, repeating firmly, “Are you okay?”

“I’m fine.”

Eric shakes his hand lightly before checking the small red spot. Nothing serious, only a nuisance in the way all witnessed injuries are bothersome; more embarrassment than actual pain.

“There’s a first aid kit under the sink if you need it. A fire extinguisher, too.”

“Thank you, Sugar.” 

Eric doesn’t mean to slip the endearment in, it just happens, and he closes his eyes to breathe through the fear that he’s just cost himself another job. The intercom hisses again, and Eric waits for condemnation. 

Instead, he hears a soft voice say, “. . . You’re welcome, Eric.”

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I gotta ask: 12) Nascar????

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This came from somewhere on Tumblr a million years ago, probably @shitty-check-please-aus, tbh. Jack and Bitty as rival Nascar drivers. I am not a race car driver and I don’t know Nascar well so this is probably very, ah, inaccurate? And I’m not saying I pulled any ideas from Talladega Nights, but Jack does come out of Formula One and has a reputation for being a handful. Anyway, Bitty’s racing, trying to stay under the radar, and Jack’s just trying to revive his career after a series of public missteps. 

________

True to form, Jack Zimmermann does not ‘flare out’. In fact, in a matter of a season he’s crawled from 28th to 3rd, racking up points and riding up Eric’s backside like an undersized fire suit.

“This was supposed to be my season!” Eric curses, whipping his helmet to the ground and startling his crew chief. He’d lost his lead around lap 280 when Zimmermann pulled a slingshot and never got his momentum back, barely sliding into second position at the flag. He lost at home. He lost in Atlanta.

He’s never lost in Atlanta.

“What the hell happened out there? You had it!” Coach demands as Eric shoves past his crew toward the bay holding Zimmermann’s bright red #1 car. 

“I didn’t have a damn thing!” Eric snaps, walking quickly. “Zimmermann skirted me! Hey!” The moment Zimmermann is in view, deep conversation with his mustachioed pit boss, Eric hollers, “I’m fixing to have a word with you about track etiquette! Didn’t they teach you any manners in Monaco?” 

Zimmermann turns, eyes wide in surprise, though his expression turns sour when he realizes that Eric’s bringing righteous condemnation and not congratulations.

“I’m from Montréal.” Zimmermann corrects shortly, placing his accent as French-Canadian and leaving Eric to feel like a bumpkin until he recalls that the man did, in fact, race in Monaco and is being an ass about semantics on purpose. “And my manners are fine. You’re the one who kept drifting, I’m amazed you didn’t hit the wall.”

“You clipped me!” Eric seethes. 

“Is that what happened?“ Zimmermann scoffs as his pit boss fights a laugh. “Sure you weren’t just texting while driving?”

Oh, and isn’t that just a delightful dig at Eric’s media hiccup from the previous season; Eric sees red, but before he can respond there’s a heavy hand on his shoulder, guiding him away.

“Some real fancy maneuvering out there, Son.” Coach says tightly. “But this ain’t the European circuit. You keep driving fast and loose, you’ll get docked.”

Zimmermann’s eyes go steely.

“There’s nothing wrong with how I race.”

“Well, there’s certainly something wrong with your personality.” Eric snaps, turning on his heel to show the man his back. 

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Would love to know more about your #13 WIP!

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Oh god #13 — okay, so, ‘(yeah it’s true) all i wanna do is talk about you’ is entirely about the Falconers signing a new/old hotshot player who’s wife immediately puts herself in competition with media-darling Bitty. What starts off as innocent backbiting turns into, like, anonymous complaints to the adoption agency Jack and Bitty are using. Also greatly inspired by UK footballer drama.

___________

“You know I’m going to be fat when I retire because of you,” Jack chides, snatching a white fudge, falcon-shaped cake pop from the stand as Eric tries to swat him away. “Hope you’re ready.”

“Ready? I’m expecting it.”

After seven years, Eric is old hat at welcoming the newest Falconers and their respective partners. The first Family Skate of the season is populated with elaborate desserts and dishes right out of Eric’s cookbooks. He spends days in the kitchen perfecting cake pops and truffles in the shape of the Falconer’s mascot, sweet and savory hand pies, gluten-free, dairy-free, nut-free, and vegan options, he puts his whole heart into every season, even personalizing care packages for each new family. All of it a love letter to the Falconers, and, unsurprisingly, to his husband.

However, as Eric stares down the folding table near the arena entrance, there’s an unease he hasn’t felt since his first Family Skate, when a still-closeted Jack had introduced Eric to his teammates for the first time.

“There’s usually one every season,” Carrie sighs from behind Eric. “We’ve been lucky, but with all this young blood, we’re long overdue for a bitch.”

Eric turns away from his shame to find Carrie, Gabbie, and Vanessa showing varying levels of discomfort as they stare down the lone gift basket; the hang tag bearing ‘David and Emily Grant’ in Eric’s swooping hand, courtesy of a recent calligraphy class taken with the ladies — also, Guy, surprisingly.

“No need to be crass,” Eric defends. “Maybe they just missed it.”

“Nope.” Vanessa shakes her head, causing the arena lights to catch on her new diamond earrings. “She was on Real Housewives of Vegas when Grant had the C before Parson dethroned him. She’s been chasing that high ever since.”

“That doesn’t mean she’s going to be a problem. I haven’t even talked to her yet.” Eric understands the issue the moment the words leave his mouth. “Oh.”

“Three A’s, no C,” Gabbie cautions. “Which means there’s a prize to be won.”

“God, do you remember when Cavanaugh signed? His girlfriend was nuts, walked around here like he was the next Crosby.”

“Did she talk to any of you?” Eric asks, trying not to worry he’s the odd man out, figuratively and literally. “Emily? Did she say anything?”

The women fall quiet and Eric exhales slowly.

“Ah, well, guess I need to go on a full charm offensive, then.”

“No, you need to stay the hell out of her way.” Carrie insists. “She’s looking for a rival and you’re the only one of us with real star power. No offense, we’re all great, but you’re . . . you.”

“And Jack’s got an A.” Vanessa chides.

“I’ve never not been able to make someone like me,” Eric says, only to immediately remind himself of Whiskey’s standoffishness. “I’ll just need to step up my game, that’s all.”

Ashley, pushing her stroller past, slows her stride when she hears the content of the conversation. “Are you talking about Grant?”

“We aren’t talking about anyone,” Eric says diplomatically. “Emily just forgot her gift basket.”

“Oooo, word of advice,” Ashley says, keeping her voice low. “Don’t let any of this get back to the guys. WAG feuds can get you traded. That’s what happened to Victoria Rawlins last season, you know, with the Caps? She got into it with the owner’s wife and her husband got knocked down to a farm team. Can you imagine an argument about breastfeeding versus formula costing a career? My god.”

That’s what happened? Jack said he was — Okay, okay, never mind, warning received,” Eric flits his hands to settle the conversation. “Now, I need everyone to remember that the adoption work interview for Jack is in a few weeks and I’ll give updates when I know it’s coming for sure, but please tell your men to not joke about our sex life, or anything, actually.”

“Eric, please,” Gabby smiles. “No one is going to fuck this up for you.”

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4 - Bitty the Vampire Slayer!

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Oldie but a goodie! I know I posted a little of this years ago but the premise is that Bitty’s a vampire hunter sent north by his family to root out a nest at Samwell; or, at least, that’s the reason Bitty gives his family for wanting to go to college, play hockey, be normal, etc.. 

While at Samwell, Bitty actually does stumble upon evidence of supernatural activity and realizes Jack’s the source.

______

Jack looks up from the stake in his hands, CCM logo still visible from where Eric hasn’t polished it away.

“You…uh, dropped this.”

Jack’s sporting a look Eric’s never seen as he holds the spike up to his chest, resting the point on his sternum like a chef testing a blade. It’d be terribly easy for Eric to drive that point deep enough to kill.

“So . . . Slayer, huh?” Jack asks, sending a chill down Eric’s spine.

“So, vampire, huh?” Eric counters, bracing himself for a fight.

“I’m not really sure anymore.” Jack lowers the stake before extending his hand, offering the weapon.

“Not a good enough answer,” Eric presses, reaching out slowly to take the stake from his Captain, definitely not fisting another in his pocket, ready for the worst, but Jack doesn’t engage.

“So, you’re just here because of the vampires?” Jack questions awkwardly. “Not hockey?”

“I’m sorry, are you seriously more upset about the fact I faked my contact issues than you are about me being a Slayer who poses an immediate threat to your wellbeing?”

Jack’s face twists into something between embarrassment and anger, triggering the shift in his features Eric’s only used to seeing before he needs to remove something from existence.

“No, I just…I thought I helped you.”

Sweet Lord, don’t make me have to kill this boy, Eric prays.

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Rules: Post the names of all the files in your WIP folder, regardless of how non-descriptive or ridiculous. Send me an ask with the title that most intrigues you and I’ll post a little snippet of it or tell you something about it! And then tag as many people as you have WIPs.
Lovingly tagged by @wrathofthestag <3

1. Doppelgänger AU - whole assed - ‘Every gun you ever held went off’

2. Do heroin under the aurora borealis

3. Bob Bitty Glass Cannon

4. Bitty the Vampire Slayer - hold

5. The Eric Show

6. Publizity (but w/ Jack)

7. Hockey Robot

8. Cancel. Clear. Delete.

9. Apocalypse Not-Right-Now

10. The Photograph

11. Looking at you (from several different angles)

12. Nascar

13. (Yeah it’s true) All I do is wanna talk about you

14. Robert Zimmermann II

15. Recluse Jack

Since everyone I could think of offhand has already been tagged, I’m openly inviting any followers who might like to participate to make their own lists! <3 <3 <3 

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sneak peek of ‘bliss (is on the other side of this)’ and a little taste of the Habs!Jack au drama to come <3)

On a layover at Logan International, Jack Zimmermann pulls his cap low as he slips into an Executive Club, settles into a seat away from prying eyes, and waits. It takes three minutes and fourteen seconds for a woman to drop into the chair beside him.

Georgia Martin, the Assistant General Manager of the Providence Falconers, doesn’t look at him as she sets her drink down on the small table between them, dropping her personal card beside the coaster as casually as a tip.

“Ballsy," Jack comments, keeping his eyes on the flight magazine he’d snatched from the concierge’s desk. "You could get fined for this."

“What’s life without a little danger?” She offers, pulling out her phone to play like they’re just sharing air, not trading clandestine chirps as they tiptoe around the point of the meeting; but their play acting doesn’t keep Martin from going in for the kill.

“Heard things are getting tense with your front office. A few close calls that might be reflected in your re-up.”

Jack turns another page, more interested in making Martin sweat than actual small talk. If he jumps ship, it isn’t going to be for a struggling expansion franchise. This is an exercise in ego-stroking; something to boost his value and remind Montréal he could always skip town.

“Get in line,” Jack offers blithely. “I’m the worst kept secret in the Metro division."

Martin shifts in her seat, straightening. Out of the corner of his eye, Jack can see her looking at him, waiting.

“We have a young team, a progressive fanbase, more than enough cap space to make a long-term move worth your while.”

“And what about the rumors you’re five years from a relocation? I’m not interested in a repeat of Atlanta,” Jack turns another page, slowing a touch when he finds a dewy Eric Bittle looking up from the inky prison of a cologne ad. He scratches the smooth paper along Bittle’s jawline, seeking a hint of the fragrance, forgetting momentarily it isn’t that kind of magazine.

“There are always rumors,” Martin acquiesces, “but the team is playoff ready. We just need something to tie it all together, so to speak. Someone.”

“If we’re playing it like that, how about percentage of ownership?” Jack counters, only half joking. “Pay my salary against the company debts, because you don’t actually have the cap space unless you jettison Robinson.”

Martin is silent in a way that tells Jack she’s in heavy contemplation, not just repositioning. For a moment, Jack considers if he’d actually accept a deal if it came with ownership rights. Mario turned the Penguins around in a decade. Jack could bring star power to Rhode Island, maybe even a few friends, but — he has to stop; this line of thinking is dangerous for more than a couple reasons. Montréal will always be his home, and Jack’s not strong enough to be the next Tavares — burned in effigy the first time he plays against his old team.

“That would be a . . . larger discussion, but I won’t say anything’s off the table. I can say, it’d be your team. We’d make you the immediate face of the franchise.”

Martin leans down and pulls a plain, unmarked folio from her bag that she rests between them, playing like she’s rearranging her carry on before softly saying, “Ten-two. A, possible C after first season. We don’t care about your friend. We care about hockey. I’ll speak to the ownership group about your suggestions and see what we can pull together.”

Jack turns his head, acknowledging her directly for the first time since they’ve sat down to meet like Cold War era spies.

“I’ll take that under consideration. You should probably head out, don’t want to miss your flight.”

“We’ll be in touch,” Martin offers, casting a parting look at the folio, and Jack watches her go, wondering if she’s actually flying or just bought a refundable ticket to get herself through security to meet with him. Whatever the case, it doesn’t matter; Jack slips the contract into the trash before he leaves the lounge.

He has his own plane to catch.

.

Bob is waiting on the tarmac with a driver when the charter lands, the irritated expression on his face telling Jack everything he needs to know about what rumors have already hit the Canadiens’ front office.

“Papa!” Jack greets.

The smile his father returns is all teeth.

.

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reblogged
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whoacanada

Zimbits - Bartender!Jack + NHL!Bitty AU

Prompt: Retired NHL player Jack Zimmermann takes ownership of a sports bar in Pittsburgh and accidentally falls for the Penguins’ (closeted) new left winger.
A/N - just the start, I’d like to get around to more of this; the basic idea was an It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia AU, but I couldn’t manage to make everyone that terrible so Jack owns and operates a gay sports bar and starts crushing on one of his patrons.

“Can’t believe you’ve owned this place since ’89.” Jack coughs, waving the dust away from his face. “Did you ever come back after we moved home?”

It’d be disingenuous to say Jack had been expecting anything other than cigars and whiskey when his father had invited him on a trip down to Pittsburgh to see Mario and glad-hand some Penguins sponsors. In fact, he’d kind of been looking forward to sulking and getting shit-faced, not limping around a condemned building dodging roaches and rats.

“It was an investment opportunity. That was the trend back then, famous athletes buying up restaurants and clubs — I had big plans for this building. Then your mother got pregnant and I realized I didn’t really give two shits about running a nightclub.”

“Realized you were pretty lazy, huh?”

As Bob laughs, Jack picks at the peeling, lacquered bartop, trying not to imagine how many decades of grime he’s just collecting under his nail, the situation made even more disgusting in such close proximity to the glittering gold championship ring his father had insisted he wear to their lunch meeting with the Penguins front-office suits. Jack flicks the gunk away as Bob levels him with a weighty look, hands braced in the air as if outlining a play and not offering a tour of a cobweb-filled dive.

“Here’s my thought,” Bob says. “The bar. It’s yours.”

Jack leans against the counter, taking some weight off his braced leg, and asks, “What’s mine?”

“This place,” Bob gestures around the room. “The whole building. It’s just sitting here, empty, the bar, the liquor license, there’s apartments and office space upstairs, we’d just need to do some renovations and —“

Jack can’t help himself. He barks a laugh and says, “I’m not moving to Pittsburgh.”

“How many times have you and I talked about opening a sports bar? I’d wanted to get this place fixed up so it’d be ready when you retired, but since the final — you could make it a gay bar, even, if you wanted!” Bob says quickly, offering another awkward olive branch. “A gay sports bar. I wouldn’t care.”

“A gay sports bar. In Pittsburgh,” Jack echoes, reaching for a chirp to defend himself, but he closes him mouth as he realizes a sports bar run by a Zimmermann might not be a terrible investment idea. “The building needs a ton of work,” Jack settles. “I just saw a rat.”

“That was a mouse,” Bob dismisses, not bothering to look at the rat still clearly in view. “Nothing that can’t be fixed. Got a dollar?”

Jack pats his pockets, finds a spare looney and hands it over. Bob doesn’t hesitate, pulling an envelope out of his back pocket to exchange for the coin.

“Congratulations. You are now the proud owner of,” Bob looks around helplessly. “I actually don’t know what they call this place now. A Bar?”

“I’m sure we’ll figure something out.” Jack swallows against the tightness in his throat, holding the deed carefully in his hands. “Thanks, Dad.”

Bob brings Jack in for a loose hug and they both ignore the soft squeaking coming from the backroom.

Five Years Later

There’s a man examining the announcement board in the vestibule, and Jack knows that posture: the forward hip cant, thick thighs, a small but definite bubble butt — guy’s a hockey player, and he has been for some time.

(Happy Writer’s Appreciation Day! Here’s a mini part 2!)

___________

Jack looks up from the soda gun and finds Bitty waiting patiently among the rowdy crew lining the bar, wearing a fitted suit with a small Penguins pin on the lapel. Bitty’s hand, extended to offer a folded twenty braced between his knuckles, bears a glittering NCAA championship ring. Upon gaining Jack’s attention, he smiles timidly, showing off his missing tooth, and Jack loses focus long enough to overflow the the glass in his hand.

“Tabarnak,” he curses, shaking dry as Bitty fights a laugh; abandoning the mixed drink to pull Bitty’s usual beer from the cooler, prying off the lid with his own championship ring as Eric looks on appreciatively.

“You’re going to have to teach me that one so I can impress all my hot dates.”

“Getting a lot of offers, eh?”

“A few,” Bitty teases, bringing the bottle to his lips slowly, deliberately, completely oblivious to the women trying to get his attention as he watches Jack. “One I’m particularly interested in pursuing.”

This is flirting. Jack knows this is flirting, because what the hell else could it possibly be?

“So, liking our Friday night bro-downs with the Pens, eh? Straight enough for ESPN, gay enough to hold a bachelorette party’s attention; and I’m not just talking about my ass.”

Jack will never admit to practicing that line in the shower, but he is extremely proud when Eric snorts hard and starts to cough, waving off assistance from a statuesque woman beside him.

“Please don’t die, I don’t want to have to put up another memorial plaque.”

Ransom whistles sharply, and Jack just misses getting beaned with a champagne bottle, so distracted by Eric’s distress. “Behind you, Boss, we need a couple bottles of Lagavulin upstairs — the guys are doing shots. It’s somebody’s birthday, I think.”

“Boss?” Bitty clears his throat, bringing Jack’s attention back. “You’re ‘Boss’, now? Did you get promoted?”

“Always was! It’s my place!” Jack calls over Ransom’s shoulder. Bitty gives him a confused look, so Jack turns slowly, deliberately, to his framed Las Vegas Aces jersey — hung dutifully beside his father’s vintage Pens sweater — and gestures between himself and the display above the bar. Back and forth, back and forth, until Bitty’s eyes go wide with recognition.

“Wait, that’s you? You played?”

“What, you though those medals in the corner are just for show?” Jack jokes, trying to lighten the mood. “I’m practically a legend.”

A big, gay legend’, Jack doesn’t say. ‘How the hell don’t you know who I am?’

“I didn’t — I’m sorry, I thought you were just a bartender.”

There is something flattering about Bittle admitting he didn’t recognize Jack; it adds a welcome context to their past meetings and floods Jack with a sense of pride. A handsome, professional athlete had showed genuine interest in a waiter with a limp. The old ‘Zimmermann Charm’ brings it home again.

“I mean, I am. Also, the owner. I’m retired.”

“You thought I recognized you,” Bittle realizes, shock abating as he looks around the bar with new eyes. “And you recognized me. I’m so stupid,” Bittle covers his face with his hands, but Jack can still see the man’s ears go pink. “Who wanders in to a sports bar and doesn’t expect to get recognized. A gay sports bar!”

“I’m not going to tell anyone,” Jack assuages, reaching over the pat him on the shoulder gently (awkwardly). “And if it helps you’re not that well known.”

Bittle drops his hands and shoots Jack a withering look.

“Yet.” Jack amends sagely. “You need a minute? Rans! Cover for ten.”

Ransom flashes a thumbs up that becomes two thumbs up when he notices Bittle.  “Won’t yell if I need you, Jack.”

__________

“It’s a little quieter back here, you can process without witnesses.”

“I can’t believe I didn’t put it together, of course you’re you, god how didn’t I put it together, my god, your ass, of course you play —”

“Past tense.”

“I know,” Bitty decries, gesturing at his own face as if to mimic Jack’s facial hair. “I know who you are but I didn’t know you were you. You can’t tell the guys this. They won’t let me live it down.”

“For several reasons, I bet.” Jack fights the stiffness in his knee and comes around his desk to face Bitty properly.  “Can I kiss you?”

Bitty nods eagerly, and Jack swoops in to capture the man’s lips, relishing Bitty’s excited whine at the contact, his arms coming to rest on Jack’s hips, holding him tightly.

“I’m not out,” Bitty breathes when they separate. “No one knows.”

“I won’t say anything,” Jack laces his fingers in Bitty’s hair and tugging him back up. “But I am out. So, if you’re planning on hanging around, people are going to talk. Having been out of the spotlight for five years means I’m in extremely high demand. TMZ follows me everywhere.”

“I’ll take that under advisement.” Bitty breathes against Jack’s lips. “I like you, a whole lot, even before I knew you played. And you’re so damn pretty —”

Jack shoves some papers aside and sits down on the edge of his desk so he’s at a better height allowing Bittle to stand between his spread thighs as they make out like horny teenagers stealing a moment behind the bleachers; Bitty finally taking initiative and getting handsy, much to Jack’s delight. At least until Jack loses track of time and there’s a loud banging on the office door.

“Yo! Jack! Penobscott just puked all over Sid’s date you gotta get out here.”

“I’m busy, Shits!” Jack calls, holding the back of Bitty’s head steady as the man tries to suck a hickey onto Jack’s neck. “Get someone else to handle it!”

“What, you jacking it in there? That’s a health code violation, man. Don’t make me report you.”

Bitty moves to cup his palm over Jack’s crotch, rubbing the heel of his hand over a very sensitive area robbing vital blood from Jack’s brain. “I’m on a call — with a new vendor.” Jack raises his voice, chasing a kiss as Bitty gropes away. “Give me ten?”

“Only ten?” Bitty whispers.

“You are a little shit, eh?” Jack rasps, nipping at Bitty’s ear. “Look at you.”

“Jack!”

________

(.)

Avatar

‘Wishful Thinking‘

Summary: Every NHL champion gets a single brush with ice magic. When Jack takes his first cup with the Falconers, he accidentally undoes the wish that brought him back from the brink of death in 2009, and Bitty becomes hell-bent on lifting the cup himself for a chance to set things right.
A/N: Finally posting some concepts I’ve played around with that aren’t 100% complete massive fics, but still pretty solid, just little things that might be enjoyed. Yet another cup-wish-gone-wrong-au with monkey-paw components. Also inspired by discord convos about canon!Jack meeting an older, veteran NHL!Bitty and having a lot of feelings. Also mentor/father-in-law!Bob trying to help Bitty navigate the NHL. There’s more to this floating around but this is the meat of it

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Bob can sense when it happens. A shift of something monumental that he’s only felt on a handful of occasions his entire life. A quick glance across the ice finds a number of the celebrating Falconers looking around curiously, unsure of the sensation; for so many, it’s their first brush with ice magic. A pleasant novelty. The vets, though, they look to each other.

Bob turns and doesn’t have to look far to find his son, one hand clasped around the cup, the other around Eric Bittle’s waist, smiling from ear to ear. Something about the moment is wrong, but Bob can’t quite determine why as he’s overcome with a wave of nausea. The stadium lights are too bright and he blinks hard, face scrunching, trying to force whatever wrongness he’s feeling out of himself.

Someone’s made a wish.

The moment passes. Bob’s vision clears. There, veiled in a shower of blue and gold confetti, is Eric; alone at center ice, face twisted in confusion as he looks around for the man who only moments earlier had been in his arms.

“You take the cup, you get one real wish,” the decades old, bourbon-lacquered voice of his first coach reminds him. “But only the one. Can be something small, like an empty cab in the rain, or it can be something big. World changing, even. The one thing, the most important thing — ”

“No,” Bob breathes. “Please, no.”

“— You never use your wish on another player.”

____________

____________

____________

They don’t know exactly what Jack wished for, but the next time Bitty’s blades touch the ice, it’s as if he’s stepped into the body of a new man. No more slurs. No more targeted chirps. He’s just one of the boys.

He plays. He wins. Then, the offers start to come.

NHL teams looking for fast wingers, team players, leadership material; not one of them mentions diversity, or Eric’s status as the first out NCAA hockey captain. No one cares. No one remembers Jack, and no one cares about Eric.

The best and worst case scenarios rolled into one. If this is the reality Jack unknowingly traded his existence for, Bitty has no choice but to walk through the door his partner opened.

Bitty swallows, trying to force the words out on one of his now nightly calls with the man who would have been his father-in-law in another world, if the shared connection between them hadn’t been interred in a Montréal cemetery almost a decade prior.

“I think . . . I think he wished for acceptance.”

___________

___________

___________

“No one remembers anymore.”

Eric scuffs his skate against this ice, building up a small pile of shavings before scattering them again, focusing on the soft white as if somehow he’ll be able to transport himself bodily to somewhere cool and quiet. Jackson Hole. Banff. Tremblant. Anywhere but here. Anywhen but now.

“Saw Tater last week at a press junket. Blank stares all around. Some days, most days, I wake up and I don’t know how I got here. I can go without thinking of him.”

Weeks. Eric doesn’t say aloud. Months. Those hideous mornings when he wakes up beside a warm body and forgets they aren’t him. They aren’t supposed to be him. Was there ever even a him.

Jack. Eric mouths silently, just to remind himself. His name is Jack.

The details always slip. The universe constantly trying to correct the fallacy of Eric Bittle remembering a man who died before they technically ever met. Faded photographs and corrupted memory cards. Selfies that used to have two people in frame. Vlog posts with cosmic ADR, swapping Jack’s name for someone else’s like a hastily rewritten script. Eventually, even Eric’s memories turn traitor. First times lost to reshoots and post-production magic. Blue eyes are brown. Black hair is blonde. Jack becomes Phillip. Eric’s first love recast. In desperation, he pulls a page from Memento, finds a tattoo parlor and has ‘Jack Laurent Zimmermann’ inked in dark, unmistakable letters on his inner thigh. Adds a cup, the Falconers’ crest, and the date they lost everything. It works well enough until the name fades; there are still days where a hook up will ask why Eric has a championship tattoo for a team he never played with.

Now, all he has is Bob.

“That’s why I’m here.” Bob reminds. “That’s why we talk.”

“But what happens if we don’t.”

Bob’s familiar assurances rumble through the phone. Constant. Refusing to acknowledge the harsh realities of the passing of time. The ever-present doomsday clock moving them both toward disaster — Bob aging, Eric aging out. He’s good, but he isn’t great, and the only offers coming his way are single-season contracts with teams that haven’t sniffed a championship in years. One day very soon, there will be no more chances for Eric to undo what’s been done. No more favors to ask of teammates that have long since forgotten a world where Jack Zimmermann was a college graduate and a rookie MVP. Not just an addict. Not just dead at nineteen.

Eric listens to Bob ramble, asks him to tell him a story, to tell him about the Jack that Eric never really got to know. The Jack he can barely remember. A man that Eric has dedicated his entire life to honoring, to bringing back — from where he cannot fathom — and Bob obliges in a soft tone Eric imagines is not dissimilar from how he must have spoken to his son as a child.

Eric ignores his teammates rushing around him — tossing chirps and gentle insults about his ‘Sugar Daddy’ — and focuses on the accented voice in his ear; grasping desperately at the memory of a man who doesn’t exist. Pretending. Hoping.

__________

__________

Across the ice, Eric sees Kent Parson watching him. When they lock eyes, the aging star glides toward him, under a guise of one amicable captain greeting another. He’s pushing 37, and while the years of competitive play are starting to show, he’s just as viciously handsome as the day they first met. At least, Eric thinks he is. He can’t imagine a life where Kent Parson strolled onto a college campus and played beer pong at a frat party, but there’s a folder of old photos on Eric’s computer. Jack is in none of them, but there’s one of himself and Kent. Smiling.

Eric can’t recall why the image bothers him so much.

Parson used his wish years ago on something that he’s never bothered to share — and Eric’s far too much a gentleman to ask a man who was once a rival what he wasted his golden ticket on — but now, he’s slowing down, and this is supposed to be his farewell season. Going out with a bang, riding the high of his fifth cup win. He’s worked hard, and he deserves to shove the Penguins back down into obscurity for another season. Deserves it far more than Eric, with his selfish, single-mindedness that’s ruined god knows how many careers in the last decade between his own ruthlessness and Bob’s meddling.

Except. . . this is also likely Eric’s last season. His last chance to undo the great tragedy of his life, and Parson knows it.

“How you feeling, Peaches? You ready?”

Eric hates the nickname in the same way he hates when his father calls him ‘Champ’.

Eric fights his own shame because he wants to be honest, say, ‘No, I’m not ready, I’ll never be ready,’ but Eric can’t ask for what he wants, anymore. He wants the Aces to balk on a power play. He wants Parson to flub a pass and throw the game —  he even knows the man would probably do it, too — but Eric needs to come by a win honestly. They learned the hard way in 2022 when Eric hands were wrapped around the cup, wishing, praying, crying, pleading . . .

Clear eyes, full hearts, or some such bullshit.

Cheaters don’t get wishes.

“I can’t remember, anymore,” Eric admits as they square up across the face-off circle, the resigned terror of an inescapable end creeping upon him like the burn of an old injury ignored for far too long. “Kent. Please.” Parson leans down, rests his stick against the ice, and holds Eric’s gaze as if to say, I’m here. Trust me. Just play.

The puck drops.

________

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________

There’s someone watching him, young, handsome with dark hair and the kind of bright blue eyes that scream ‘notice me’ with all of the biological bluntness of neon plumage and a mating dance. The man weaves through the crowd, unnoticed by Eric’s teammates, and comes close enough that Eric can’t help but assume familiarity. He must be a fan, the way he’s flushed and excitable.

Eric’s drunk enough on the moment that he’s happy to indulge his baser instincts. He also literally can’t remember the last time he brought company home and if there’s ever been a night to get laid, it’s this one.

Crisse, look at you, Bits.”

The man is caught between being awestruck and simply struck, reaching out to touch Eric’s arm but not quite making contact, like his depth perception is the tiniest bit off. He drops Eric’s old nickname so easily, so earnestly, that for a moment Eric thinks they might already know each other — but that’s impossible. Eric would remember someone so handsome, so very much his type.

“Only my friends call me ‘Bitty’.” Eric cautions, raising his half-empty champagne bottle in a mock toast and flashing his best ‘you’re coming home with me tonight’ smile. “But I’m more than happy to to get acquainted with you, Sugar.”

Eric isn’t usually this forward, this unrestrained. Tonight, it doesn’t matter, he’s celebrating: another championship, the end of a career, a life well lived. It’s to be expected. What isn’t expected is how the man’s relieved smile falters; as if Eric’s unbridled joy is somehow misplaced.

“Bitty? It’s me.”

“And ‘me’ is called . . . ?”

On very few occasions in Eric’s life has he been able to witness true devastation first-hand; and those instances were related to deaths, hockey losses, or blackout morning afters.

“Jack.” The man says softly, face slack with surprise. “It’s. . . Jack. Bitty, you know me.”

“If we’ve met before, I’m sorry,” Eric apologizes, hating to see the kid look so defeated. “I meet so many people — ”

Over Jack’s shoulder, Eric catches sight of Bob Zimmermann and waves, delighting in the way Bob’s face lights up when he catches sight of Eric, practically going supernova when he notices Jack as well, crossing the ice like a man possessed; Bob moves to pull them both into a hug but Eric’s new friend holds up a defensive hand and Bob stops mid-gesture.

It’s extremely apparent something is off, and between the reporters, the confetti, the champagne, and the fans, Eric is missing all of the context clues.

“Just won my last cup,” Eric singsongs, gesturing with the bottle between his mentor and the man Eric would very much like to fuck — who look very similar now that Eric can see them side by side. “Everyone’s super excited, right? Yeah? So, what’s going on. Did someone die?”

“No.” Bob says quickly, eyes flicking between Jack and Eric warily. “No. Not . . . that.”

“Severely injured?”

“. . . Non.”

“Okay, then, we should be celebrating!” Eric throws his arms wide and nearly clocks a passing teammate. “No more party pooping, Bobbert. Speaking, this is my new friend, Jack. Jack, Bob, Bob, Jack. Though, I’m getting the feeling you two might know each other. Or might be . . . related.” Eric gasps and smacks his free palm against his forehead. “Oh my god, the Tremblant retreat? Is that where I know you from? Listen, I was fucked up on pain meds that whole weekend, I am so sorry if we’ve already met.”

Despite Eric’s continued attempts at clarifying their shared mystery past, Jack keeps looking at Bob with that same wounded expression and it’s really killing Eric’s buzz.

“Bob.” Eric redirects. “Help me, here. Cutie’s nervous.”

“Eric, this is my, ah, well,” Bob’s smile is so forced, so tense, it looks more like a grimace. “Well, this is my son, Jack.”

There is only one ‘Jack’ Eric has ever known in relation to Bob Zimmermann, and he is not someone to be mentioned in polite conversation.

“Your son?” Eric echoes slowly. “Your son, Jack.”

Bob realizes what Eric’s tiptoeing around and casts a furtive glance toward the younger man, lifting two fingers to his cheek conspiratorially to imply ‘it’s a long story, not meant for public ears’. Eric knows how to play along.

“Wow, okay, did not expect that, but now that you’re saying it, I can one-hundred-percent tell. You have the same, well, everything.”

Eric takes Jack’s hand for an obligatory shake, not missing the way Jack’s features twist up into something caught between flattery and misery, before staring down his pseudo-mentor.

“My question is this, where have you’ve been hiding him — because how long have I know you, Bobby? Shame.”

“I’ve been . . . away.”

Jack’s tone is weighted with context Eric absolutely does not possess, but can definitely read into. Given the age difference and Alicia’s conspicuous lack of attendance this evening, Jack’s definitely a love child from some 90s Zimmergroupie. Or, original Jack didn’t actually OD and Bob spirited away his kid to keep away the prying eyes of the public; but that wouldn’t explain the age difference or the shared name.

Oh, Bobbert.

“Couldn’t wheel him out too soon,” Bob jokes, but Eric can tell the man’s heart isn’t in it, reinforcing Eric’s suspicion.

“Well, I’m happy you did,” Eric says graciously, trying to smooth over the awkwardness. “He’s very handsome, when he isn’t doing this Eeyore impression.”

“Just like his father,” Bob says reflexively —  defensively —  as Jack goes pink. “Eric, will you excuse us for a moment? Back in five minutes, tops.”

Eric offers a gracious wave, gaze lingering on Jack’s retreating back — and backside, bless — watching Bob rest a firm hand on his son’s neck, gripping tightly to lean in and furiously whisper something. As Eric watches, Jack looks back over his shoulder; it’s not the fond glance of a potential paramour. Regret, maybe? Grief, definitely.

He must be as disappointed to be cock-blocked by his father as Eric is.

Across the ice, Kent Parson has rushed Jack, gathering him into a crushing embrace that the younger man returns easily —  burying his face against Parson’s pads; pulling back only when Parson grabs Jack’s shoulders to push him away, taking a long look at him, holding his face between his hands briefly before pulling Jack back into his arms.

They don’t just look like old friends, it’s a reunion of desperation, like the videos his mother sends of soldiers coming home from war, but before Eric can think better of it, a teammate fists a hand in the collar of Eric’s sweater and pulls — away from Bob’s forlorn love child and forgotten first meetings — and the night goes on.  

Bob doesn’t return. Neither does Jack.

Eric doesn’t even notice.

__________

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Avatar

Zimmerbro AU

Summary: Andrew Phillip Rowe could skate before he could walk, and it wasn’t until he was almost twenty and well on his way to becoming a Las Vegas Ace before he knew why.
a/n: that’s right we’ve got a secret zimmermann brother au based on the fact that Bob was an active pro athlete for almost 15 years before Jack was born and almost definitely had relationships before Alicia. This particular one resulted in a secret love child.

When the call finally went out that year —  a request for players willing to billet the incoming draftees —  Andrew had been the first in line.

His already sparsely decorated guest room had been primed for a new tenant since he’d learned Las Vegas’ abysmal season had earned them the first pick of the 2009 draft. In his mind, Andrew had envisioned a tearful confession. A family reunion nineteen years in the making where he’d finally get a chance to connect with a half-brother he’d grown up learning about through news articles and stats pages.

He wasn’t ready for Jack to pull out of the draft days before the ceremony; wasn’t ready for the claims of an overdose or speculation about suicide attempts. He certainly wasn’t expecting to have to open his home to a young man with limp blonde hair and deep circles under his eyes with the same enthusiasm he’d promised he’d offer to a son of Bob Zimmermann.

Andrew was hoping for a little brother. 

He got Kent Parson instead.

______

“You remind me of my boyfriend.” Kent slurs one night, completely gone on Johnny Walker Blue borrowed from Andrew’s wet bar. “It’s your . . . face.”

“Shouldn’t talk about things like that,” Andrew cautions gently, covering his own surprise. “Never know who might be listening.”

“Who fucking cares? He won’t talk to me,” Kent continues, ignoring him and sniffing like he’s on the verge of sobbing or puking, both options equally unwanted. “They wouldn’t tell me if he was even alive.”

Another unwanted puzzle piece locks into place.

“Jack?” Andrew suggests softly, and Kent begins to cry.

“You won’t tell right?”

Andrew shakes his head no, long enough for Kent’s bleary eyes to focus on the gesture and take it seriously.

Things are different, after that conversation. Not worse, or better, just different.

________

“He’s my brother.”

Andrew admits this one night, for no reason other than that he can.

Kent is across the room, backlit by lights from the Strip, his legs dangling off the arm of his favorite couch as he scrolls through his phone looking for distractions. Parse hasn’t lived with Andrew for almost two seasons, but he still turns up like a bad penny whenever he needs to commiserate with someone who knows his more lascivious secrets. Truthfully, Andrew’s grateful for the company. He’s a pretty genial guy, but he’s always kept his distance, a personality trait he likes to think he shares with an unassuming sibling, but there’s no way to know for sure. The farther Andrew gets from the 2009 Draft, the less faith he has in a reunion that won’t just bring crippling sorrow to everyone involved.

A secret Zimmermann son who actually made it in the NHL. Who has his name on the Stanley Cup, not once, but twice, largely thanks to the spitfire forward lounging in Andrew’s living room.

“Who’s your brother?” Kent asks, not looking up from his phone.

“Jack Zimmermann.”

Kent barks a laugh and rolls his head lazily to smirk at Andrew.

“That’s funny. I guess you kinda have the same chin. Was Marky digging for chirps?”

Andrew has no idea what that means, but he sets down his tablet and says, “No, he’s actually my half-brother. My mom dated Bad Bob in ’84 and got pregnant.”

The lackadaisical smile on Kent’s face falters as his gaze sharpens, like he’s actually looking at Andrew for the first time. Andrew responds by gesturing at himself lamely.

“That’s not funny.”

“No.” Andrew agrees. “It isn’t.”

Kent swings his feet down off the couch and braces himself against the overstuffed leather. He doesn’t look mad, but there’s something too close to disbelief for Andrew to convince himself everything’s okay. It takes a moment, but Kent must find what he’s looking for on Andrew’s face.

“Does Bob know?” Kent asks with that familiar overfamiliarity, as if they both still have some personal relationship with the living legend.

“Yeah. When Mom got pregnant she told him she didn’t want the attention since it was only a fling — ”

“Who the fuck doesn’t lock down Bob Zimmermann?” Kent breathes. “Also, why the fuck did she tell you that?”

“No shit, right? She got him to sign away parental rights, set up a trust, never spoke to him again as far as I know. I didn’t find out until after I signed with the Aces. She didn’t want me to get blindsided if it all came out, but the story never broke.”

“I mean, does Bob know who you are?” Kent questions. “Does Jack?”

Andrew shakes his head no, because he doesn’t think so, and Kent flops back against the cushions, face slack with disbelief; it doesn’t take long for his features to shift to anger.

“You knew this whole time and you didn’t tell me? Even after I told you —“

“Okay, there’s a whole-ass difference between you fucking dudes and and me being ‘Bad Bob’s bastard’,” Andrew bites, curtailing Kent’s imminent hissy fit. Appropriately, Kent closes his mouth, almost pouting.

“Fine. But that’s fucked.” Kent says after a loaded moment of silence. “I’m sorry you’re . . . you.”

“Yeah. I’m sorry you’re you, too.”

“You know Jack’s signing with the Falconers, right?” Kent offers like the worst kind of olive branch, unintentionally telling Andrew exactly what he was up to during that stretch of time between New England games a few months prior. “It’s not public but it’s happening. Ink’s dry.”

“I know. That’s why I told you. It’s gonna be weird,” Andrew swallows, thinking about playing Providence in the coming months.

“Fucking right it’s weird.”

_________

For the most part, the Las Vegas Aces are decent, stand up guys. Even with the accusations of gambling debts and mob connections with the ownership group, Andrew’s never been asked to hit a certain player a little too hard, or to take a dive so the other team gets a shot at a power play. A lot of talk, a lot of conspiracies, ‘Typical Aces hockey’, but there’s no malice. Not really.

Andrew thinks it’s hilarious he plays the game a lot like his estranged father, but he’s not a legend in the making, hell, at this point he’s barely regarded as more than a mid-level, reliable center that can bring home 40 points a season.

Carly whips behind Zimmermann’s back to clip his skate with a stick, dropping a ill advised chirp that sets every player in earshot on edge. Parse is close enough to catch the quiet slur, stiffening like he’s been hit, and Andrew watches Zimmermann recover quickly, steely and resolute. 

Jack has his mother’s eyes — not the warm brown Andrew catches every time he looks in the mirror.

“He’s a fucking goon,” Andrew breathes, gliding up to Jack’s shoulder in lieu of an apology. Zimmermann doesn’t miss a beat, his gaze flicking to Andrew with the quiet rage of ‘who gives a fuck’. Andrew admires his commitment to the game. Coming back after so much, after so long, to willingly subject himself to the same kind of treatment that Andrew knows likely led to his original fall from grace.

“Hey,” Kent ducks his head as he slides up a little while later, mouthguard clenched between his teeth, and asks, “You see his twink?”

At Andrew’s obvious confusion, Kent jerks his head toward the glass behind the Falconers’ bench, to a raucous group of fans all sporting fresh Zimmermann jerseys. Andrew’s gaze drifts along the row of faces, lingering longer on the familiar, handsome couple beside the blonde young man. He may be imagining things — the stadium lights catching a bad angle —  but for the briefest moment, Andrew holds eye contact with his father.

“He’s cute, right?” Kent says bitterly, like he doesn’t have a partner of his own back home.

“Yeah, he is. You gonna do anything about the slurs, Captain?” Andrew counters, earning a stern look from Parson.

“I’ll deal with Carly.”

“Oh, you will? Because I’ve never seen you shut him down before.”

“I’ll handle it.”

Kent’s expression goes stormy, and he gives Andrew a hard shove before skating off to set up for the next shift. To his credit, he does grab Carly by the arm and tell him something that earns a look of displeasure from the larger man, but Andrew knows a verbal warning won’t curtail someone as dead-set in his conservatism as Carly.

The next play, Carly flashes Andrew a toothy smile over the lineman’s shoulder, as if they’re in on the same joke, and his vision goes red.

__________

__________

“Bad Bob’s outside,” Scraps rasps, like whatever brief interaction he’s just had has physically winded him. “He wants to talk to Flip.”

Andrew blinks up from the water bottle in his hands, previously concerned with the pink-stained gauze wrapped around his knuckles. A few of the guys start chirping, but most of them remain silent, still processing the fact that Andrew assaulted one of their own without clear motivation, in defense of an opponent.

“That’s what this was all about? You gunning for a trade?” Sorenson spits from his stall. “Needed to impress Bad Bob by beating the snot out of Carly?”

“Maybe I am,” Andrew sighs, pushing himself to his feet, wincing at the way his jaw aches from the few good hits Carly had managed to squeeze in before he went down. “What the fuck are you gonna do about it.”

_______

Andrew’s grateful he kept his skates on. He needs the boost of confidence that comes with the added height, especially when he finds Bob Zimmermann waiting patiently in the corridor like he’s just another staff member and not the second most recognizable figure in modern hockey.

“Hey kid,” Bob greets, casting an approving, overly-familiar eye over Andrew’s padded bulk and sweat-slick hair. “You can throw a hell of a punch. Don’t think I’ve ever seen a guy beat the piss out of a teammate before. Off ice, sure, but never during a game.”

His accent is just as thick in private as every interview Andrew’s ever caught live — but his tone is unexpectedly warm, even grateful — when Bob laughs at his own recounting of Andrew’s assault attempt, the sound is light and joyous like nothing in the world comes easier to this titan of a man.

Andrew wonders if Bob can recognize the chin they share beneath a his playoff beard; if there’s any resemblance left in a nose that’s been reset a half-dozen times.

Andrew grew up loved and never wanted for anything. His step-fathers, both of them, had been good men who never left him looking for a father figure. It wasn’t until his twenties that Andrew even realized there was hole where his bio-dad should have been, and not just a regular hole, a yawning sinkhole threatening to devour his entire sense of self, because his biological father turned out to be a man he grew up idolizing as a personal hero.

He’s not mad at his mother, but when Andrew struggles to find his voice — which is bullshit seeing as he’s almost thirty-five and a god-damned professional athlete — he can’t stop himself from feeling like a misplaced child.

“Do you,” Andrew swallows, looking over Bob’s shoulder to see if anyone’s watching them. Finding they’re alone, he rallies quietly, “Do you know who I am?”

Bob’s jovial expression softens into something remorseful, but unfathomably kind. “I do, buddy,” he acknowledges, somehow squeezing three decades of affection into one term of endearment. “I’ve known for some time, now. The whole time, actually.”

That hurts more than expected.

“Does your wife? Does Jack?”

Bob shakes his head, but it isn’t a hard no.

“Alicia knows, and Jack has some idea he’s got a half-brother, but it’s all in the abstract. No specifics. Definitely doesn’t know you play. I wanted to respect your privacy and your mother’s wishes. She let me know she’d told you the truth a few years back and I wanted to give you the space you needed if you decided to reach out. When you didn’t, well, a man makes assumptions.”

Andrew looks down at the concrete beneath his skates and sniffs hard, fighting nasal drip from the smelling salts he’d needed in the third period; or, at least, that’s what he tells himself. “I had a plan, back when — ” he stops himself, looking down at his skates. Bob’s eyebrows lift in curiosity, leaving room for Andrew to gather his thoughts, but he doesn’t take the bait, unable to bring up what could have been just yet. Bob seems to grasp the context after the moment.

“2009,” he acknowledges softly. “Hell of a year.”

“Yeah. It was. Is he okay?”

“What, Jack? He’s leagues ahead of where he was then —”

“No, I mean, tonight. Carly clipped him pretty hard before I got in there.”

“Oh, a little bruised up, but he’ll live. Are you?”

“Am I what?”

“Okay.”

Andrew looks down at his bandaged fist and realizes he’s completely forgotten how gnarly his face must look.

“Trainer says I’m alright, but I’m gonna get leveled with a wicked fine, I know it.”

“Was it worth it?” There’s a look of guilty pride on Bob’s face, like the man’s enjoying himself a little too much when he leans in and whispers, “You just did something I’ve wanted to do since Jack was in mites. Fucking lay out one of those fuckers that’s got nothing better to do than bitch because they can’t play,” there’s a moment of hesitation, as if he’s worried about pushing a boundary, before he adds, “How’d it feel to look out for your little brother?”

Pride, it turns out, in contagious, and Andrew feels like he could go back on the ice and do it all over again. “Pretty fucking great,” Andrew can’t help a smile, wincing when the gesture pulls at his split lip.

Bob slaps a hand on Andrew’s shoulder pads, then gets a grip on the back of his head, heedless of his sweaty hair.

Crisse, you’re a fuckin’ beaut, kid. I’ve wanted to tell you that for years.”

Andrew can’t blame the smelling salts anymore.

__________

Jack clearly doesn’t see his father standing there with red-rimmed eyes, or Andrew in an equally unkempt state, and has no reason to think anything untoward has happened when he offers a handshake and pulls Andrew into a hug, bouncing his free fist off the back of Andrew’s pads. “I owe you a drink,” Jack says decisively when he pulls back, shooting a grin between his father and Andrew. “Can’t believe you did that.”

“More than a drink, I think,” the blonde guy Andrew saw behind the bench pipes up. Jack’s ‘twink’. Boyfriend. Whatever. “Dinner at least.”

“A pie,” Bob suggests tightly, keeping his voice even as he turns to quickly scrub his fist over his eyes. Andrew recognizes the statuesque woman who strides up beside Bob, and one quick look tells him she definitely knows who he is.

“Hello, Andrew,” Alicia greets softly, genuinely. “It’s very nice to meet you.”

“You, too.” he says, the tightness in his throat coming out as gruffness rather than emotion. “This is great, but I should go shower and, uh, it was nice meeting you all.”

Bob’s hand whips out and fists the sleeve of Andrew’s sweater, keeping him in place.

“You have plans tonight?”

Andrew debates lying, because he doesn’t know how to move forward from this point, but they’re all looking at him. Waiting. Expectant. There’s too much at stake, and yet somehow — A sharp whistle drags Andrew’s attention back to the locker room. Kent is peeking his head out, and god knows how long he’s been eavesdropping.

“Yo, Zimmermanns. Bittle.”

“Parson.” The blonde says curtly, earning a wry smirk from Kent.

“Flip, we got a presser if you feel like putting a bow on the evening,” Kent’s gaze drifts to Bob’s flushed face, and he adds, “Or, you can shower and slip out the loading bay while I cover for your aggro ass because this is not going to be fun. Your call.”

Andrew looks at the small family surrounding him, his family, and says, “I don’t want to explain.” Kent shrugs and ducks back inside while Bob’s brow furrows in confusion. “I can do dinner, but I don’t want to,” Andrew holds his hands out in front of him, trying to gesture what he means, and Bob snaps his fingers in understanding.

“Ah, ha, I got you, kid.”

“Neat. I’m gonna go shower.”

“We will be here when you’re ready,” Alicia offers. “Take your time.”

“Oh, I will,” Andrew replies before he can stop himself, cringing the second his back is turned because what the fuck could he be any more awkward?

Time will tell.

_____________

.

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when all else fails (i’ll still be right here) - zimbits fic

Summary: The National Hockey League is resurrecting the Quebec City Nordiques, and the expansion draft hits the Falconers much harder than expected.
(The Heartbreakfest fic that almost was.)
Word Count: 6097

Eric’s fretting over dinner options when Jack’s phone starts buzzing in his pocket — a specific triple-tone vibration he’d set for Georgia almost three years earlier. Eric waves a fond hand Jack’s direction as he steps outside to take the call — already knowing it isn’t going to be happy news.

“Who’s it going to be? Tell me we didn’t lose Poots, you know he just bought a house.”

Through the patio door, Jack can see his husband dancing around their brand new kitchen, renovated specifically for Eric’s web series; plating their dinner, adjusting the light and angling his phone to get the best photo possible before abandoning the device and going for Jack’s ever-present camera.

This is their first home, too; nestled in the suburbs, a stone’s throw from Tater’s place and just a neighborhood over from Marty’s. Running distance. Good schools. Enough guest rooms they’ll never have to send their parents to hotels over the holidays. They’ve already leveled the ground in the back for a greenhouse and garden in the spring, the yard large enough for pets and, one day, if Jack’s lucky, children.

“It’s not Fitz.” Georgia says after a loaded silence, tone as gentle as it is remorseful. “It’s . . . You’re not protected from the Quebec City expansion draft, Jack. It’s you.”

“Yeah, right.” Jack says reflexively, not quite finding the humor in her joke. “Who’s it really?”

“Your contract renewal didn’t make the Player Association cutoff. The Quebec owners are threatening legal action if we try to expand coverage because you’re technically eligible and they want to build the team around a ‘star’ — Word about your contract hasn’t hit the news yet, but you’re going to get a call tomorrow from Jeremy Wilmington, and, probably, Bettman. Quebec is going to pick you first.”

She’s serious. 

She’s serious.

“George? George.” Jack tries to keep his tone even, not sure why he’s explaining this to a woman who knows him better than most anyone. “Right? Yeah, I don’t want to go to Quebec to play for an expansion team that isn’t going to have a playoff run for a decade.”

“We tried, Jack. We’re still trying. No one wants this. We’ve been on calls with the owners all day, the lawyers, but the ruling came down from the league office tonight —”

“George. This isn’t funny.”

“— At the end of the month, you’ll officially be a Quebec City Nordique.”

Jack balls his fist and presses the heel of his hand to the iron railing on the porch, pushing down until his knuckles turn white and he feels something pop.

“I wanted you to hear it from me.” Georgia apologizes softly. “Not Deadline. I know this isn’t what you want. I know this isn’t good for Eric’s career, either.”

“He can’t even speak French, George,” Jack exhales in a desperate half-laugh, already feeling himself dissociating from the news. “Bitty’s supposed to open his first storefront in Blackstone at the end of the year; he just signed the lease agreement.”

“I know, Jack. I know.”

“So, what do I do?”

There’s a moment of contemplation, and Jack briefly thinks the call has dropped before George huffs a breath.

“You can do one of two things, Jack: You can move to Quebec, and you can become the first, best captain that franchise will ever have, or you can give up, and chose to end your career with a whimper.”

Jack sits with her words, listens to the breathing across the line, and says, “Yeah, but if I tank the team, you can get me back to Providence.”

George barks a laugh, and Jack finds a reluctant smile tugging at his lips.

“You burn that team and I’ll come up there to kick your ass myself.”

.

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Zimbits Fic - ‘Little Aurora’ -Update

Summary: Five years after dropping out of college, Eric Bittle is traveling across the country looking for content, and, more importantly, the part of himself that’s been missing since he left Samwell University. When a storm strands him in a small Alaska town, Eric stumbles into a relationship with a camera-shy hockey coach hiding more than a few secrets about his past — the kind of secrets Eric can't always edit his videos around. Now, with a scandal brewing and the media ready to descend on their tiny winter hamlet, Eric has to figure out how undo the damage he's caused and protect his new boyfriend, Laurent, who might just be long-lost hockey royalty.

a/n: I know it’s been an eternity but I come bearing an update!

Face squished against his pillow, one eye blearily tracking his notifications, Eric swipes each away slowly with his thumb, refusing to give into sleep just yet. Down the hall, Eric can hear his parents getting ready for bed; having been courteous enough to wait for him to get home. 
For the first time in months, Eric’s back in his own bed, and he absolutely hates it.
‘Made it back safe’, Eric texts Laurent carefully, not willing to adjust his position to accommodate the action, accepting the inevitable typos. ‘Wishing I was still in the wilderness with a certain handsome man, tho’.
Eric smiles when Laurent doesn’t send an emoji heart, going so far as to type out a less-than-three that doesn’t auto correct. Eric’s in love. Messy, sticky, highly-problematic love, but love all the same. As he’s drafting a response, a banner notification from Twitter drops at the top of his screen, and a blue check mark winks up at him. He barely has time to click it before another banner has kicked down the first. Another blue check.
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