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#whose sweater vest is that actually Keith?
waugh-bao · 3 months
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francesderwent · 6 years
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“In Need of a Generic Father Figure” A Veronica Mars Everybody Lives/Nobody Dies Meet-Cute LV AU Week Day 7 Canon-typical language, but otherwise general audiences On AO3 Inspired by this post and that one scene in Charlie Don’t Surf.
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It was supposed to be a kind of housewarming-slash-homecoming party, the kind of event that was totally low key in its formulation and planning stage but got completely out of hand once things got rolling.  All their friends from the old neighborhood were coming over, and it was supposed to be all nostalgic idiocy born from the eternal familiarity of each having been present for one another’s particular flavor of shitty childhood.  There were no delusions about the depth of this bond, and so they weren’t expecting it to be a great party, not the best night of anyone’s life by any means, but it was the sort of gathering you could predict, could depend on.  Low-pressure, low stakes, low key.
So, precisely the kind of event which would have a giant wrench thrown into it if you were to add in an unknown factor, say, a perfect stranger to man the grill.
“But he wouldn’t be a stranger,” Dick is insisting.  “He’d be a dad.”
Logan gapes at him.  “Whose dad?”
Dick shrugs, ineloquently.
“So by dad, you just mean some unknown-as-yet male person who has at one point fathered a child?”
“Sure.”
“So, some unknown person’s father, standing on the corner of our property, making hamburgers.”
“Grilling hamburgers, that’s essential.”  Dick looks up from his computer and gives Logan a look like he’s disappointed in him for missing an obvious point.  “And it’s not just some random sperm donor, dude, he has to be fatherly and shit.  I put it in the ad.”  
“Ah yes, the ad,” Logan says.  “The Craigslist ad, which you put up online without consulting or telling me.  I read the ad.  And yet here I stand, questioning the entire premise behind it.”  But Dick has returned to his computer, presumably to scroll through his emailed responses.  Logan pinches the bridge of his nose.  “Alright, the court recognizes that grilled hamburgers are better than any alternative. But why do we need someone else to come grill?  You and I are fair-to-average at setting things on fire already.”
“We don’t have a grill.”
“No, but we both have trust funds that kicked in some time ago.  You may remember them.  They’re how we afforded the house…”
Dick huffs.  “So we just buy a grill?”  Logan gives him the raised eyebrows and jazz hands: duh.  Dick bangs on the space bar.  “Just buy one, from the depths of our rich boy pockets, without working for it or anything.”
Logan stares.  “Are you having some kind of break?”
“It’s stupid to spend money if we could just borrow one.”
“Okaaaay,” Logan says.  “So why aren’t you advertising for a grill we can borrow?”
“Because!”
“Because what, Dick?”
“Your dad is supposed to teach you how to grill!” Dick bites out.
They stare at each other for a long beat, then Dick tears his eyes away and starts clattering angrily on his keyboard. Logan sighs, then gingerly sits next to him on the sofa.
“You know,” he says, careful to keep his tone conversational, “if you wanted to sign up for one of those programs for kids with deadbeat dads where they hang out with well-adjusted adult men and learn life skills, I would have happily signed up with you, but we really should have done that when we were younger.”
Dick throws an elbow into his ribs half-heartedly. “Shut up.”
“I’m not saying, like, when we were twelve,” Logan goes on, warming to the topic, “because we mostly hadn’t figured out our dads were deadbeat by then.  But definitely before we finished college and joined the workforce.  I’m thinking like nineteen or twenty would have been the ideal age.  Our father figures could have taught us to consume alcohol, in addition to teaching us to grill.”
“We were already pretty good at drinking alcohol by then,” Dick reminds him.
“Then they could have given us a strict talking-to about underage drinking,” Logan says.  “It’s far too late for that now, and we’ve missed our chance.”
“Missed our chance…” Dick echoes.
Logan looks at him sideways.
Dick catches his eye and actually sniffs a little. “I know it’s stupid.  You don’t have to tell me it’s stupid.”
Logan shifts uncomfortably.  “It’s not stupid, man.  I just wish we knew of some actual father figure we could get to sub in for you, rather than resorting to Craigslist dads.”
“It’s not just for me, dude,” Dick insists.  “I know you care about this shit, too.”
Logan cracks a smile despite himself.  “If some guy with a beer gut shows up and grills me a hamburger and calls me ‘sport’, that’s not going to make the old man any less of an abusive asshole.”
“I know, but we can make some nicer memories can’t we?  Some nice dad-memories?”
For a second, Logan allows himself to enter into the delusion, but almost immediately becomes sidetracked on the mental image of Gregory Peck from To Kill a Mockingbird standing in their backyard, holding a light beer and grinning affably.  That would be one thing – but he can’t imagine that any fathers like that actually exist in the world.  No, this dad was probably going to be more or less a deadbeat himself, or else how would he have time to babysit a bunch of profligate twenty-somethings?  At best, it would be some old guy whose kids were too grown-up and busy to talk to him anymore, a dad whose desperate neediness for attention and affirmation matches Dick’s.  But then again, Dick will inevitably be drunk for the entire party – he wouldn’t notice if the dad was an escaped convict in black and white stripes with a literal ball and chain on his ankle.  What harm could it do?  He sighs, asks in a wry tone, “Are you going to ask for proof of paternity, or is this person going to be a fake dad on top of being random?”
Dick lights up.  “That’s a great idea, I’ll edit that in!”  He resumes typing at a frenzied pace; Logan watches bemusedly.  
Still.  It’s one weird thing on one day.  It won’t make any difference one way or another, in the long run.
Nobody’s life was ever changed because a stranger made them a hamburger.
                                                -~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-
After that, Logan tries to extricate himself from the whole dad-audition process, but Dick is, as usual, both oblivious and incorrigible.  Logan very quickly comes to dread the phrases “hey, listen to this” and “what about this”, since both are sure signs that he’s about to be read a joke resumé with phrases like “excels at offering positive reinforcement”, or shown a headshot of a guy in a sweater vest.  So when he gets home from work and the first thing he hears is “Logan, dude, this is the one”, his first response is to groan and flop face first onto the sofa. They found the sofa at the side of the road the second week in the house and it is therefore a little worn out, so the decision to be dramatic hurts.
“Asshole,” Dick tells him absently, wandering in from the next room holding his laptop.  “Listen: father for twenty-plus years, expert level jokes and manly affection, bonus secret-family-recipe hot sauce.”
“The hot sauce is a nice touch,” Logan admits, rolling over onto his back and kicking his feet up onto the sofa arm. “All of the other applicants have really fixated on the ‘dad’ part of ‘grill dad’.”
Dick nods so enthusedly it looks painful.  “I know, right? And get this, there’s an attached letter from his kid,” he says.  “Dear advertiser, I can confirm that the applicant has been my father for my entire life, and I can honestly say that he has excelled at the position.  You would be lucky to have him at your party, where he would strike just the right balance between embarrassing and fun, call all of you by the wrong names and then substitute “son” or “honey”, and repeatedly tell you he’s proud of you.  His hamburgers are to die for, and he brings his own fire extinguisher in case anything should go wrong.  He has my unreserved recommendation.  Also, if this is some kind of dad kidnapping scheme, I will hunt you down and kill you.  Cordially, V. Mars.”  Dick looks up expectantly; Logan fights a smile.  
“They wrote a letter of recommendation for their dad?”          
“Uh huh.”
“Hmm,” Logan says neutrally, then says, “Mr. Mars,” trying it out, hitting the ‘r’s and dragging out the ‘s’.
“Keith Mars,” Dick adds helpfully, and turns the computer so Logan can see the attached photo.  Keith Mars is bald, just slightly on the portly side, staring adoringly down at the tiny pigtailed child with whom he is dancing, her feet on his – V. Mars is a girl, apparently.  Dick tabs to the next picture: Keith Mars standing next to a grill holding a hot dog over the head of a plaintive-looking pitbull while a gap-toothed, elementary-school-aged V. Mars laughs in the background with a blue-haired friend.  In the third picture Keith is older, wearing a suit and grinning widely, hugging someone in graduation regalia, her face obscured by her cap.  “He looks cool, right?” Dick prompts eagerly.
“Yeah,” Logan says, tearing his eyes away from the graduation photo.  Neither he nor Dick had had any relatives attend their college graduation, and he’d seen plenty of family reunions at the baccalaureate celebration that seemed more stiff and awkward than anything else, but Keith looks like he just might burst with pride.  “Yeah, he seems nice.”
“Like a real dad, right?” Dick persists.
Logan snorts.  “As if I have any experience with which to judge that quality.”
Dick offers a fist bump and Logan complies. “Trauma twins!” Dick says, sing-song. Logan rolls his eyes.  “But he seems legit?” Dick says, returning to the salient point.  “This is okay?”
Logan stands and claps his roommate on the shoulder. “Sure, man.  If you say this is the one, I think you’re probably right.”
Dick beams at him.  “I’ll tell him he got the gig!”
“Cool,” Logan says drily.  “I can’t wait to meet him.”
                                            -~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-
Since Dick thinks it would be acceptable to simply explain the dad-for-hire situation when their guests show up, Logan finds himself calling each invitee one by one the day before the party and beginning with the statement, “So you know how Dick has a tenuous relationship with reality?” Lilly laughs for a full minute and a half, and Duncan, no matter how many times Logan runs through the concept, just doesn’t seem to get it, but everyone else just thinks it’s sad.  
“Oh my god, our lives suck,” Gia says, sounding as if she just realized it.  “Does no one in our group have a functioning father figure?”
“Carrie’s dad was okay,” Logan offers.  “But he moved out of state a few years back.”
“And he never knew how to grill!” Dick yells through his bedroom door.
“And he never knew how to grill,” Logan repeats.
“Yeah, well,” Gia says skeptically, “I’m bringing extra booze for when this weird-ass idea causes someone to have an emotional breakdown.”
“Appreciated.”
And when the day arrives, booze is the one thing they do seem to have enough of.
“Why did we say we were going to supply ingredients?” Logan wonders aloud as he methodically opens and shuts every cupboard in their kitchen.  “You forgot to buy onions, we don’t own any spices, I don’t even think we have salt and pepper –”
“Logan.  Man!  Relax.”  As anticipated, Dick is already halfway to trashed, and far from caring if their hamburgers are seasoned.  
“This was your idea,” Logan says, accusing sliding into sardonic.  “You’re the one who wanted to make some new dad-memories, and now because you were overly confident in a Craigslist ad, our new dad is already going to be disappointed in us.”
“Dude, holy shit –” Dick bursts out laughing and can’t continue his thought.  Logan turns around to glare at him in exasperation. “What if –” Dick stammers, chortling, “what if he says the thing?  ‘I’m not mad I’m just disappointed?’  How absolutely sick would that be?”  He’s wheezing now, and Logan can’t think of anything to do except stare at him.  “Just like a real dad!” Dick howls.
Logan stands, frozen, for a beat longer, and then abandons his search for the probably-nonexistent spice cabinet to reach for the scotch instead.  “Gia was right,” he says flatly.  “This is going to end in tears.”  He pulls a little too sharply on the tab of the wax seal and it snaps off with the seal still in place.  He looks at it in consternation, and it is at this point that the doorbell rings.  Dick makes no sign of moving from his position, giggling slumped over the kitchen table, so Logan jogs to the front hallway, only to discover that Dick has placed all the beer they bought in front of the door, barricading it closed.  He’s kicking six packs out of the way and trying to open the scotch bottle with his teeth when he finally manages to wrench open the door and is greeted by the genial but not-quite-non-threatening face of Keith Mars.  
For a moment the desire to say something dismissive rises up, as if this was still high school and he was still incapable of engaging with an adult on mutually respectful terms, but Logan takes a deep breath and forces it down.  “Mr. Mars,” he says.
Keith sticks out a hand.  “Richard?”
Logan snorts, but accepts the handshake.  “Richard is inside.  I’m the roommate, Logan.”
Keith’s eyes drop to the scotch bottle still in Logan’s hand.  “I hate it when that happens,” he says mildly.
Logan makes a non-committal noise.  “We probably have a wine opener somewhere that should do the trick.”
“We don’t!” Dick yells from the kitchen.  “I told the chicks to bring one!”
“That would be Richard,” Logan tells Keith wryly.  Keith raises his eyebrows, but then reaches into his jacket pocket and offers Logan a multi-tool.  “Thanks,” Logan says uncomfortably, looking down to flip through utensils instead of making eye contact.  “Can I offer you anything?”
“Nope,” says Keith cheerfully, “just point me to the backyard and I’ll get the grill fired up.”
“Get the grill fired up!” Dick’s voice repeats, maniacally.  
“He’s fine,” says Logan, unconvinced himself. “The backyard’s through this way.”
“No!” Dick stumbles into the hallway and spreads his arms wide, probably so as best to show off the tshirt he bought specifically for the occasion which reads “you’re all up in my grill”, a decided improvement over the grill-themed shirt Logan had to initially talk him down from, which had a meat-related innuendo on it.  “I will show you to the backyard, sir!”
Keith offers a hand.  “Keith Mars.”
“Awesome, dude.”  Dick shakes his hand, which is apparently hilarious because he cracks himself up again.  “Welcome to the party!”  
Keith glances at Logan, who shrugs.  “I’m just happy to be included,” Keith says, sounding, against all odds, like he means it.
“Dope,” Dick responds.  “Follow me, mon capitan, I will show you to your grill kingdom!”
“Please stop mixing your metaphors,” Logan tells him, but Keith waves him off and allows Dick to sling an arm around his shoulder and lead him towards the screen door to the backyard.  
“Dude, seriously, your application was whack,” Dick says.  “I was like, whoa, this guy is like a serious dad!”  Logan is watching them go, wondering if he’s responsible for making Keith feel safe and if he should therefore follow, when there’s a voice at shoulder-level behind him.
“So that’s the Craigslist guy?”
He turns, smoothly accepts the proffered casserole dish. “Craigslist dad, actually, or you’re missing the whole point.”
Carrie stands on her toes to look over his shoulder at where Keith is patiently observing Dick’s wild gesticulating at all the ingredients they bought.  “Huh,” she says.  “I guess he does kind of look like a dad.”
“I should hope so, we took the casting call very seriously.”
Carrie rolls her eyes.  “That’s a fruit salad,” she informs him, indicating the dish he’s holding.  “I’ve just gotta grab my guitar out of my car and then I can help set up or whatever.”
“You brought your guitar?” Logan repeats.  “Are we gonna sit in a circle and sing campfire songs?  What the hell kind of barbecue do you think this is?”
“A nice wholesome one, of course.  You were kind enough to invite Susan and her kid, and you specifically got a random dad to come grill you food.”  After a pause and seemingly despite herself, Carrie asks, “You really couldn’t have just bought a grill yourselves?”
Logan sighs.  “Actually, the grill is ours.  Keith had one but it wouldn’t fit in his car, so Dick went straight out and got the most expensive one there was.”
“Don’t all serious dads own pickup trucks?”
“That’s exactly what I said.”
“And now you have your own grill.”
“We even managed to work it ourselves; we made marshmallows over it last night.”
Carrie makes a face.  “I can’t believe you guys are living together.  You’ll both starve to death or suffocate under dirty laundry within a month.”
“Nah,” says Logan, dismissive, “we can live on marshmallows for at least two months, and we can just buy new clothes and burn our dirty laundry on the grill.”
“That,” Carrie tells him calmly, “is disgusting.”
“People who bring acoustic guitars to house parties shouldn’t throw stones,” Logan counters.  
She laughs and flips him off.  “When’s everyone else getting here?”
He indicates careless ignorance with a wave of the hand.  “Hopefully soon.  I think we need to set up a watch rotation to make sure Dick doesn’t start crying on the grill dad.”
Carrie snorts, tosses him her keys; he manages to switch the fruit salad to one hand and snag them in the hand holding the scotch. “In that case, you go grab my guitar out of the trunk.  What did you say the guy’s name is?”
“Keith Mars.”
“Got it.  Do not leave me out there by myself for more than a minute.”
“Of course not!  In fact, I wouldn’t dream of getting in your car and driving far, far away from here.”
She elbows past him, laughing, and jogs through the house to make a dramatic exit out the back door, where she is greeted by Dick’s incoherent shouts.  Logan sighs, then picks his way back through the six-packs to the kitchen to put everything down, finally open the scotch, and knock back half a drink.  When he gets back out to the driveway Casey Gant is there with his newest arm-candy girlfriend, and Logan finds himself cajoled into giving a house tour so he can explain to her why he and Dick decided on this house, how all the guests know each other, and that, no, Casey wasn’t lying about the Craigslist situation.  By the time Logan manages to extricate himself, everyone has arrived and is milling around the backyard.  Carrie waves to him from a picnic blanket in the middle of the lawn, where she is in fact playing guitar for Susan and her adolescent daughter.  He likes Susan and the kid fine, but the three of them seem to be working on a warble-y song from the latest Disney princess sensation, so he hides a grimace, waves back, and looks elsewhere.  There’s a few people clustered around the grill, listening to Keith tell some story which is apparently fascinating; Logan gives them a wide berth and joins Lilly and Gia instead, who are standing off to the side eyeing the whole scene skeptically.
“Don’t you ladies want to take advantage of this unique opportunity to interact with a genuine, human parent?” he asks.
“Nope,” says Gia, at the same time as Lilly says “Not even a little.”  
Logan snorts.  “Well, cheers to that, I suppose.”  
“Yes, cheers!” Lilly says.  “To dealing with our issues in therapy, rather than projecting all of our buried hopes onto a stranger with a novelty apron who could never live up to our ideals anyway.”  
“Like motherfucking adults,” Logan echoes solemnly. They clink glasses.  
Gia looks contemplative.  “It’s not so much that he’s a random stranger,” she says. “I even kind of trust that he’s for real, you know?”
“I know,” Lilly retorts, pausing to take a big gulp of her drink.  “That’s the worst part.  Dick introduced me to him when I got here, and he was immediately more interested in my life and my job than my parents have ever been.”
“Yeah, but like, actually interested,” Gia adds, “like he thought I was worth his time and couldn’t wait to hear more about me.”
“How dare he,” Logan says mildly.
Gia elbows him in the ribs.  “I don’t see you over there talking to him.”
Logan shrugs.  “If I met him on the street maybe I’d be able to trust that he’s the real deal, but the fact that he answered the ad just seems fundamentally suspicious.”
“Yeah, but you guys aren’t paying him, are you?” says Lilly.
“Just in beer.”    
“He’s probably just lonely,” Gia suggests.
“I thought the same thing,” says Logan. “But if he’s such a good father, then wouldn’t his own kid want to see him?  So why would he need us?”
Lilly pats him on the shoulder.  “Logan, you’ve honed your trust issues and pessimism into quite an art.”
He huffs, irritable despite himself.  “I’m just saying, don’t anyone go writing him into their will just yet.”  Gia looks at him little worriedly, and he attempts a reassuring smile.  “I need another drink, can I get either of you anything?”  They both wave him off, and he makes for the deck where all the refreshments are, but in his haste to get away, forgets to avoid the grill group and accidentally makes eye contact with Dick.  Dick, of course, begins frantically waving him over, and though Logan lifts a hand in acknowledgement and tries to stay course, this only means that Dick starts yelling his name.  Logan silently swears to himself that he will not enter the fatherland without a drink in hand, so yells back that he’ll be right there and prays that they’ll be out of something on the drinks and appetizers table so he’ll have to go inside to get it, if not drive to the store.  Tragically, Carrie is already there, refilling chip bowls, and when he offers to help she just gives him an unsympathetic look.  
“Go get it over with, before Dick convinces everyone to start chanting your name,” she says.  
Logan sighs, grabs the beer with the highest alcohol content he can find, and skips down the stairs.  “Logan!’ Dick crows.  “Logan’s here, guys!”
“I live here,” Logan reminds him.  The obvious statement is greeted by polite laughs from the Keith fan-club and drunken giggling from Dick.
“Get this, Logan!” he says, childlike excitement radiating off him in waves.  “We didn’t even need salt and pepper, Keith brought his own burger rub!”
Logan looks obligingly at Keith, who nods.  “Secret family recipe.”
“I thought the secret was the hot sauce?” Logan says.
“I’ve got that, too.”
Logan raises his eyebrows.  “Everything’s a secret with you, Mr. Mars.  And here I thought we were just on the verge of opening up to each other.”
Keith laughs good-naturedly.  “I’m an open book, Logan.”
Logan is mentally scrolling through options for sarcastic replies which aren’t overly combative when suddenly he feels very, uncomfortably cold, from the back of his neck down, and can do nothing but gasp stupidly.  For a moment he thinks Dick has poured ice down his back, but Dick is standing on the other side of the grill from him, looking genuinely surprised albeit delighted. Logan cranes his neck and turns in a circle, but can’t see what’s been spilled on him, though it’s entirely clear who’s to blame.  “Duncan,” Logan says, flat and edging toward a growl.
Duncan has the nerve to roll his eyes.  “Come on, man, it’s not my fault.”  
Logan gestures to where Duncan has clearly dropped his solo cup and half a plate of appetizers on the lawn.  “And how do you figure that?”
Duncan shrugs.  “You know how hard it is to hold a drink and a plate of stuff at the same time.”
“Hmm, then maybe you should go inside and eat at the table – or better yet, maybe the family down the block can loan us their high chair.”
Duncan scowls at him.  “Do you have to be like this, Logan, seriously?  It’s just a shirt.  And it’s your freaking house, you can just go in and change.”  
Logan flicks his eyes over at Keith, who thankfully doesn’t appear inclined to use his fake fatherly authority to intervene and is pretending to look intently at something across the way.  Logan fakes a laugh and says as evenly as he can manage, “And it was your freaking drink, so you could have just apologized.”  Keith abandons his examination of the next-door-neighbor’s maple tree to give Logan a side-eyed smile, and for a moment, Logan feels a vague sense of satisfaction, before he remembers that he doesn’t care about Keith’s approval.  He makes a wry face back.
“Logan,” Keith says mildly, “keep an eye on the grill? I need to grab something I left in the kitchen.”
“No problem, Mr. Mars,” Logan answers, saluting sloppily.  Keith nods at him, and then pats Duncan on the shoulder as he passes; Logan interprets the move as condescending and is pleased again, and again annoyed at himself for being pleased.  As a pathetic attempt at distracting himself, he pulls his arms into what was previously his favorite gray v-neck and puts it back on backwards so he can look at the stain, and then is horrified all over again.  “Duncan, what the fuck were you drinking?” he demands.
Now, finally, Duncan has the grace to look ashamed, or at least defensive.  “Mike’s,” he mutters.
“Mike’s lemonade is not this color.”
“It was Mike’s hard black cherry lemonade, alright!”  
There are various titters from the group; Logan snorts inadvertently and lifts up the shirt to sniff the purple-y stain, which smells more like sugar than anything else.  He knows he should stop pushing, but can’t quite restrain a “Dude, really?”, which turns the titters into full-fledged barks of laughter.
Duncan snaps.  “Why do you have to be such a –”
“Donut!”
Duncan freezes at the sound of Lilly’s voice.
“Quit being a drip!” she yells.  “Or go home!”
For a second, Duncan turns his glare back on Logan with full force, and Logan almost thinks he’s going to spit in his face or something, but then he just kicks at his dropped solo cup and slinks off toward the front yard.
“Wo-o-ow,” says Dick, with barely contained glee.  “This really is the best party ever.”
Logan rolls his eyes, grabs the spatula hanging off the grill, and starts idly pushing burgers around to have something to do. “You’re happy with your Craigslist investment?” he asks Dick.
“Absolutely, dude!”
“And the weirdness of the concept still hasn’t dawned on you?” Casey adds, snickering.
“How could it be weird?  Keith is awesome, and he’s the perfect addition to the party, just like the application said.”
“Of course he is.”
Logan jumps, almost drops a burger on the ground, and then turns to find that Duncan’s place in the circle has been filled. She’s on the shorter side, with blonde hair falling down her back in waves, a leather jacket slung over one shoulder, and a completely unreadable expression on her face – and based on the looks she’s getting from the others, no one else has the faintest idea who she is either.  “Uh –” Logan says.
“Keith Mars is still here, right?” she asks, voice somewhere between businesslike and belligerent.
“Well –”
“He just went inside,” Dick says, helpfully. “He’ll be back out in a minute.”
Logan groans.  “Dick, remind me never to commit any crimes you’d have to be interrogated about.”
Dick shrugs, the whole movement exaggerated by drunkenness.  “Look at her, man, what’s she gonna do?”
Logan looks at her, less sure that he should be unintimidated than Dick seems to be; she gives him an unimpressed once-over, but then cracks a smile seemingly despite herself.  “So was it some combination of getting dressed in the dark and a wet tshirt competition, or is this a bold fashion choice?”
Logan glances down at his backwards v-neck and the damp, purple circle on his chest.  “Bold fashion choice,” he answers, looking up to raise his eyebrows at her.
“I wouldn’t have been able to picture it,” she says, looking him up and down again, “but now that I see it, I guess it works.  In fact, you should only wear this.  Like, ever.”
Logan grins awkwardly, unsure whether she’s mocking him or flirting with him, and still unsure what he, as a homeowner, is supposed to do about strangers in his backyard, even if they are exceptionally cute.
“So, this is weird,” Dick offers.
“Hey, honey!”  Logan turns; Keith is coming down the steps of the deck with burger buns and cheese in hand, beaming at the interloper.  
“And it just got weirder,” Casey announces.
“Yup,” echoes his date.  “More drinks?” 
“You bet.”  They wander off arm in arm; Casey salutes Logan with his beer can.
“What are you doing here, sweetheart?” Keith says, dumping his armful of food onto the picnic table so he can hug the blonde girl.
She shrugs, looking considerably more relaxed now that he’s appeared.  “I’m an only child, dad, you didn’t honestly expect me to let you adopt a whole party without at least coming over to check up on you.  I’ve never had to share before.”
Keith laughs.  “Of course, why didn’t I think of that.  Why wouldn’t my grown adult daughter show up at an honest Craigslist gig to make sure she wasn’t losing her spot as my favorite child?”
“I dunno,” Dick says suspiciously, “I think she might also be here to flirt with Logan.”  
“You two have met?” Keith turns a surprised look on Logan, who does his best innocent blink and tries not to broadcast that a few seconds ago he was considering using Duncan’s spill as an excuse to take his shirt off in front of this girl.
“Only just now,” Keith’s daughter assures him.
Logan nods.  “You’re V. Mars?”
“Veronica,” she answers.  She offers her hand to shake.
“Don’t take this personally,” Logan says, “but I wouldn’t.  I’m honestly kind of covered in Mike’s hard black cherry lemonade.”
“That exists?” she says.
“There’s no limit to the abominations which crawl this earth,” he replies, straight-faced.  She laughs.
“See what I mean,” Dick says to Keith.  Keith looks at him blankly; Dick belches, shoots Logan a complicated and incomprehensible hand gesture, and wanders off after Casey, leaving Logan alone with the two Marses.  He looks back and forth between them, trying not to stare, and wondering if it would be weird to ask what kind of degree Veronica just graduated with based on the picture Keith sent.
“So!” Veronica says, into the strained silence. “You’ve been treating my dad well?”
“He’s getting all of the standard grill-dad benefits,” Logan answers.  “We didn’t want to have the agency all over us, or god forbid, the unions.”
Veronica smiles in acknowledgment, but her eyes flick to her dad with something like nervousness.  
“Do you two need a minute?” Logan offers.
“No!” says Keith, confidently calm. “Everything’s all fine, here.  Son, can you start putting cheese on hamburger buns? Veronica, honey, help him?��
Veronica rolls her eyes, but bumps Logan out of the way with her hip so she can grab the cheese.  “So, daaad,” she says, sing-song.
“Veronica,” he says, warningly.
She actually pouts.  “Come on, dad,” she says, the words coming quicker now. “It’s pretty clear Logan doesn’t care about you being his fake father for the day; his entire body flinched when you called him son.”
Logan hands her a hamburger bun he removed from the block of them in the bag, says mildly, “I thought I managed to reserve my flinch to only seventy percent of my body.”
“Nope!” Veronica gives him an apologetic smile, and then turns back to Keith.  “Dad, please.”  
Keith glances at Logan, back at her, and sighs. “Make it quick, Veronica.”
She drops the package of cheese and reaches into her bag to retrieve a giant camera.  “So-o-o,” she says, lowering her voice, “you know that guy I’ve been on all week for a completely unrelated…work thing?”
Keith rolls his eyes.  “Yes.”
“Well, he just walked through the front door of your guy’s house.”  
“No, he didn’t,” Keith says drily.  She tabs through a few photos on the display, shows him one.  Keith looks at her.  “That can’t be good.”  
She lets out a huff of breath.  “No, I didn’t think so either.”  
“I can see both exits from here, honey, and I haven’t turned my back once.”
“From here?” Logan repeats.
They ignore him.  “If I didn’t notice him going in, it was because I wasn’t looking for people entering,” Keith continues, reassuringly.  “Nobody could have gotten away, so they must all just be inside.  We’ll wait it out, it’ll be fine.”
Logan is just about to give up and leave them to it so he can find another drink, and maybe even change his shirt, but that, of course, is when the air is filled with the sound of breaking glass.
Some kind of instinct takes over and he dives in between the sound and Veronica, dragging her to the ground with him despite her incoherent noise of protest.  He looks up in time to see a flailing person hit the ground below the next-door-neighbor’s maple tree, surrounded by the debris from the shattered second-story window.
“That’s yours!” Veronica gasps, but Keith has already produced a gun from somewhere under his novelty apron and is pointing it at where the fallen man has gotten unsteadily to his feet.
“Police!” Keith shouts.  “Don’t move!”
There’s a stunned pause, Logan takes in the faces of gaping astonishment on his friends, and then the man takes off running in the opposite direction.  Keith lets out a brief curse and rips off his apron.  “He’s running,” he announces to thin air, and Logan hears a siren start up down the street, so apparently he really is police.  Keith throws the apron at Veronica.  “Don’t let the hamburgers burn,” he orders, and then he climbs on the picnic table, vaults clumsily over the neighbor’s fence, and takes off after the runner.
“You’re going to strain your back,” Veronica yells after him, almost petulant.  She elbows Logan in the ribs and he rolls off her, not sure whether she’s about to join in the chase herself or whether she’s just going to lay into him for tackling her. She gets up, checks her camera and is apparently convinced that its not broken, but still looks dissatisfied about something.  She peeks into the grill, lifts a single burger with the forgotten spatula. “They’re not going to burn,” she says, disdainfully.  
“Dude.” Dick jogs over so he can give Logan a hand up off the ground.  “Dude,” Dick repeats, “is it just me or was our grill-dad packing heat?”
Logan pats his arm.  “Not only was he packing heat, but he was almost definitely using us to surveille the house next door.”
Dick looks flabbergasted.  “Shit, man.  Even my fake dad didn’t really want to spend time with me.”  
“I’m sure he’ll be back, once they’ve collared the guy,” Veronica offers.  As if inspired, she removes the first burger patty from the grill, puts it on one of their prepared buns, and hands it to him.  
Dick looks at it suspiciously, takes a bite, and then nods, but adds accusingly, “Whatever, man.  I’m going to need therapy from this.”  He shoots a finger gun at Logan.  “So, you do whatever you’re doing here, I’m gonna go apologize to Susan for exposing her child to all this violence.”
“That’s really mature and responsible of you, Dick,” Logan says, surprised.
“Duh,” says Dick.  “It’s up to us to break the cycle.”  And with that, he heads back towards the rest of the party, who are all staring at Veronica with no small amount of apprehension.  She doesn’t seem to notice, but absently picks up Keith’s apron and puts it on, and starts assembling burgers.
Logan can’t help but ask, “You’re not going to follow them?”
“Nope,” she says, shortly, “not my case.”
“Do you need to go after…your guy?”
“No, I’ve got the pictures I needed.”
“Then I’m sure Keith would appreciate the backup…?”
She lets out a short laugh, and Logan sees with dawning comprehension that she’s worried.  “He needs it,” she answers, “but he wouldn’t appreciate it.  I don’t have the clearance.”
“You’re not his partner?”
She turns to look at him like he’s an idiot. “No-o-o,” she says.  “I’m his daughter.”
Logan grins, lifts his hands in surrender. “Sorry, I wasn’t sure how deep the undercover scheme went.”  She snorts, flips her hair over her shoulder, and turns back to the grill.  “That one on the right is getting a little overdone,” he says, pointing.
“No it’s not.”  She swats his hand away, and then moves the offending burger closer to the coals, Logan suspects just to be contrary.
“So you’re not a cop?” he tries again.  She shoots him an exasperated glance over her shoulder, he grins, says, “If you’re not a cop, why were you surveilling the house too?”
She huffs a sigh, puts the spatula down with a clatter, and reaches for her bag where it had fallen on the ground.  “Here,” she says, and tosses something at him.  He catches it, turns it around, opens it.  
“You’re a private detective?”
“Mmhmm.”
“Not a cop?”
“I’m going to throw a hamburger at you.”
Logan laughs.  “So, what, you didn’t want to follow in your father’s footsteps?”
“I did, he didn’t,” Veronica says casually, returning her focus to the grill.  “He wanted me to aim higher.  I got accepted to Quantico, and was sent home after three weeks because of my issue with authority.”  She shrugs, spins the spatula like a baton.  “Turns out, I’m more suited for private eye work than I am for either the feds or the boys in blue anyway.”  
“Huh.”
“What?”
Logan shrugs, thinking that she was already exceptionally cute, but she just became the most fascinating person on the planet. “I don’t know.”
She removes the last burger from the grill and spins to look at him, hands on her hips.  He feels a goofy grin spreading over his face, and she rolls her eyes at him. “What, Logan?”
“You should only wear this.”
She looks down at Keith’s apron, which reads in big, bold letters, “NEVER TRUST A SKINNY CHEF”.  She snorts.  “If you haven’t figured out yet that you shouldn’t trust me, no amount of written reminders are going to do the trick.”
Logan ducks his head, rubs the back of his neck. “So I’m trusting, sue me.”
“Ah!” She taps her chin with one finger, mock-contemplative.  “Is that how you ended up advertising for a strange dad to on-site cater your barbecue?”
“That wasn’t my idea.”  Veronica raises her eyebrows, Logan adds, “I actually feel a lot better about your dad now.”
“You feel a lot better about him now that you know he deceived you?”
“Well, yeah,” Logan admits.  “He seemed way too normal to be the kind of person who responds to Craigslist ads, so there definitely had to be a catch.”  She raises her eyebrows at him, he adds lamely, “So it’s nice that the catch was he’s mainly here to catch bad guys.”
As if on cue, Veronica’s cell phone buzzes; she picks up on the first ring.  “Dad?” The worry smooths away from her face at his response, and she mouths a quick apology to Logan before retreating into the corner of the yard to debrief.  The last thing he hears her say is “I can’t believe you jumped over that fence, are you trying to kill me?”
Logan walks over to where Dick and Gia are relating the main event to Duncan, who has reemerged and is trying very hard to appear as if he doesn’t regret missing out.  “Then Keith magically pulled a gun out of nowhere,” Dick says, miming in slow motion, “and yelled get on the ground or I’ll shoot!”
“He didn’t exactly yell that,” Gia puts in. “I’m pretty sure he basically just said ‘police’.”
Dick ignores her, too invested in the story. “But the guy just books it, and so Keith literally vaulted over the fence and chased after him, yelling and firing at him –”
“No,” Gia says.
Duncan rolls his eyes.  “This is what you get for inviting strangers into your home,” he says derisively.
“Trained professionals to arrest the criminal who apparently lived next door to us anyway?” Logan pipes up.
“Professional or not,” Gia says, upbeat, “as soon as shit started to go down, Logan shielded the cop’s daughter with his body, which was pretty cool.”
“Aww,” says Lilly, coming up to put an arm around her brother’s shoulders.  “And you were out in the car, sulking because everyone laughed at your drink choice!”
Reminded, Logan glances down at his shirt, which he’d mostly forgotten in all the excitement; it is now starting to stick to his skin uncomfortably.  What the hell, Keith won’t be back for twenty minutes at least; he can definitely get some mileage out of this.  He takes the shirt off.  The girls wolf-whistle, Duncan groans.
“You know,” Lilly suggests slyly, “there are definitely easier ways than Craigslist to incorporate a new father figure into your life.”
“What?” says Dick, immediately intrigued.  “Is there a more specific service?”
“Is there?” Logan repeats, alarmed.  
Lilly starts laughing.  “You’re both idiots,” Duncan tells them, with significantly more affection now that his knowing something they don’t has reestablished him in a position of authority.  
Gia appears to be about ready to take pity on them, but is interrupted by Veronica’s return. “They got the guy,” she announces.  “Dad is driving him to the station.  Logan, he says he’s leaving you in charge until he gets back, not Richard.”
Dick flips her off; Logan replies, “I’m touched that he’s ceding authority to me in my own home.”
Veronica performs an elaborate double take, gestures at the house.  “This is yours?”
“As far as the eye can see, or at least until where I imagine the police tape will be going up.”
“It’s my house, too,” Dick puts in.
Veronica ignores him.  “I took you for an out-of-towner,” she tells Logan.
The fact that she thought of this means she’s not uninterested in the possibility of seeing him again.  “Nope, local boy, though and through.”
Veronica eyes him thoughtfully.  “And why are you half naked?”
He realizes he doesn’t actually have a good reason.  “I was really starting to smell?”
She pretends to consider this.  “I guess I’ll take it,” she finally says.  Lilly starts cackling.  
Logan tries not to preen.  “Veronica, this is everybody; everybody, Veronica.” Veronica waves awkwardly.  
“Are you going to stick around until your dad gets back?” Gia asks, faux-innocent.  
Veronica looks sidelong at Logan.  “Stay,” he says, hearing it come out somehow as if he were laying his heart on the line.  He adds, more casually, “You can scold him for his fence-jumping.”  
She considers him.  “Do you have anything other than Mike’s hard black cherry lemonade?”
He cracks a smile.  “I think I can scare something up.”
“The good stuff is all inside,” Lilly lies, straight-faced, then elbows Duncan, who says with faux-enthusiasm, “Oh yeah, and while you’re in there, maybe Logan could put a shirt on.”
“Like, if one jumps out at him,” Gia puts in. “Not every color works on Logan.”
“Yeah,” says Lilly.  “He went through a whole orange phase.  It was bad.”
Veronica looks bewilderedly around the circle, then back up at Logan.  “I guess I could stay awhile,” she says, a smile pulling at her mouth.  
“Don’t forget to grab hamburgers before you go in,” Dick says, serious.  “That’s literally the whole point.”
“Right,” says Logan, not taking his eyes off Veronica. “Thank goodness for those hamburgers.”
                                              -~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-
Yahoo answers post from user MeCasablancasIsTooCasablancas:
So a few years ago I met this really cool dad, super great, very wise, lot to offer as a father figure.  I put a lot of effort into getting to know him and he’s always been totally chill.  My roommate, on the other hand, barely wanted to talk to the dad, from day one.  Only problem is, now that’s changed and we’re in competition, and I was wondering, how do I make sure that my prior claim to the dad is respected?  My roommate didn’t even want a dad, but now just because he’s marrying the guy’s daughter everyone’s telling me father-in-law trumps the fact that I clearly called dibs? This can’t be right.  
Also, the wedding is in two months, and even though there’s no way they go through with it, just in case please go to Craigslist and look for my post seeking a new roommate.  If it helps, we have a grill.
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Mattress Shopping
A little drabble I wrote based on @dimplesandcurlsss fic Hearts Don’t Break Around Here (which you ALL should read because it is sooooo gooodd!!) 
**I DID NOT WRITE HDBAH !! THIS IS A FAN WRITING** 
“Come on snickers just try it out.” Lance patted the bare mattress beside him.
Keith crossed his arms. “This is your bed. It’s not like I need to like it.”
Lance had insisted that Keith come and help him pick out a new mattress. It was a gift for his birthday from his parents and he was very excited. So excited that he laid on his bed all day the day before so he could be sure to ‘feel the difference.’
“I’m gonna sleep so well now.” Lance had said as they got in to his scalding hot car.
“You sleep good anyways.” Keith rolled his eyes, pulling at his shirt to fan himself, because Lance had the windows locked.
So now they were roaming Mattress World and Lance insisted that he try each and every one before he made a decision. It wasn’t like Keith hated shopping with Lance, but it was just a very immersive experience. When Lance needed to buy a suit for work, he made sure to try each style, each color of tie with each color of shirt. They were at Macy’s for hours. And when they wanted to buy a coffee table, Lance refused to buy one online because he /needed/ to see in person.
And so now Lance was lounging on their tenth mattress, his arms spread out to his sides.
“Don’t be such a party pooper Snickers!”
“Do you know how many people have laid on that thing?”
“Lay on the damn mattress Keith.” Lance gave one more firm pat on the bed. And it wasn’t too often that Lance used Keith’s actual name. So he laid on the damn bed.
“So, what do you think?”
Keith didn’t really care. Anything was more comfortable than the bed he owned now. But he knew Lance cared.
“It’s good. Pretty cushy.” He pressed three fingers into the bed.
“Yeah, it’s softer than the last one.” Lance bounced his body a little, shaking the bed.
Keith hummed, although he didn’t lay on the last one.
“Hello gentlemen can I help you with anything?” A peppy voice interrupted their bed-trying-out-moment.
They both sat up and saw a salesman standing at the foot of the bed, his yellow tie neatly tucked into his sweater vest.
Lance swung his legs off the bed, and Keith followed because he decided he had been laying on a bed he didn’t own for too long.
“Yes.” Lance said, straightening his posture and placing his hands on his hips. “I’m buying a new mattress.”
The salesman, who Keith figured out whose name was Craig from the blue nametag on his chest, smiled. What a salesman-ish name.
“Well, is there anything specific you are looking for?”
“Just queen sized and comfy.” Lance beamed at his witty alliteration.
Craig clapped his hands together in excitement. “Well, we have many models, and many of them I could get at good deals for you.” Craig began to lead them around the narrow pathways between beds.
They stopped in front of a very nice looking bed. Keith gazed at Lance, who looked liked he wanted to jump on it.
“Now this one is very popular, as both sides are adjustable for each of you, which is very helpful if either of you snore.” He chuckled lightly.
Keith slouched and Lance giggled.
“We’re not together.” Keith voice was as monotonous as it comes.
“Yeah, just bestest buddies.” Lance wiggled his shoulders. Keith shot him a look. Lance continue to shoulder wiggle.
Craig’s pale eyebrows lifted into his forehead. “Oh- oh I apologize.”
“No biggie Craig. Now let’s look at some bachelor beds shall we.” Lance rubbed his hands together, which made Keith chuckled. He shoved his hands in his jacket pockets and laid on what seemed like every single bed in the store with Lance.
“This one’s pretty nice.” Lance laid his head on his hands. “Whatdya think snickers?”
“I don’t know if your parents gave you enough for this one.” Keith fiddled with the price tag.
Lance huffed. “Fuck, yeah you’re right. Okay what about the one by the ugly light fixture?”
“That one was good.”
“And the one by the window.”
“Yep.”
There was a pause. The plastic by their feet crinkled.
“Pillows or Tennis Shoes?”
“Pillows.” Keith said, no hesitation whatsoever.
“Right. One by the light fixture.” Lance rolled off the bed and hopped up, running a hand through his hair. “Craig! We’ve made our decision.” With hands on his hips he gave Keith a triumphant smile. “You always know what to say.”
Keith just shrugged and got off the bed.
“Hey Lance?”
“Hm?”
“How are we getting this home?”
“Fuck.”
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