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#waitress marinette
thealexio00 · 1 year
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Official Marichat songs are now "It only takes a taste" and "Bad Idea" from the Broadway Musical adaptation of Waitress.
I'm sorry, but this is the law now
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anna-scribbles · 1 year
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cover art for Chrysalis by @peachcitt​
summary: 
We’re on an American road trip,” Adrien says, looking over at Marinette to see that she’s giving him one of her soft smiles, one of the ones where she looks like she’s halfway between wanting to tease him and wanting to kiss him.
“An American road trip,” the waitress repeats with a little shake of her head and a laugh. “Well, I sure hope it’s as glamorous as you make it sound, darlin’.”
or
after the events of metamorphosis, adrien and marinette attempt to find their version of normal.
(my LATE christmas present for peach. I love you and this story forever) 
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miraculousfanworks · 4 days
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Writing Prompts: "Give my compliments to the chef"
Throughout his whole life, Adrien has been surrounded by gourmet chefs and a lifestyle much more expensive than an average person.
After his father’s death and having more freedom, his friends take him to a fast food restaurant. His friends warned him it will be different from what he is used to…however his reaction is not what they expected. As they entered Wendy’s he looked like a child in Disney Land, fascinated by the structure and the food they had there. Adrien also noticed sauce packets and got excited, who knew fast food restaurants had such cool souvenirs!! ….Marinette wouldn’t let him take the whole box though unfortunately.
Adrien very much enjoyed the meal and his friends company and before they leave he said he had to do something first.
Adrien: walks up to counter Excuse me? Waitress: Oh Adrien Agreste! Did you enjoy the meal, I know it’s probably not what- Adrien: I loved it! …Actually I was hoping I can talk to Wendy. Waitress: Who? Adrien: You know… the owner of the restaurant, Wendy? I want to tell her she did a good job Waitress: Oh…uh… Marinette: Adrien, Wendy’s just the name…there’s nobody named Wendy here Adrien: But…isn’t that who the restaurant is named after? You know… Wendy’s Nino: That’s not how it works… ok let’s head out Adrien: Ok…looks across the street Ohhhh can we meet McDonald?! Everyone: …
Prompt by: Mickeyfan1
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ladyfreya123 · 1 year
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Hi! @goldenlaurelleaveswrites. I’m your secret admirer this year! I went with your ‘meet cute’ prompt. I was having a lot of fun with this because I also like fluff. I hope you like it. 😊😊💙💙
“A street musician, Luka Couffaine was struggling with writing his new song, he felt he was a bit blocked. This afternoon was sunny and calm but he couldn’t find his own peace, his head was gloomy. He entered a small coffee shop to take a break. A cute girl appeared before his eyes. Marinette, the waitress, had a beautiful smile that illuminated everything around. She was like a shining star and he couldn’t take his eyes away from her... The writing of the new song was about to start and then something new started as well.”
@lovebugs-and-snakecharmers
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mintaka14 · 1 month
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Welcome to Chapter 9 of Living Arrangements, my Lukanette ML AU fanfic where they were roommates! Thank you for your patience, and now, sit back and hopefully enjoy:
Living Arrangements
A Miraculous Ladybug fanfiction
By Mintaka14
Chapter 9 – Old Friends and Complications
'Cause she don't need umbrellas in a summer rain She could catch the eye of a hurricane in blue jeans and pearls
[I Met a Girl: William Michael Morgan]
The café that Adrien had suggested wasn’t one that Marinette was familiar with. She checked the address, and checked it again before she pushed open the doors. The café was full of hushed, business-like conversations going on over the soft clink of gleaming silverware and tasteful china.
A young woman around Marinette’s age in a starched black and white uniform greeted her with a bright, customer service smile.
 “Welcome,” she said, “and how may I help you today?”
“I’m… uh, meeting someone here,” Marinette said a little uncertainly.
“Of course. Do you have a reservation with us today?”
“Sorry?”
“Your reservation. What name is it under?”
What kind of café needed a reservation?
“… Agreste,” she said, and the waitress’ smile grew more perfunctory. She glanced down at the appointment book in front of her.
“We do seem to have a booking today.” Her gaze swept over Marinette, and lightened as she seemed to reach a conclusion. “You must be here for an interview with Gabriel’s recruitment manager. She’s not here yet, but we’ve reserved the usual table -”
“Actually, I’m meeting Adrien Agreste,” Marinette tried to clarify. The customer service smile grew condescending.
“I’m afraid Adrien Agreste doesn’t usually meet with new hires in person. But you’re welcome to wait until Mlle Garamond arrives.”
“No, I –“
Before Marinette could finish trying to explain, the waitress had turned away to lead her to a reserved table. Marinette gave up the attempt. She shrugged herself out of her jacket, and draped it over the back of the chair, setting her bag beside her as she sat down.
Marinette could hear Tikki rustling around in her bag as she stashed it near her feet, and it was very distracting. Usually, Tikki was content to snuggle down, and maybe play a silent game or two on Marinette’s phone, but the kwami was oddly restless. The bag gave an odd little skip, and tipped over.
Marinette bent to straighten it, and whispered into her bag, “Is everything okay?”
Tikki blinked up at her, almost vibrating. “You’re going to see Adrien again,” she whispered back. “Are you okay?”
“Mademoiselle?” the waitress said from somewhere above her. Marinette’s head slammed into the underside of the table as she jerked upright. When she straightened, rubbing the aching back of her head, the waitress was regarding her with a raised eyebrow and a menu in her hand.
“Would you like to order anything, mademoiselle?”
Marinette fumbled her sketchbook out of her bag and held it up with a nervous little laugh.
"Just… doing a bit of work. I’ll wait for… I’ll wait, thanks.”
The waitress’ eyebrow climbed even higher, but she turned away without a word.
Marinette opened her sketchbook, sparing a grimace in response to Tikki’s wide-eyed look of sympathy from the depths of her bag, and started making notes to distract herself from the whispers and glances around her.
She flipped another page, losing herself in the movement of her pencil, and didn’t notice when the café door chimed and all the subdued conversations in the café seemed to pause for a moment.
A hand drew back the chair opposite her.
“You’re early. That doesn’t seem like the Marinette Dupain-Cheng I remember,” a voice said lightly, and Marinette looked up, startled, into Adrien Agreste’s famous smile.
“Oh my god,” the waitress gasped, sharp over the soft buzz of whispers and recognition that rippled through the café. “It really is Adrien Agreste!”
It was like a spotlight had been switched on, glinting on his golden hair and brilliant, photo-ready smile. Marinette’s practised eye for fashion design couldn’t help sweeping over the lines of the casual suit he was wearing that was anything but casual, and she would have bet that it cost more than her entire wardrobe. It did sit well on him, she had to admit, even if he did look as though a team of stylists had spent hours crafting the perfect look (Summer Catalogue, page five. Cool linens for that casual look, said a sarcastic little voice in her head that sounded like one of the kwamis, and she hastily silenced it).
Marinette blinked, and glanced away, half-expecting the flash of cameras to have followed him in, but all she saw was café patrons watching with varying degrees of avid attention, and the waitress with her wide eyes fixed on Adrien and all traces of supercilious boredom gone. The girl was practically trembling with speechless excitement, and Marinette felt like she was staring at her fourteen-year-old self. Marinette looked away, to find Adrien still smiling down at her, his hand resting on the back of his chair.
He still had that air of open guilelessness that she remembered from the boy she’d known before, but now, on the man he’d grown into, it felt as much of a curated image choice as his suit did.
“Well, we’ve both changed a bit in the last few years,” she said.
“You’ve certainly grown up since I last saw you. You’re looking well,” he said with unmistakable admiration in his voice as he sat down, and Marinette couldn’t help blushing furiously. Back in collège, something like that from Adrien would have reduced her to an incoherent mess. As it was, she dropped her eyes, focusing on the table for a moment. 
“I’m feeling a little underdressed, though,” she admitted. “If I’d known what this place was like, I would have dressed up more. I think I’m the only one wearing jeans here.”
Adrien looked around in mild surprise. “I suppose you are. I know our recruitment manager likes to hold business meetings here because she likes the rhum baba, and I used to come here with Father sometimes when he met with private clients. I remember it as being good.”
The waitress had recovered from her starstruck paralysis, and rustled between the tables towards them with a couple of menus clutched in her hands.
Adrien turned his attention back to Marinette, his gaze raking over her as he said, “You might be the only one wearing jeans here, but no one else could make them look that good.”
“Adrien!” she sputtered, feeling her face burn.
Then he said, “You’re injeanious,” and his professional, perfect smile cracked into a shit-eating grin that was so unlike the Adrien she knew that for one wild second Marinette didn’t know how to respond. She stared at him, and tried to suppress the weird sound between a groan and a snort of laughter that escaped her as his words sank in.
Adrien’s grin grew wider.
“Was that meant to be a pun?” Marinette asked in disbelief. Since when did Adrien Agreste make puns? “That was terrible!”
The waitress flashed her a disparaging look, and then ignored her completely, as she breathed, “Adrien Agreste!” She thrust the menus at him. “I’m your waitress. I’m Josephine. What can I get you? Can I get you anything? Anything you want, just let me know...”
Adrien was still watching Marinette, with a hint of that grin lingering.
“Have you ordered yet?” he asked her. “What would you like? Coffee? Tea? Or they used to have a really good vin chaud here.”
Marinette had a memory of Luka in the kitchen that morning, smiling his slow, sweet smile as he handed her a mug, and his voice a little rough with lack of sleep as he asked, “Coffee, Melody?”
“Tea with lemon would be lovely, please,” she said. She wondered if she was actually going to get the tea. She wasn’t convinced the waitress had actually heard her.
“I’ll have a black coffee, thanks,” Adrien said, hitting the waitress with that dazzling smile.
Adrien settled back into his seat, and he waited until Josephine was gone, his eyes on Marinette. He seemed to be studying Marinette’s face as if he was looking for something, and she shifted uncomfortably under the scrutiny.
“Your recruitment manager must come here a lot. The waitress was convinced that I was here for a job interview with Gabriel,” she said to break the awkward silence.
“Gabriel would be lucky to get you.” 
Marinette couldn’t help the dismissive sound she made. “You don’t have to say that to be polite. You don’t even know if my work is any good.”
Adrien’s smile grew warmer. “Don’t forget, I’ve worn your designs. You got Father’s attention back in collège, and believe me, that’s not easy to do.”
“For a kids’ competition,” Marinette scoffed, feeling her cheeks heat up again. “That’s a long way off scoring a position at Gabriel, or any of the fashion houses for that matter.”
“It’s only a matter of time,” Adrien shrugged, and glanced up to give the waitress a smile and a murmured thank you as she settled his cup of coffee in front of him and fussed with the placement of the teaspoon and petit fours beside it. “Alya showed me some of the photos from your showcase last year. This is your third year at IFM, isn’t it?”
Marinette nodded faintly. 
Josephine slid a dish of tea in her direction.  Marinette thanked her, and decided not to mention the absence of lemon. She lifted the dish to her lips and sipped the scalding tea carefully.
“So what are you planning to do after that?” Adrien asked, and Marinette responded, but she felt very aware of the waitress hovering around their table with carafes of water and cutlery they didn’t need. Marinette answered Adrien’s questions and talked self-consciously about her plans and possibilities, and tried to ignore that Josephine and half the café were likely listening to every word.
Adrien, on the other hand, seemed sublimely unconcerned by the surreptitious interest around them. He flashed Josephine a smile every time she topped up his already full glass of water, and he leaned in a little closer to ask Marinette about her fashion marketing classes when Josephine finally ran out of reasons to linger and retreated to the café counter.
He knew most of Marinette’s professors when she mentioned them, and when she told a story about one of the guest lecturers who had been particularly brutal, he laughed.
“I don’t know about that,” Adrien said, “but I do know that Father refuses to work with him again.”
Marinette leaned forward, and propped her chin in her hands.
“Father brought him in for a ready to wear line,” he went on, “and they fought over the whole thing from start to finish. Things really blew up, though, when the patterns went out to the manufacturer, and somehow no one spotted that some of the dimensions were out by a factor of ten.”
“No!” Marinette pressed her fingertips to her lips to suppress a horrified snort of laughter.
“Oh, yes. Father blamed Fabian, Fabian blamed my father, and I don’t know which one of them threw the bigger fit about it, but in the end Father threatened to have security fling Fabian into the street if he ever darkened our doors again.”
“The glamorous world of fashion,” Marinette giggled, and Adrien gave an exaggerated sigh.
“The things I’ve seen since I started working with my father.”
“Is that what you’ve been doing since you left Paris? Working at Gabriel?” she asked. “I mean, we know you’re still modelling, obviously –“ It would have been hard to miss - there were still billboards of him all over Paris, and every fashion magazine had him splashed all over the covers. Adrien pulled a wry face that didn’t make him look any less perfect.
“That wasn’t exactly my idea, but it’s good for Gabriel’s profile, according to Father’s PR gurus. And I’ve been shadowing Father in the company, learning more about the business side of things, since I passed the international bac.” He picked up the teaspoon beside his half-drunk coffee, turning it in his fingers.
“And now you’re back in Paris.”
“I’m back to stay,” he agreed.
“It’s good to have you home again,” Marinette said, and Adrien’s green eyes lit up at the polite sentiment. “It’s been too long since we’ve heard from you.”
“Yeah, I know I haven’t been that good at keeping in touch,” he said a little guiltily. “Things have been rather busy the past few years.”
“We were all a bit worried when you just left without a word, and even Nino didn’t know what the story was.”
“It was nothing that exciting,” he said, absently stirring a pattern in his coffee. “Father had been considering going to New York for a while, to oversee a few changes the company was planning to make there, and then… well, a few things happened, and we had to leave for New York pretty quickly. I wanted to say goodbye before we left, but Father didn’t really see any point…” Adrien trailed off, looking uncomfortable for the first time since he’d walked into the café, and Marinette was suddenly very conscious of all the surreptitious eyes watching them, and the ears listening. Over by the counter, Josephine had given up all pretence of doing anything but eavesdropping on their conversation.
Like they always did when Marinette was nervous, a jumble of words crowded into her mouth, and before she could stop herself, she found herself blurting out the first thing that came to her, “At least we knew you hadn’t been abducted by aliens or anything.”
Marinette cringed, but the discomfort in Adrien’s face disappeared. His eyes flicked up to hers with a startled look.
“Aliens?”
“When you left Paris, we knew you probably hadn’t been abducted by aliens, because you were all over the magazine covers, and we saw all the interviews you did,” she ploughed on, and then giggled. “Although Kim did come up with a whole deep fake theory for a while, until Max talked him out of it.”
Adrien stared at her. “I’m almost afraid to ask –“
“The board of directors put it out that you and your father had moved to New York so that no one would find out that they’d locked you both in the basement and replaced you with AI simulants,” she recited glibly.
Adrien’s startled laugh was loud enough to draw attention from everyone in the café. He glanced around apologetically, with that bright golden smile of his that melted all the disapproving looks into indulgent smiles, and he turned back to Marinette.
 “Seriously?” he asked. “Why?”
Marinette was trying to keep a straight face herself as she told him, “Well, Kim couldn’t decide if it was because your father was about to announce a line of clothing so horrendous that it would destroy the company if they didn’t get rid of him, or if it was because he’d come up with a revolutionary new flipper shoe and had to be stopped before foreign agents could steal the designs and weaponise them.”
Adrien started laughing helplessly. “You’re so funny, Marinette.” His laugh faded. “I wish we’d been able to talk like this, the last few years. I’ve missed this,” he said, his green eyes meeting hers, and she felt a pang of sympathy for the boy who’d been so desperate for friends, for school, for something resembling a normal life. And he’d just disappeared one day without so much as a goodbye to any of them except Nino.
 “We missed you, too,” Marinette told him gently. “I know Nino’s organising some sort of a collège reunion party while you’re in Paris.”
“No, I mean –“
“Can I refill your coffee for you?” Josephine asked, materialising beside them.
Adrien’s practised, brilliant smile switched on as he turned to glance up at the waitress hovering at his elbow with a coffee pot in her hand.
“No. No, thank you. I’ll be up all night if I have another coffee now, and I have a photoshoot at the crack of dawn tomorrow,” he said with a charming, self-deprecating roll of his eyes that had Josephine practically swooning. “Although your coffee is nearly worth risking Vincent yelling at me when I turn up with bags under my eyes.”
Josephine was still giggling as she backed away again.
Adrien glanced at Marinette’s empty tea cup once she’d gone. “She forgot your tea.”
“I think you have a fan there,” Marinette said quietly, and Adrien glanced behind him.
Josephine was on her way back to them before he’d even finished turning his head.
“Is everything alright?” she asked eagerly, the words tripping over themselves in a way that felt all too familiar to Marinette. “Can I get you anything?”
“My friend would like another cup of tea, if it’s not too much trouble,” he said.
“No, it’s okay,” Marinette protested, but neither of them seemed to hear her as Josephine spilled out apologies, and Adrien cut the waitress off with another smile.
“We really appreciate the way you’ve looked after us today,” he told her.
“I’m such a huge fan,” she blurted out, and Adrien’s smile grew brighter.
 “And I’m so glad to have the support of fans like you, Josephine. I’d be happy to take a photo with you, if you have a camera handy,” he offered, and Josephine stammered out something before bolting hastily. She came back with a phone in her hand.
Adrien turned that smile on Marinette, one eyebrow lifting.
“Would you mind?” he asked her, and she took the phone while Adrien smiled at the camera and Josephine gazed up at him as if she couldn’t quite believe he was real. Marinette handed back the phone.
“No one would have believed me, if I just told them I met Adrien Agreste,” Josephine sighed happily. “Thank you. I… thank you!” And she disappeared into the back of the café, clutching her phone as if it held something unspeakably precious.
“You still get a lot of that,” Marinette said, quietly enough that no one nearby could hear, as Adrien sat down again. His brilliant smile grew a little wry.
“I’m used to it. Remember the day we hid from that mob that chased us?”
“I remember.”
“It’s not uncommon, although that’s the only time I’ve hidden in a fountain to get away from them,” he teased.
Marinette buried her face in her hands. “I still can’t believe I did that.”
“Hey, it worked. They can be pretty persistent sometimes.”
“That’s why Luka dyed his hair and wears long sleeves when he goes out,” Marinette said, and reached for the empty teacup to hide the fond smile she could feel spreading across her face. She instantly felt silly for pretending to drink tea that clearly wasn’t there.
“Luka?” and Adrien’s brow creased at the unfamiliar name. “Who’s Luka?”
“He’s Juleka’s brother,” she explained, trying not to sound self-conscious. “I moved in with him and Juleka a few months ago.”
Adrien’s frown deepened. “Is he your –“
“Your tea!” Josephine interrupted brightly as she returned with a fresh, steaming cup, but her eyes were on Adrien.
A look of cold annoyance flashed across his face at the interruption, and for a moment the resemblance to his father was uncanny, then it vanished, wiped away by his habitual, charming smile, but Josephine’s hand jerked nervously and the teacup skittered in its saucer with a clatter of china as she put it down.
Marinette barely had time to feel second-hand cringe before the cup tipped, sending the tea spilling down the front of her blouse in a scalding splash. She couldn’t help the faint cry as hot liquid hit her blouse and soaked through the thin fabric, dripping in burning trails down her chest. She hunched over, trying to pull the blouse away from her skin.
“Oh my god, I’m so sorry!” Josephine gasped.
Marinette glanced up, her mouth open to respond, but the girl was staring at Adrien, her eyes wide in horror.
Adrien gave Josephine a reassuring smile.
“I’m such a klutz,” she was babbling. “I can’t believe I was such an idiot in front of Adrien Agreste.”
“Don’t worry about it,” he told her. “No harm done.”
Marinette glanced down at the spreading stain on her shirt. She had a sudden, unpleasant flash of memory – Adrien, in collège, telling her not to call out Lila’s lies because they weren’t hurting anyone – and she shifted uncomfortably, pushing the moment aside. The waitress wasn’t Lila, and hadn’t deliberately spilt the tea on Marinette.
“It’s fine,” Marinette said wearily. “Accidents happen, I know.”
And Marinette was rewarded with Adrien’s full-wattage smile, but she was too distracted to appreciate it. She took the napkin that Josephine was holding out vaguely in her direction, and patted at the damp brown spot without much success.
“I should go,” she sighed, dabbing at her shirt again. “Maybe if I get this in to soak quickly, I can get the stain out.”
She put down the napkin and reached for her bag, but Adrien stretched out a hand as if to hold her back.
“Oh, no, do you have to? It’s barely noticeable, and it’ll dry soon.”
He was right, it would dry quickly, but that was the problem. Once the stain was dry, it would set beyond much hope of repair. Maybe if she got some bicarb soda and detergent on it, she could still save it… Adrien was saying something.
 “… I’m sure Josephine can bring you another cup of tea, and we can finish catching up.” That famous smile was still turned on her. “I’ll get you a new blouse, it’s the least I can do.”
Marinette didn’t mention that finding a replacement for this particular blouse would be impossible. Josephine was spilling out reassurances to Adrien that she’d replace the tea, bring petit fours on the house, anything he wanted, anything at all …
“It’s okay. I really do have to go,” Marinette apologised, and started to gather up her bag and her jacket, shrugging it on over her soaked blouse. She stuffed her phone into her bag, and rummaged around in the depths under the tangle of keys, tissues and pencils trying to find her wallet, until Tikki silently pushed it into her hand. “It was nice to catch up, though.”
She tugged her credit card out of her wallet, and held it out to the waitress to pay, but before Josephine could take it, Adrien had produced a sleek black visa card.
 “Don’t worry about the bill,” he insisted. “There have to be some advantages to having a company credit card.”
 “Adrien –“ she protested as Josephine froze, with her hand hovering between the two proffered cards. Her anxious gaze shifted from Adrien to Marinette and back again.
Rather than leave the poor girl stuck while she argued the point with Adrien, Marinette put her card back into her wallet, and stuffed it into her bag.          
“Okay,” she gave in, “but next time is on me.”
His smile grew, as if he’d just scored a point. “It’s a deal. I’ll look forward to next time.”
When she brushed a quick bise against his cheek in farewell, Adrien seemed to lean in to it. His hand tightened briefly on her forearm.
 “Until next time,” he told her, and Marinette hurried out the door of the café in a jangle of bells.
~~~~~  
Luka was there when she got back to the apartment, stretched out on the couch and focused on his laptop.
 “You’re home early,” he said, looking up as she came in, and gave her a smile that faded into a look of concern as he caught sight of her blouse. “Is everything okay?”
“It’s just a tea spill,” she tried to say lightly. “It’s not a big deal.”
He was still frowning, as if he wasn’t buying it, but all he said was, “Is there anything I can do? I’ve got to take a load of washing over to the Liberty later anyway –“
Marinette shook her head, and her own smile felt a little crooked. “It’s fine. I’m just going to try soaking it in the bathroom.”
She’d changed into an old t-shirt and was standing over the bathroom basin, anxiously eyeing the blouse soaking in cold water and working a bicarb and detergent paste into the tea stain, when her phone rang. Alya had obviously given up on waiting for a response to the increasingly peremptory string of texts that had been pinging on Marinette’s phone and had decided on the direct approach.
“Well?” Alya’s voice demanded. “Don’t keep me hanging here! How did it go?”
Marinette sighed, and stirred the blouse in the cloudy water. “Do you ever have the feeling you’re cursed?”
“What?”
“Nothing. Look, Alya, I’ve got to go finish washing this tea stain out.”
 “What tea stain?” But Alya had obviously come to her own conclusions, and a sympathetic, if slightly impatient, laugh came through on the other end of the phone. “Girl, you’re hopeless. I’ll be there in fifteen minutes.”
Marinette found herself protesting to the sound of the dial tone. Alya must have been already on her way, because it wasn’t long before Marinette heard the doorbell ring. Nothing motivated Alya like the scent of gossip in the water.
The doorbell rang again impatiently, and she heard Luka getting to his feet. She wrung out the blouse to drape it over the towel rail. It would have to do.
She came into the living room just as Luka opened the door, and heard Alya asking him with studied casualness, “Hey, Luka. How’s it going?”
Alya followed Luka up the steps into the living room, and her uncomfortable defensiveness was obvious to Marinette as she came into view. Judging by the way the way Luka’s mouth twitched imperceptibly, it was obvious to him too.
 “Not bad,” was all he said, amusement lurking in his voice. “And you?”
“Oh, good, I’m good.” There was an awkward pause. “If you’re not doing anything, you should come to Nino’s next gig on Friday,” she added abruptly, and Marinette suppressed the urge to roll her eyes at the unspoken no hard feelings in Alya’s voice and posture. “You’d probably enjoy it, he’s really good.”
Luka’s easy expression didn’t change, but there was a gleam of humour in the depths of his blue eyes. “I’ll see if I’m free,” he said easily.
Alya abandoned the attempt at pleasantries as she caught sight of Marinette.
“Alright,” she demanded. “Spill. How did the date go?”
“Alya –“ Marinette sighed.
“I know, I know. Not a date. You were having coffee.”
“I didn’t get coffee - it was just a cup of tea,” Marinette protested, flicking a quick glance at Luka as she moved past the couch towards the kitchen, but he’d gone back to frowning at his laptop screen as if he hadn’t heard anything. “I didn’t even have anything to eat with it.”
 “Oh-kay…” Alya said, giving her a bemused look and following on her heels. “Well, whatever it was, stop holding out on me and spill the details. What did he say? What did you say? I assume you can actually talk to him these days. And what was all that cryptic stuff about being cursed?”
At that, Luka shifted and got to his feet with a sigh. His eyes met Marinette’s, and the corner of his mouth turned up in a brief half-smile that didn’t give much away.
 “This paper is giving me hell, so I’m going to go out for a walk, try to clear my head.” He reached for his coat draped over the back of the couch beside him. He shrugged himself into it, and glanced over his shoulder to tell Marinette, “The place is all yours for a few hours.”
“You don’t have to leave for us,” she protested, but he just gave her a quick smile, and headed down the steps, his shoulders hunched and his hands shoved into the pockets of his coat.
Alya watched him leave, and before the door had even closed properly behind him, she turned back to Marinette with a knowing smirk.
“Do I detect a hint of jealousy there?”
“Who, Luka? Why on earth would he be jealous?”
“Well, he didn’t exactly want to hang around and hear all about your coffee date, did he?”
Marinette levelled a look at Alya. “Or he didn’t want to stay so you could be hostile at him again.”
“Hey, I was perfectly friendly! I invited him to Nino’s gig, didn’t I?” Alya protested. She followed Marinette back into the living room as Marinette scooped up her jacket from where she’d left by the door when she’d come home. “And of course he’s jealous. The guy looks at you like you’re his favourite snack - of course he’s jealous that you just spent the afternoon with Paris’ most famous supermodel and heir to the Agreste empire.”
Marinette stopped in the middle of folding her jacket, and turned to knit her brow at her best friend. Alya had said something at the bar the other night about the way Luka looked at Marinette, but she’d just dismissed that as too many cocktails and Alya reading too much into things.
“Paris’ very single supermodel,” Alya added slyly.
“Oh, but Adrien’s not single,” Marinette cut her off brightly, “not according to the Daily Mail – he’s in a very serious threesome with one of the British royals and that guy from last season’s I’m a Celebrity. And I know how you feel about the Daily Mail’s sources on these things.”
“Yeah, yeah, I get it,” Alya grumbled. “But I’m right about this. I know what I’ve seen with my own eyes. You can’t say that’s not reliable –“ Marinette chose not to respond to that  “- and, since we’re talking reliable sources, I’d just like to point out that I know for a fact that the first thing that Adrien did when he got back to Paris was ask me and Nino for your number,” Alya pointed out triumphantly.
“Seriously, it was just catching up with an old friend from collège. I’m not even sure we have all that much in common anymore.”
“You’re both in fashion. You have that in common. You didn’t talk about that?”
“Well, yes, until I ended up with tea all down my blouse and I had to leave,” she said without meaning to, and Alya pounced on the hint of gossip.
“Is that why you were washing out tea stains when I called?” she demanded.
By the time Marinette gave in and told her the details, culminating in getting the cup of tea knocked all over her, Alya was chuckling.
“Oh, girl, only you!” Her laugh became a knowing smirk. “Still klutzing out around Adrien, huh? Nice to know some things never change.”
Marinette sighed. “It really wasn’t my fault this time.”
Alya waved away the protest. “Yeah, yeah, it was the waitress.”
Marinette scooped up her bag, which she’d left by the stairs when she’d come home, and stole a quick look to check that Tikki had managed to sneak away to the bedroom. An odd smell of cheese wafted up from her bag, and she wrinkled her nose. What on earth had Tikki been eating in there? She’d have to clean it later… and all thoughts of weird smells got left aside as she realised what definitely wasn’t in her bag. Marinette scuffled through the mess with increasing agitation while Alya kept talking.
 “- and Nino’s planning to throw that reunion party for Adrien, so -” Alya broke off when Marinette upended everything onto the couch. “Jeez, Marinette, what’s up? Lost your phone or something?”
 “Worse,” Marinette muttered, focused on the assorted junk on the couch. Her lipstick, her spare pens, her wallet, the sheaf of course notes from three days ago were all there, but there was no sign of the one thing she really needed. “My sketchbook. I must have left it at the café –“
That was the last time she knew she’d seen it. She’d been sketching out ideas while she’d waited, and then Adrien had turned up and she’d –
Alya laughed, and said, “Well, isn’t that just the perfect excuse to see Adrien again. Maybe he picked it up for you.”
Marinette glared at her. “Alya, this is serious! That book has all my notes, my sketches for the finals, everything.”
Alya scooped Marinette’s phone up from the litter on the couch, and held it out to her.
“So just call him,” she insisted with a roll of her eyes. “It’s not a big deal, and at least you’ll know if he’s got your sketchbook or not. If he hasn’t got it, then you can panic.”
And, sure enough, there was a message from Adrien that she’d missed while she was washing her blouse, in the middle of Alya’s texts. Marinette ignored Alya’s questioning eyebrow, and tapped out a quick response that had an answer within seconds of hitting send.
“He has it,” she said as she put aside her phone. “I can pick it up tomorrow.”
“And you have another date with Adrien,” Alya said on a note of satisfaction.
“It’s –“
“Not a date,” Alya chimed in, rolling her eyes again.
She didn’t stay long after that, and Marinette was left pacing the apartment, feeling twitchy and unsettled. Between Alya getting into her head about Luka, and a growing feeling of anxiety when her thoughts swung round to her sketchbook and having to go the Gabriel offices the next day to get it back from Adrien, it took her longer than it should have to realise that the noise when she pushed open her bedroom door wasn’t just a manifestation of the agitation in her head.
Tikki was flitting around with unusual energy, and there seemed to be an escalating argument going on. None of the kwamis noticed Marinette.
“There’s sssomething he’ss keeping to himssself. I don’t like thisss at all,” Sass hissed, swaying over the coil of his tail, as Tikki zipped past his head.
“I’m staying out of it,” Roarr yawned, “but I agree with Sass. Something doesn’t smell right.”
“That would be the cheese,” one of the kwamis snickered.
A tiny rubber banana ricocheted off Roarr’s head, and she bared her fangs, snarling at Xuppu as he drew back his arm to launch another one. The second banana caught Roarr between the eyes, and the monkey kwami bounced out of reach as Roarr’s snarl became a low, warning growl.
“I’m sure he’ll be looking for an opportunity to see me again, and fill me in,” Tikki said defensively, just as Fluff tumbled out of the air to land on Marinette’s bed, startling the kwamis clustered there.
“Trussst you to make excussses for him.”
“A tale as old as time,” Fluff announced out of nowhere, “and I should know.”
The little rabbit somersaulted over the edge of the bed, and vanished again. Sass’s forked tongue flickered.
“Sssome people don’t deserve the sssecond chancesss they’ve been given,” he hissed. “And I should know.”
“That was not his fault, and you know that, too. He didn’t have any choice about leaving us-“
“Much asss that cheesemonger itchesss my fangss, I wasssn’t talking about -”
“What on earth is going on?” Marinette finally managed to make herself heard over the rising noise, and everything went quiet. Tikki whipped around guiltily. Marinette eyed the hovering kwami for a long moment, and glanced at Sass on the window sill. His tail was still flicking against the painted wood with an agitation that she’d never seen in him before.
“Does anyone want to explain what’s going on here?”
Before anyone else could answer, Tikki swooped through the air to hover in front of her face.
“It was nothing,” Tikki insisted, her big eyes going wide with an unconvincing innocence. “Just a small disagreement.”
“Who were you talking about?” Marinette asked, directing the question past Tikki at the snake kwami, but Tikki whirled around to intercept Marinette’s attention before Sass could answer.
“We should go out. How long has it been since you transformed? It would be good for you – you’ve been so wound up since we got home,” Tikki suggested, as if she hadn’t just been doing manic little spirals in the air. “You could use a bit of fresh air. You really shouldn’t let yourself get out of practice.”
“Becaussse that’sss what we ssshould be focusssed on right now,” Sass said caustically, and Tikki whirled around to face him, glaring.
Their voices rose, and the other kwamis threw in opinions and unhelpful, inflammatory comments that escalated until the room was full of shouting and Marinette had to clap her hands over her ears. She felt a sudden spike of panic at the thought of what would happen if Luka got back before she could get the kwamis calmed down. There was no way Marinette would be able to explain away the noise that they were all making.
“Enough!” she finally shouted over the top of them, glaring around the room as she flipped her hair back to touch her miraculous earrings. “Do you want Luka or Juleka to walk in on all this? You and me, Tikki, we’re going out, and when we get back we’re all going to have a nice, calm discussion about this that doesn’t involve the neighbours calling the police on me, or having to lie to my roommates, or bananas,” she added sternly as she caught sight of Xuppu out of the corner of her eye, just as he drew his arm back to throw something.
The little monkey hid whatever it was behind his back, and gave Marinette a sheepish grin as she transformed.
At least the streets of Paris felt quieter than her room had, once she swung out over the rooftops. It was good to feel the wind in her face, and focus on the adrenaline rush of every leap, on the way her heart rate sped up in a steady rhythm and her mind moved sharp and fast across the rooftops ahead. Tikki was right about one thing, even if she’d only suggested it to avoid answering Marinette – it had been far too long since she’d gone for a run as Ladybug.
It was an uneventful night down below her in Paris, and things had calmed down in her bedroom by the time Marinette finally landed back through the window. Most of the kwamis had vanished into their various corners and nests, but Sass reared up his head as she came in. The tip of his tail was twitching.
“Did you sssee anyone interesssting?” he asked Tikki, a trace of acid in his tone. She huffed, and flitted away to sulk without answering the question or staying to continue the argument that had started it all.
Marinette eyed Sass.
“Are you going to tell me what that was all about?” she asked.
The little snake turned a thoughtful look in the direction of Tikki’s nest, and said, “Jussst an old argument among usss kwamisss.”
Marinette stared at him, and Sass stared back at her, unblinking. He added slyly, “I hear Luka’ss back.”
As distractions went, it was a pretty effective one, and Marinette also took his subtle reminder that they weren’t alone in the apartment. Even so, she thought for a moment about pushing harder, but when Sass flicked a meaningful glance in the direction of the shelves, she gave up on getting a straight answer from him with all the kwamis listening in from their various hidey-holes and perches, not when it might start off another noisy disruption.
Instead, she listened for the soft sounds that meant that Luka was home again, and working in the living room. She reached for her bedroom door without conscious thought, her suspicions and concerns about the kwamis’ moods temporarily put aside.
Luka had his guitar on his lap, and pages of music scattered like snow-drifts all over the floor. There was an unfamiliar stringed instrument lying on the couch beside him. He was scribbling something on the stack of manuscript, and then let it flutter to the floor to join the other marked pages piling up around him.
The lamp shone on his blue-dyed hair, filtering through the rumpled strands like sunlight falling through deep water, and Marinette was tempted to reach out and tangle her fingers in the soft strands. She wished she could work out how to recreate that effect in fabric. Maybe a watered silk, hand-dyed, if she could get the right blend of shades…
She only realised she’d been lost in staring at him when Luka sighed and straightened, and caught sight of her. Bedroom eyes, Alya’s voice whispered slyly in the back of her mind, and Marinette could feel a blush burning her cheeks. He gave her a soft smile, which didn’t help at all.
“Sorry, was I disturbing you?” he asked quietly, and she shook her head. “What time is it, anyway?”
“Just after midnight,” she said just as quietly.
“That explains why my hand’s so sore, then.” He sighed, and massaged his wrist. When Marinette came further into the room, he shifted a few loose pages out of the way so she could curl up in her usual place beside him on the couch, but she hesitated, suddenly very aware of just how close it would put them. She silently cursed her best friend for getting into her head, leaving her searching for signs of something more in the slow, sweet smile he always gave her.
When she hesitated a little too long, his smile became a question, and she made herself relax into the space beside him.
“I didn’t get a chance to ask before - how did things go catching up with your friend this afternoon?” he asked, and Marinette filled him in on the whole afternoon. She couldn’t help a soft huff of a laugh when she got to the spilled tea.
“The waitress was so busy trying to impress Adrien that by the end of it she’d forgotten I was even there, she was so busy apologising to him –“
“Wait, she was apologising to him, not you?” Luka interjected.
 “Well, I get it. I did far stupider things when I was trying to get his attention back in collège.”
Luka’s brow creased, but all he said was, “Did you manage to get the stain out?”
“Mostly. I don’t think I’ll ever be able to wear it again, though…” she trailed off in thought. “Unless, maybe, I can embroider it, or add something…”
She pulled herself back before she could get too side-tracked by creative solutions, but Luka’s frown had melted into a fond smile as if he knew exactly what she was thinking and didn’t mind at all that her attention had wandered.
She found herself feeling self-conscious again as their eyes met, but there was nothing in the way he was looking at her that she hadn’t seen in the smiles he gave his sister, his mother, or any of the small handful of people he really cared about, and she ignored the tiny pang of disappointment at the thought.
She tilted her head towards the drifts of paper around him. “So what’s keeping you up tonight?” she asked. “Have you got an assignment giving you a hard time?”
He gave the abandoned instrument on his other side a rueful look. “I’m supposed to be practising for my world music performance assessment in November, but I keep getting distracted. I’ve missed writing music for so long, it’s hard to ignore the inspiration when it happens.”
“That’s some pretty powerful inspiration,” she teased him.
“Yeah,” he said, setting his hands on the strings of his guitar again, and picking out a soft, slow run of notes. “It’s pretty irresistible.”
He dipped his head over his guitar. The fall of his hair hid his eyes for a moment, but the light of the lamp cast a warm heat across his cheekbones that almost looked like a blush.
“This is a side of you that I haven’t seen before,” Marinette said without thinking, and he raised his head to give her a look of mild curiosity. She ploughed on, “I mean, I knew you were talented, I love listening to you when you play or sing, but I’ve never seen you so…”
“So?” he prompted gently when she trailed off.
“In your element. It’s really –“ hot, a suggestive little voice in her mind provided, and she tried to ignore it “- good to see.”
His mouth quirked up. “Now you know how I feel, watching you in action.” His fingers plucked out a fragment of a tune that Marinette had never heard before.
“All of the warp and the weft the world sends her, she gathers them into her hands,” he sang softly, “and sees something beautiful, sews something beautiful, out of whatever the world sends her way…”
Luka glanced up from his guitar, and there was something intense in those deep blue eyes, dark as the ocean, focused on her.
This was…
…oh.
Surely there was no mistaking that look in his eyes.
A profound thrill shivered through her. Marinette could feel the heat rising through her, leaving every inch of her burning and tingling, and there was an electric moment when it felt like he might finally lean in, close that distance, and kiss her.
Marinette’s breath caught at the thought.
The moment broke with the soft sound. Luka shifted, putting aside his guitar. He got to his feet, and stretched.
“Is it too late for a coffee?” he asked, and Marinette blinked. “I think I need some more caffeine.”
~~~~~
The soft, startled intake of her breath brought Luka back to the moment, and Marinette staring up at him through the dark fringe of her lashes, her beautiful blue eyes wide and overwhelmed.
Luka set aside his guitar and stood up, saying something as casually as he could manage about getting coffee, to give her some space.
There was a moment’s hesitation, then Marinette got up and followed him into the kitchen, and he knew a strong flash of relief that at least he hadn’t freaked her out too badly with the intensity of what he was feeling, and what had poured into that brief snatch of the song she’d inspired. Jules had always said he could be a little much when the muse took hold of him.
She watched while he started the kettle and got a couple of mugs out. “You’re going to be up all night,” she told him.
“Yeah, I don’t think sleep is on the cards tonight,” he said ruefully, and he glanced down at Marinette, hoping his face didn’t give away the heat and want flooding through him. “Did you want anything? Assuming you’re not over hot drinks by now,” he joked gently.
“I’d better stick to a decaf, if you’re offering. And it was tea, not coffee,” she pointed out. “Coffee stains would have been easier to get out.”
“Really? Interesting – I would have thought that tea stained less.”
She was shaking her head authoritatively, the intense moment between them dissipating under the kitchen light. “More mess to start with, but the tannin marks are worse. I’ve had a lot of experience with spilling stuff on myself.” The air of exasperation that went with that statement was adorable, and Luka hid a smile.
He dropped a scoop of ground beans into the filter pot and poured the boiling water over it, and then turned to get the rarely used jar of decaf instant coffee out of the cupboard. Marinette giggled at the face he pulled as he put a spoonful of granules in her mug and topped it up from the kettle before handing it to her. The smell of brewing coffee filled the kitchen, and he leaned his forearms on the counter across from Marinette while he waited for his to be ready.
“Sounds like you should stick to drinking water, next time you’re on a date.”
“It wasn’t a date,” she repeated, her expression becoming a little disgruntled. “It was just coffee with an old school friend.”
“Where you didn’t drink any coffee,” he couldn’t help teasing her, happy to see the disgruntlement vanish as she pulled a face at him. Her eyes dropped to focus on the mug in her hands, and an odd little quirk caught the corner of her mouth.
“You’ve spoiled me for anyone else’s coffee,” she said without looking up. 
He didn’t dare hope that she meant it as anything more than a joke, but he couldn’t help the stupid grin that he hid behind his own mug. He raised it to take another swallow, and stopped, caught by a stray wisp of music.
There was something in that… He found his fingers tapping the cadence against the side of his mug, the riff that would go with them playing as clear as a bell in his mind, and he groped blindly for something to write them down.
Marinette must have understood the sudden mood that gripped him, because she silently pushed the shopping list towards him and handed him a pen. Luka scribbled down the random line of music in his head, the potential lyrics scrawled under the reminder to get eggs and milk that was already there, and Marinette giggled.
~~~~~
Marinette rinsed out her mug, and left Luka to his music. She knew, from her own experience, that he would be consumed by the creative fit that had overtaken him for the rest of the night, and she took her pyjamas into the bathroom to change and brush her teeth. He was still bent over the lyrics that he’d begun on their shopping list when she passed him on her way to bed, and she smiled to herself as she closed her bedroom door behind her.
In the darkness, she could hear the kwamis, the soft little snorts and noises that meant they were asleep, and she climbed into bed without turning the light on so she wouldn’t disturb them. Only Sass’ golden, slitted eyes gleamed in the shadows, watchful and awake.
“Sass?” she whispered, and those eyes turned her way.
“Yesss, Marinette?”
“Are you going to tell me who you were talking about this afternoon? I need to know if there’s a problem.” She couldn’t help feeling a little hurt, couldn’t help the small mutter that slipped out, “I thought you could trust me.”
There was a long silence, as if Sass was weighing his words, then he said quietly, “You are our Guardian, our Ladybug, and our friend… but you know, better than mossst, that sssome sssecrets are not oursss to tell.”
There was an even longer silence, and Marinette stared up into the dark shadows of her ceiling.
“What I will sssay,” came the soft hiss in the gloom, “isss that you are a truly inssspiring Ladybug, but never forget that Ladybug iss jusst a pale reflection of who Marinette isss.”
Sass’ observation seemed completely off the subject, but Marinette knew the snake kwami well enough to know that in his own way, he was answering the question she’d asked. She frowned as she tried to puzzle out his meaning through a growing fog of exhaustion.
“Trussst your insstinctsss… and trussst in thossse friendsss who make you more Marinette, not lessss.”
Marinette found herself turning her head to glance at the dark form of the mannequin with Luka’s half-finished coat pinned to it. The beading on it caught a stray hint of street light through a gap in the curtains, and gleamed like a smile in deep blue eyes.
“Funny,” she murmured drowsily. “Luka said something like that the other day - asked me if I’d really want to love someone who would want me to be less.”
There was a quiet, sibilant chuckle in the darkness. “I alwaysss sssaid your musssician wass a wissse sssoul.”
Her musician. Oh, she wanted him to be.
And maybe, just maybe… if she hadn’t read too much into that moment on the couch… maybe he wanted that too.
“Sssleep, missstressss,” the soft voice whispered. “We will not let you ssstand alone again, I ssswear it. Sssleep now, and dream sssweet dreamsss.”
~~~~~
“So, it turns out Marinette’s still a complete space case around Adrien,” Alya said in fond exasperation, and she finally had Lila’s full attention. She’d been starting to think that Lila wasn’t listening to a word she was saying, and the way Lila was tapping her fingernails on the tabletop was getting a bit annoying.
“What happened?” Lila asked, pausing her persistent tapping for a moment, and Alya filled her in on Marinette’s coffee date with Adrien.
“Although she swears it wasn’t a date,” Alya added, with an amused roll of her eyes. “And then, of course, she ended up with tea all over her, and had to leave early, but at least that worked in her favour for once – she was so distracted, she ended up leaving her sketchbook behind, and Adrien picked it up for her. So she’s meeting up with him again today to get it back.”
“Clever,” Lila murmured, in an odd, flat tone.
Alya snorted at that. “Oh, come on, romantic scheming has never been one of Marinette’s strong points, you know that.”
“She always did have a thing for celebrities,” Lila said a little sourly, almost as if she’d forgotten that Alya was there, and started to drum her nails on the table again.
“She always had a thing for Adrien,” Alya snapped back, her hands going to her hips. It was one thing when she teased Marinette about falling for famous hot guys, but Lila didn’t quite sound like she was joking. “What’s with you, Lila? You’re not upset about Marinette and Adrien, are you? I mean, you were the one who broke it off when you were dating Adrien, and that was years ago.”
There was a long pause, broken only by the irritating sound of Lila’s nails.
“No, Marinette and Adrien deserve each other,” Lila said, still with that sour note in her voice, but then she met Alya’s frown and gave her a wide smile. Alya beamed back in relief.
She should have known that Lila wouldn’t be so petty as to begrudge Marinette a chance at happiness with Adrien. And, after all, it had to be a little weird for her, after the way she’d said Gabriel Agreste had fired her as his model and blacklisted her when she’d broken up with Adrien.
Lila stopped drumming her nails. Her smile grew wider. “Of course, they’re perfect for each other, much more than someone like Luke Stone.”
And of course, they were. An up and coming talented young fashion designer, and a supermodel whose father was the founder of one of Paris’ most prestigious fashion houses? They were made for each other.
“We should go get her for a girls’ night out tonight,” Lila was saying. “Find out how things went with Adrien. She lives near here, doesn’t she?”
“I don’t think that’s a good idea,” Alya vetoed firmly. “She’s not exactly your biggest fan, and things didn’t go well at the bar the other night – you know how stubborn Mari can be sometimes.” She made a sympathetic face, but Lila was frowning into space and didn’t seem to notice. “And anyway, I promised her I wouldn’t interfere in her love life.”
“So you’re just going to let her throw away her second chance with Adrien and get sucked in by someone like Luke Stone?”
Alya could understand Lila’s frustration, but she knew Marinette best.
“I think we just need to let Marinette see it for herself at this point. And maybe Luka’s not as bad as all that.”
Luka’s air of mild amusement might irritate Alya, and all the more so because she had the deep-seated feeling that he was amused by her, but she was big enough to admit that he’d been a perfect gentleman to Marinette since they’d moved in together.  
“Those tabloid reports can’t all be true,” Alya told Lila, “and maybe he’s settled down since you knew him.” Maybe Marinette had settled him down. He certainly looked at her as if he was completely besotted.
Judging by the way Lila pursed her lips, she didn’t agree, but Alya knew this was for the best.
“Besides,” Alya went on, thinking of how keen Adrien had sounded when he’d asked her for Marinette’s phone number, and a touch of smugness crept into her voice, “I don’t think we’re going to have to do anything.”
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knifedancer · 5 months
Text
Dancing In The Rain
Prompt: Rain In which Felix learns that Paris at night is much more beautiful when he dances in the rain…with Marinette.
~~~~~~~
It was a rainy Saturday in Paris, the city of love and magic, of superheroes and villains… One would expect to be charmed by a gentle sprinkle on such a lazy day! However, standing under the sopping café umbrella that threatened to snap shut under the weight of the current downpour, we find a boy who feels the polar opposite. Felix Fathom was unimpressed and just plain irritated with Paris – he didn’t even want to be here! It was not the city itself but his week that had put him in such a foul mood. He took stock of his life up to this point and was convinced he was on a bad luck streak – one that built with each passing day until this very moment.
Why, you may ask?
Monday he was shipped off to Paris by his mother to visit his oblivious cousin for two days. Two days of pretending he didn’t know Gabriel was Monarch. Sure, what could go wrong?
Well, he must have jinxed it or angered a random omnipotent god because this week must be divine punishment…
On Tuesday, he discovered his favorite fountain pen had exploded all over his new book and the contents of his book bag.
Wednesday his mother joyously announced he would be staying for the whole week due to work obligations on her part. Phenomenal.
Thursday he was targeted by an akuma – which, in all honesty, he had instigated the akumatization… but only because that damn waitress had dumped his iced coffee into his lap!
If the akuma seemed a little too hostile, well, Uncle was likely gunning for him…
On Friday, he discovered Gabriel had someone ransack his room – likely looking for the peacock miraculous. Felix suspected it was Uncle Gabe himself because half his clothes were ripped asunder by someone expressing a lot of frustration! And he was not sure what that awful odor rubbed all over his boxers was!
Although he was unsure what his uncle would have burnt to leave a random trail of ashes on the floor…
But this morning?
Oh ho ho, this fucking morning was the pièce de résistance!
Saturday brought forth quite a surprise! He awoke in Adrien’s bed, in his cousin’s pajamas, and a note on his forehead from said conniving cousin telling Felix to ‘fill in’ for him on a photoshoot while he spent the day with his friends. Felix had no idea how the model had gotten out of the house, although he assumed that he would find some of his own clothes missing from his closet if he checked. How did Adrien even get him from his room down the hall without waking him?!
That wasn’t even the worst part.
Halfway through the boring photoshoot on the outskirts of Paris, there was an akuma attack. Stormy Weather appeared after being slighted by the meteorologist at the news station – something about Stormy’s predictions being wrong? He didn’t fully know, he only caught part of her monologue before running for cover. They had been hit by hurricane level winds, sleet, and snow so suddenly that half the equipment had to be left behind. Le Gorille had rushed him to the car to make a quick getaway however, just eight blocks away, they had hit some black ice and popped two tires on the curb. Gorille sent him to go find a place to shelter while he called the auto club, but nothing was open due to the attack. So, Felix made the executive decision to walk back. He was about halfway across Paris when the wave of ladybugs purified the area. Finally, his day was looking up!
Felix pulled out his phone to call Le Gorille…only to find the battery dead. Great.
He was stranded, in the middle of Paris, with a dead phone and no money to even hail a taxi with. ‘This day could NOT get any worse!’ Felix thought in a huff.
That was when the rain started.
You see, Stormy Weather – Aurore, whatever – had predicted an unseasonable rain coming that day and the chief meteorologist had scoffed at the teen. Felix was suddenly very supportive of the akuma’s desire to correct the idiot! The blond ran down the street to a café, only to find it was closed due to a shortage of staff. Luckily there was a left-out patio umbrella that he could take shelter under until the rain lightened up.
Except that it didn’t. It grew heavier by the passing minute and Felix found himself huddled under a flimsy, soddy, dripping umbrella in seemingly the worst rainstorm to hit Paris since the Great Flood of 1910. The wet blond mused over the fact that somehow, someway, this was not caused by an akuma. If that were the case, then could all these linked bad events just be coincidence? Or was he simply that unlucky? Once he returned back to London, he would definitely need to ask Duusu if kwamis could curse people…
Just as Felix was about to settle for getting drenched in the rain, a flash of pink caught his eye. There, across the street, moved a lone hazy figure with a polka-dotted umbrella and pink galoshes. As he turned to look at them fully, he realized this figure was not walking down the street but dancing; kicking up puddles on the sidewalk while humming a little ditty as they crossed the intersection nearby. As the figure got closer, he could make out dark hair pulled back into pigtails… pigtails that reminded him of…
“…Marinette?” He hadn’t seen her since that disastrous night at the Diamond Dance!
The girl jolted with surprise when she heard her name, her bluebell eyes taking in the damp blond boy huddled beneath the dripping canopy. He looked exhausted and just as shocked as she was.
“Ad-Adrien? W-what are you doing out h-here?” she squeaked, a light blush dusting her cheeks.
‘Ah, she thinks I’m Adrien again…perhaps I could trick her into letting me borrow her umbrella,’ Felix thought strategically.
He plastered on his imitation model smile and approached her as far as his sparse covering would allow. “I uh… I had a photoshoot today, but then there was that akuma attack? Then my phone died! And, well, it’s a long story...” He rubbed the back of his neck nervously.
“Wow, talk about bad luck. But are you lost? Your house is this way,” the young designer pointed in the opposite direction that Felix had been headed.
The blond blinked and muttered a curse under his breath. “I guess I got lost with everything going on… Would you mind if I walked back with you?”
“Oh…um…s-sure,” Marinette lifted her umbrella to accommodate his taller frame. He ducked under but quickly discovered that she would shrink slightly from their proximity and cause the umbrella’s armatures to smack him in the head. With a gentle smile disguising his irritation, he offered to hold it for her, and she quickly acquiesced. They fell into a companionable silence as they walked. He knew he needed to say something, Adrien would obviously be chatting with her…
“So…what were you doing out in this storm, Marinette?”
“Oh…uh, I was out running a delivery for my parents.”
“Really? In this dreary weather?” Felix asked with obvious surprise.
“Dreary? No, I love the rain! There’s something magical about it…like having a million sparkles falling from the sky!” He watched as her eyes twinkled and he could almost imagine the raindrops glistening just from the brightness of her smile. “It’s special to me,” she finished with a blush.
“Is that why you were dancing in it when I saw you?” He chuckled remembering her hops and twirls on the sidewalk.
Her cheeks flushed dark red, her eyes dropped to her fidgeting hands, and her smile faded with her embarrassment. “Ooh…you saw that? I just…,” Marinette paused, unsure of how to proceed. “I’m not any good at dancing but…it’s fun,” she finished with a whisper.
Felix frowned at the change in her behavior, he clearly recalled their short dance together and her natural grace on the dancefloor. Perhaps she was just self-deprecating because she was intimidated by his cousin? Adrien would surely attempt to cheer up his friend – perhaps girlfriend – wouldn’t he? With not a second longer in hesitation, he stopped and held out his hand to the bluenette. She stared at it for a moment before turning her impossibly blue eyes toward him. “Could I have this dance?” Her eyes widened and she blushed, taking his hand bashfully. He handed her back the umbrella to hold over his shoulder as he wrapped her in his embrace. With a soft hum he began to lead her in a gentle waltz down the sidewalk.
Slowly but surely the warm smile returned and brightened before his eyes as he guided her into bigger and faster spins, keeping them both in tempo to the steps long ingrained in his limbs by dance instructors his mother had insisted he learn from – much to his dismay at the time. ‘I guess I’ll have to thank her now that those silly lessons were finally of some use,’ he thought while a grin spread unwittingly across his face. He lost himself to the movements of their dance, a comfortable warmth growing in his chest. In a rather large puddle he spun Marinette, her foot fanning out in a way that caused the standing water to splash in a great wave over the curb before she settled back into his arms for another set of steps with a giggle. The warmth grew as Felix dipped her, watching as her radiant smile turned up towards the heavens as raindrops danced across her face.
They progressed down the street, both of them smiling and laughing as their hair and shoulders were moistened by wayward drops that missed the umbrella. Eventually they slowed to a stop as they waited for the crosswalk light to change; he gazed down at her – noting the flushed pink cheeks, sparkling eyes, and wide smile. Felix wasn’t sure what came over him. He glanced down at her lips, parted and panting from their energetic dance, and suddenly wanted to know how they felt. With hooded eyes he leaned forward, his arm tightening around her waist as he felt her rise up slowly on her tip toes as if to meet him halfway…the umbrella dropped from her fingers as they slid to the short hairs on the back of his neck, but neither could find it in their minds to care about the rain falling on their heads…
Just as their lips were about to touch, a car came careening around the corner and hit the large puddle forming at the blocked drain. Felix quickly rotated them so that he would shield her with his body. Within seconds a massive, brackish tidal wave splashed over them both and left them drenched. Feeling the cold, dirty water sliding down his spine, the blond let out a string of English curses that even his mother would be ashamed of. Marinette seemed to jolt at the noise and stared at him while he pushed the very wet hair from his face – unconsciously putting it back into his normal style – as the heavy rain continued to pour on their heads. He missed the calculating look she gave him before that gave way to a small smile, then to a chuckle, then a full belly laugh. Felix looked at her dumbfounded before he, too, began to crack up at their situation.
“You look ridiculous,” she giggled out.
“You look like a drowned mouse!” Felix laughed back, unable to contain himself.
“At least I don’t look like an overgrown komondor!” They laughed harder, tears springing to their eyes as the rain plastered their hair to their heads.
‘When was the last time I laughed like this?’ both thought to themselves wryly.
They both eventually calmed down, wiping tears and hair from their eyes. He fished the umbrella from the sidewalk and shook some of the water free before offering it to Marinette. She shook her head and motioned for him to keep it. “My house is just a couple doors down from here. You need it more than I do. The mansion is just up this street,” the blue-eyed girl pointed down the adjacent road.
He furrowed his brow slightly, realizing that their stolen time was coming to an end; he found the warmth in his chest had turned to an ache – he would miss her presence. “You’re sure? At least let me walk you home.”
Marinette quickly shook her head, her wet pigtails flinging droplets of water with the motion. “I’ll be fine, besides you need to get back, so you don’t catch a cold.  We’re both soaked to the bone!” He watched as she hesitated for a moment before sliding in close, pulling him down by his shirt collar, and kissing his cheek. “Th-thank you for the dance, Felix.”
With a distant clap of thunder, a red flush crept up his neck and onto his face as her soft lips pressed against his cheek. In the seconds that it took for him to register her words, she had taken off at a full sprint and disappeared into the heavy rain – returning to the pink blur he first saw by that café. Felix stood there in the rain, speechless and flustered as he touched his cheek. He couldn’t say how long he stood there, staring off, but it was long enough that the downpour had finally become a light drizzle. He looked down at the umbrella in his hand as if looking for proof that this had not been a dream… He gripped the handle a little tighter. It was solid, tangible, real.
A small smile spread across his face. Perhaps his luck wasn’t so bad after all.
~~~ BONUS SCENE ~~~
On Friday after school, while Adrien took care of his extra Chinese lessons and the others were out of the house, Plagg decided to do a little reconnaissance. He carefully zipped across his holder’s room and phased through the wall, floating down the empty hallway until he got to the end. Once there he passed through the door and ducked behind a garbage can while he surveyed the room. A wicked gleam and mischievous grin lit up the kwami’s face; the room was empty!
It had been about two months since Tikki told him about the Adrien knockoff showing up with Duusu and making a mess of things. The London blond had been very combative with Ladybug but oddly protective of Marinette. Tikki was hopeful that Felix might be reformed and join their side – his other half was so optimistic like that. The cheese wheel was always half full with her!
Plagg though? He was a ‘it’s a half a damn wheel of cheese’ type of cat – he jokingly liked to say he was an ‘optipissed’: pissed off optimist. Could things go right? Sure, but things could also just be what they appear.
Plagg didn’t know if Adrien’s cousin was redeemable and didn’t care to figure it out; planning was Tikki’s thing. He preferred results. That’s why he decided to curse that fluffed-up popinjay with a little bad luck! Well, that was mostly because the tiny cat god wanted revenge. Tomato, potato. Right now, the cat kwami intended to get results by taking the peacock miraculous and get it to Pigtails ASAP. Plagg hoped that Felix had left it behind in a hidden compartment or spot in the room while not in use. If it was on his person, the black cat wasn’t sure what to do!
“Duusu!” the black cat called, “Hey Duusu! You in here?” There was no answer.
“Tsk. If I was a feather-brained, pompous, jerk face, where would I hide a broach?” Plagg asked himself as he looked around the room. He decided to check the desk first – rifling through the neat stacks of paper and pens – before dive bombing into the bed to phase through the mattress and pillows. No dice. He proceeded around the room, passing through lamps, tables, and books with increasing irritation. He didn’t even sense the miraculous nearby! He swatted a pillow with his tail in agitation.
Well, if he wasn’t going to get what he came for, he might as well enjoy himself…
Just then the door opened and Plagg hid himself inside a lampshade, watching with great suspicion as Gabriel entered the room to do his own snooping. The cat kwami stayed silent as his holder’s father dug through the closet and dresser, ripping apart jacket and suitcase linings in search of something. After about five minutes, Gabriel let out a soft growl and stalked back across the room to the door. With one last glance around the room, he slammed the door behind him.
‘Seems he didn’t find what he was looking for either!’ Plagg thought suspiciously, he wondered what the kid had stolen this time.
The black cat kwami slowly exited his hiding place, making sure no one would be near to hear his next actions. Then he phased into the closet and began to toss the remaining collection of trousers, vests, and pristinely pressed shirts all over the floor while he cackled with glee. When it was in proper upheaval, he gathered up one each of Felix’s socks from the dresser, called upon his cataclysm, leaving only a small pile of dust on the floor as evidence of their existence. Plagg then burrowed into the underwear drawer, intent to claw some holes in the materials there when the door opened again…
“Plagg?” came Adrien’s hesitant whisper.
Popping his head out the leg of a pair of boxer briefs with a cheesy belch, the kwami called back, “hey kid, I’m over here!”
Adrien quietly closed the door and stalked across the room, tripping on a shirt and unconsciously kicking up the small pile of ashes as he recovered his balance. Plagg watched with satisfaction as the ashes settled to litter a bigger portion of the floor. “What the hell are you doing in here? Felix will be home any minute!”
“Just lookin’ for the miraculous, kid. Figured we know sourpuss has got the peacock, perhaps he’d leave it unattended, then we could get it back to the guardian.”
“Did you have to make such a mess?” the blond pressed his hand to his forehead as he looked over the random piles and ripped items on the floor. “I’m already stuck doing that photoshoot tomorrow instead of hanging out with Nino; if Father thinks I destroyed Felix’s room, I’ll probably be grounded for life!”
Plagg landed on Adrien’s shoulder, “About that kid… I got an idea. Why don’t we…,” as he whispered quietly in his ear.
Adrien’s eyes lit up and he chuckled, gathering up a few pieces of clothes from the floor to use as his disguise in the morning. “That’s sure to put him in a fowl mood!”
~~~Author's Notes: yes I referenced a historical event (Great Flood of 1910), a specific breed of dog, and made a peacock pun.
AO3 Link
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fabseg-reader · 7 months
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I publish two Cerisette sketches:
The theme is waiter/waitress.
Marino Unmasked (basic scene/already posted in a previous sketch)
Cerise Unmasked (alternate scene)
Marinette is suspicious towards the waitress after taking her wig. "So familiar..."
While this moment, Cerise tries to explain the wig thing with lies.
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Cursed Thought: If Normal-Verse has "Marino the Clumsy Butler" comic, then this means that GenderSwap-Verse has "Marinette the Clumsy Waitress" comic?
YES
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miraculousficsarchive · 6 months
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Blueberry Sugar
Chapter 1: Not Exactly a First Meeting
🫐
Marinette busted her ass all day every day and no one could deny that. Having it be your parents diner and all, you'd think that would mean you could slack off sometimes. Marinette? No way. She put 100% of herself into this job regardless of what was thrown at her. She always said, "Being a waitress isn’t for the faint of heart". Between the teenagers that try not to pay, couples who fight, and old people who think they're entitled to free food because she got their order wrong -which she totally didn't do but whatever- it was hard to keep a smile on all day. Mari managed. And truth be told, the only thing that kept her going was her school. Every paycheck she got, most of it went towards her tuition. After all, the best fashion school in Paris wasn't cheap. Sure, balancing classes and shifts at the diner and superhero work is a pain in the ass. But if she could just break into the industry, this would all be worth it. All the disaster tables she had to clean, every child throwing food on the floor, and all the awkward old men hitting on her would all pay off. Don't get her wrong, being Ladybug is a dream come true and all, but it doesn't pay the bills.
So in the meantime, her home is DC's diner.
Her long hair was pulled into a large bun on top of her head, bright red ribbon keeping it in place. She smiled at the young woman in front of her as she paid her bill and left the diner. The second the door closed she dropped her smile and her head, leaning across the counter.
"Alyaaaaaa, I'm dead."
Her friend laughed from across the room.
"You and me both. Look at this mess. What's with kids throwing food everywhere? I think I stepped in macaroni."
Marinette perked up and examined the bottom of her own shoes.
"Gross."
After Alya was done cleaning the floor and Marinette had finished wiping countertops and tables, Alya took off her apron and said goodbye to her friend. Mari always stayed late to close up, partially because she's the only one that her parents trust to do it, and partially because she liked the quiet after a long day of noise.
As she said goodbye to the cooks and started counting the register, she heard the chime of the front door opening. Not looking up from the money, she called to whoever walked in.
"Sorry but our cooks just left. We're closing up."
"Awe man, I heard you guys have the best pie here. I was aching to get my claws on some."
Marinette's eyes whipped up to see big shoulders, blonde hair and cat ears.
"O-oh! Chat Noir!"
She quickly stuffed the money back in the register to count later. Fixing her uniform and hair, she motioned for him to sit at the counter. What was he doing here? Did he find her out? She thought he'd gave that up years ago. They haven't talked about secret identities in forever. Did he follow her here? He's supposed to be on patrol right now.
"We still have some left. What kind would you like?"
His eyes grew as he sat on the stool in front of the pie shelf.
"Blueberry, of course. Gotta start with the classics."
He flashed her his signature smile and she had to force her eyes away before they rolled into the back of her head. She grabbed him a slice and set it in front of him.
"Hope you like it."
He took a bite and looked her in the eyes.
"This is the most delicious thing I've ever eaten."
As much as she would try to deny it, her face started to show a hint of pink. She smiled and suddenly found interest in the strings hanging from her apron.
"Thank you. They're made in house every morning. The blueberry is my favorite to make."
He planted both hands on the counter and leaned forward.
"You made this?!"
She laughed and nodded, watching him shovel a big bite into his mouth.
"I'm glad you like it."
"Oh, now I've gotta try them all. How late can you stay open?"
Marinette put a hand on her hip and pointed at the menu on the wall above her. He followed her finger to see a list of prices for the wall of pies behind her.
"Heroes only get one free slice a day. You buying?
He gave a nervous laugh and his ears bent down.
"Oh. I forgot my wallet at home."
She crossed her arms and smiled.
"Sorry, Mr Noir. Our pies get donated to charity every night, and as far as I can tell, you're not needy." She gently poked his chest as she spoke, a little surprised with how firm it was. Was he flexing?
"You donate your pies? That's really nice."
She turned back to counting the money in the cash register to avoid his gaze.
"Yeah. We always have leftovers and it's not right to throw them away. We take them to the nearby community center and they're given to people that are struggling."
He looked at her as she closed the register and then scribbled on a piece of paper. She ripped it off and slid it over to him.
He picked it up to see an address.
"Feel free to swing by sometime. I'm sure they'd love to meet the famous Chat Noir."
He smiled and tucked the paper into his bell.
"I just might take you up on that, Miss-" he leaned in to read her name tag.
"Marinette."
Her heart skipped a beat when her civilian name fell out of his mouth. This was weird. Did she like hearing that? Surely not. He was annoying. A good partner? Yes. But still annoying. Why did she invite him to the community center? They shouldn't have contact as civilians. It's dangerou-
"Are you here every day?"
She realized she'd been standing there silent and nervously flashed him a smile.
"Uh, yeah. Just about."
"Well, it looks like I just found my new favorite pie place."
He walked to the door and waved as he extended his staff. He placed it on the ground and put one foot on the side of it.
"Goodnight Marinette!"
Fully extending it, he launched himself into the night sky.
Mari quickly ran over to the door and locked it, leaning her back on the door as if it would prevent him from returning.
"What was that!?"
🫐
Index | Next
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persephonenewton · 1 year
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I hope we can all agree that Marinette will one day become a successful fashion designer. What about Adrien? I read a lot of thoughts about his future job. I love the idea of him still voice acting or modeling for his Lady.
But hear me out. What if he´ll become a musical actor.
Just imagine it. Hundreds of puns, catchy songs and some crazy choreography and costumes. I would love to see him playing roles like Ogie from Waitress, Damian from Mean Girls, Light Yagami from Death Note: The Musical (lets pretend it is official not only in Japan) or any character from Starkid.
And there is another idea but I know you will maybe hate me for it.
Adrien will be playing the role of Squip from Be More Chill. (If anyone could draw this, please. I NEED to see Adrien in Squip costume.) And he will be constantly JOKING about similarities between this story and their school days. „Hey, M´lady, can you imagine my father singing the song Upgrade when wanted someone akumatize?“ or „My Lady do you think some people will pay for the akuma if anyone didn´t know Hawkmoth was villain?“ Marinette and his friends are worried whenever he talks about it. For Adrien the similarities are really funny and he doesn´t understand, why is everyone looking at him like that.
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purrincess-chat · 6 months
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Cursed Thought: If Normal-Verse has "Marino the Clumsy Butler" comic, then this means that GenderSwap-Verse has "Marinette the Clumsy Waitress" comic? /rhetorical
Wrong, she (or he I guess) still dresses up as a butler with a fake mustache but it's just a bigger mustache. And the accent is 10x worse.
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gameguy20100 · 6 months
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Cursed Thought: If Normal-Verse has "Marino the Clumsy Butler" comic, then this means that GenderSwap-Verse has "Marinette the Clumsy Waitress" comic?
*shrug*
Sure, why not?
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mintaka14 · 1 month
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I've been thinking a lot about your last chapter of Living Arrangements, which I love! And your portrayal of Adrien, which I think was just so perfect. He's trying to be himself, so he tells a stupid pun. He's too nice to strangers, and it doesn't click for him that Marinette's uncomfortable being overheard. His flash of annoyance with the waitress. His moments of sadness and loneliness. It was so nuanced and on point.
I'm excited for Luka and Marinette's relationship to develop, but I'm also excited to see what Adrien's arc is.
I'm so glad you liked it, and hopefully the rest of the fic will deliver - there's a lot ahead for all of them, and I'm having fun writing the romance and the drama. I take it as a real compliment that Living Arrangements has given you a lot to think about, and thank you so much for letting me know.
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fabseg-reader · 7 months
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Some others Cerisette sketches. There is a one-to-one moment between the two girls (First person vision from each other) at the Dupain-Cheng's home (bedroom).
Below, Cerise, (disguised) as a waitress, focuses her interest on Marinette. The latter is confused because the "waitress" seems familiar for her.
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Waitress Cerise unmasks "Marino". (Spoilers: she chooses to not denounce/expose "him")
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Bonus: Tikki and Nooroo
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residentmiddlechild · 9 months
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Hello there how are you?
Uhm random question, you dont happen to still have your ladynoir fallout playlist and to be kind enough to share it or do you??? Asking for a friend : )
I don't have it as an actual spotify playlist, but I do have a list of the songs that I associate with that ladynoir era, which I am happy to share! Basically the playlist is half-canon/half-fanfic. It's like a season 4 AU where Ladybug and Chat Noir really did have a serious falling out that lasted a pretty long while. And while Chat did still help with akumas sometimes, he kept to his own mostly. Some of the songs only vaguely match up with it, but I'll put in little explanations for the songs here too so that you can know what I was thinking.
Waiting in the Wings from Tangled the Series [Chat singing this as he becomes more and more sidelined by Ladybug]
Drift Away cover by Caleb Hyles [Chat feeling like he and Ladybug are drifting apart]
Lovers’ Eyes by Mumford & Sons [Chat starting to be angry with Ladybug, but still loving her]
Waiting in the Wings (reprise) from Tangled the Series [Adrien about Gabriel]
Dead Mom from Beetlejuice [Adrien about Emilie]
Lost In the Woods from Frozen II [Chat Noir]
brutal by Olivia Rodrigo [Chat/Adrien as his anger at everything grows]
I Couldn’t Know Someone Less from Daddy Long Legs [Chat to Ladybug when she starts to be his “boss” (specifically the "why would you set me free only to imprison me?" line)]
Waving Through A Window from Dear Evan Hansen [Adrien feeling alone]
Head Above Water by Avril Lavigne [Chat feeling like no one cares]
Happier by Marshmello [Adrien thinking Ladybug will be happier without him]
To Build A Home by The Cinematic Orchestra[Chat before the fallout]
Life’s Too Short - Outtake from Frozen [Them fighting before the fallout]
Crossing the Line from Tangled the Series [Chat and Ladybug fall out]
I Won’t Hold You Back by Toto [Chat leaving]
Make It Right from Prince of Egypt [Ladybug saying she can make it right, but Chat saying there’s nothing she can do so she leaves]
Let You Go by Joshua Bassett [Chat saying goodbye]
The Next Right Thing from Frozen II [Ladybug after Chat leaves]
What Baking Can Do from Waitress [Marinette stress baking after the fallout]
Before You Go by Lewis Capaldi [Ladybug reflecting back on everything]
True Love - Ballad by Jordan Fisher [Ladybug realizing what she’s lost]
good 4 u by Olivia Rodrigo [Chat being angry because he thinks that LB is okay and has moved on when he hasn’t]
I Knew You Once by Hollie Allen [Ladybug after the fallout)
Wishing You Were Somehow Here Again from The Phantom of the Opera [Ladrien singing]
If I Could Take This Moment Back from Tangled the Series [both of them feeling regret for their actions]
Iris cover by Kina Grannis [both of them while they're "broken up"]
Learn to be Lonely from The Phantom of the Opera [Chat while he’s Rogue Noir]
I Don’t Wanna Love Somebody Else by A Great Big World [they still love each other]
I’d Give Anything from Tangled the Series [Ladybug wanting Chat back]
Did I Make The Most Of Loving You from Downton Abbey [Ladybug asking about Chat]
Payphone by Maroon 5 [Chat starting to regret his choices]
Far Too Late from Andrew Lloyd Webber's Cinderella [Ladybug feeling like it’s too late to get Chat back]
Always Remember Us This Way from A Star Is Born[During the "break up", them remembering the good times]
When We Were Young cover by Madilyn Bailey [After the ladynoir fallout Chat looking back...both of them stark back on the past]
Hello by Adele [them starting to call out to each other]
Meet Me On the Battlefield/Battlefield by SVRCINA [Them seeing each other in fights but no where else]
Life’s Too Short (Reprise) - Outtake from Frozen [Learning to see each other’s points of view]
Say Something by A Great Big World [them wanting to talk but not having the courage to]
Beautiful Ghosts by Taylor Swift [Chat trying accept the loneliness]
Wondering from High School Musical: The Musical: The Series [Both of them wondering what would have happened if things were different]
Pictures in my Head from The Muppets [Remembering the happy past]
Stay With Me by Sam Smith [Both of them thinking it but never saying it]
Just Give Me a Reason by P!NK [Chat looking at this point for any reason to stay]
Space Between from Descendants 2 [Them starting to reconcile]
What’s Up Danger from Spider-man: Into the Spider-Verse[Chat Noir returns]
I Still Have Faith In You by ABBA [Ladynoir come back together]
Confident by Demi Lavato [Ladynoir fighting Shadowmoth together]
Seventeen (reprise) from Heathers [After the battle]
After All by Michael Buble [them falling in love with each other again]
And that's it! Sorry I didn't have it as a real playlist! Hope it scratches the Ladynoir fallout itch! Happy (or sad) listening!
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Persona AU:
The MiracuClass is hanging out together at a local dinner.
Waitress: Hey everyone you ready to order?
Kim: A Big Bang Burger for me!
Max: Oh no...
Alix: damnit Kim, not again.
Kagami: I'm confused what is this Big Bang Burger, I can't seem to find it on the menu?
Marinette: it's part of the secret menu. It's an absolute monster of a burger and people try to finish it in one go as a challange. Very few people have ever managed to complete it.
Nino: Unfortunately Kim has been trying for years with no luck.
Kim: come on guys, I really think I can do it this time!
Alix: the burger takes forever to order and even longer to watch you eat it. It's just not worth the time.
Kim: Wait, what if someone else does the challange too?
Alix: who would be crazy enough to join you?
Kagami: actually it seems quite fascinating. I wouldn't mind partaking in this challange.
Kim: Hell yeah! Kagami for the win!
Max: welp... I geuss were doing this...
*an hour and two massive burgers later Kim is slouched over in defeat while Kagami sits in front of a clean plate.*
Kagami: I must say that was quite delicious.
Marinette: that was the simultaneously the most impressive and the most disturbing thing I've ever seen.
Max: i don't even understand how you physically fit that much food inside you.
Kim: that was Awesome! You have completely earned my respect.
Kagami's notifications:
*all stats +1*
*you really feel like you made a connection today*
*Social Link with Kim has leveled up*
Oh I love that so much
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