Title: Baby, Let’s Play House
Fandom: Hockey RPF
Pairing: Taylor Hall/Jordan Eberle
Categories: Romance, Family, Kidfic, Fluff, First-time
Length: Long (17,986 words)
Warnings: None
Author on LJ:
doctor_denmark
Author Website: doctor_denmark @AO3
Summary:
The baby stirs a little, and whimpers before settling himself again, and Taylor looks at him. He's dark haired and brown eyed, and looks a lot like Emily. Jonathan could be his kid, or he could be Ebs’s kid. Taylor can't tell.
Review:
It’s 100% kidfic without the mpreg! After a drunken threesome with a cousin of one of Ebs’s friends the boys find themselves taking care of a baby that could be either of theirs biologically. This is a story about co-parenting after being thrown into the deep end without any floaty wings and it’s domestic and sweet and adorable. The author handles the boys’ cluelessness (especially Taylor’s) about caring for a child perfectly. There’s also wonderfully delicious pining and misunderstandings and idiotic boys who hate to talk about feelings.
When it comes to domestic fluff this story has everything a person could possibly want and it is delivered in the most satisfying way. I would love nothing more than another 100 thousand words in this verse as Jonathan grows up with his dads.
Baby, Let’s Play House
Fandom: Hockey RPF
Pairing: Taylor Hall/Jordan Eberle
Categories: Romance, Family, Kidfic, Fluff, First-time
Length: Long (17,986 words)
Warnings: None
Author on LJ:
Author Website: doctor_denmark @AO3
Summary:
The baby stirs a little, and whimpers before settling himself again, and Taylor looks at him. He's dark haired and brown eyed, and looks a lot like Emily. Jonathan could be his kid, or he could be Ebs’s kid. Taylor can't tell.
Review:
It’s 100% kidfic without the mpreg! After a drunken threesome with a cousin of one of Ebs’s friends the boys find themselves taking care of a baby that could be either of theirs biologically. This is a story about co-parenting after being thrown into the deep end without any floaty wings and it’s domestic and sweet and adorable. The author handles the boys’ cluelessness (especially Taylor’s) about caring for a child perfectly. There’s also wonderfully delicious pining and misunderstandings and idiotic boys who hate to talk about feelings.
When it comes to domestic fluff this story has everything a person could possibly want and it is delivered in the most satisfying way. I would love nothing more than another 100 thousand words in this verse as Jonathan grows up with his dads.
Baby, Let’s Play House
