Where Every Scroll is a New Adventure
Buckley-Diaz Family: Dear Theodosia by Lin-Manuel Miranda
Eddie Diaz: Charybdis by Jorge Rivera-Herrans
(EPIC: The Musical)
Buddie: Always You by Louis Tomlinson
Just remembered it was Eddie fucking Diaz that restarted Buck's heart.
This started as a tweet I made but grew I to my full feelings for Buck and his romantic relationships:
The writers likely didn't mean this, but Buck getting into relationships after a traumatic event is him regressing. It's him not dealing with his trauma. Not to mention he's always had a difficulties with relationships since s1. The most development we got was him being in a serious relationship after a direct trauma rather than hooking up with people because of a difficult upbringing.
Which is also why I think Ali is more liked as Buck's girlfriend, because from what I can remember, she was the only one who left after he got severely hurt and didn't start dating him after he went through a trauma. Abby started seriously talking to him after Buck couldn't save the man in the rollercoaster, Taylor got with him after Eddie was shot, and Natalia was first interested in Buck because he died and only came back after he got hurt again.
Not to mention Buck's obsession with sex in s1 and when we later learn he got attention from his parents through hurting himself. He's always been regressing.
The biggest reason there has been no change is because for Buck to see worth in himself is him not dating the girls he think will be the next to help him after a trauma; but that goes against the heterosexual nature some writers push for Buck, and if he sees that none of those girlfriends or hook-ups ever saw him for who he is, eventually he would realize that he always had someone who knew him head and heart. But because that someone is a man, people working on the show will never let that be the finale to Buck being with someone who fully understood and was content with him as him through and through.
What I HOPE happens in the finale is that Buck and Eddie realize their respective romantic interests aren’t what they need, and that Buck and Eddie meet in the middle, on Eddie’s couch, and talk about how they’re each other’s constant. Fade to black, implied buddie canon.
The way Eddie’s love for Buck is clearly unconditional, but Eddie himself likely feels his love is unworthy.
I jus j I just rembered the couch theory
Guys, Eddie telling Pepa he doesn't want to be alone, him not being interested in all the WOMEN he was set up with, Buck Chris and Eddie being a family unit last episode, THE COUCH THEORY!
I'm still going strong guys idgaf.
Eddie worked harder to make sure him and Buck worked out more than him with his own wife
-\_('~')_/-
idgaf it is totally canon that eddie diaz steals and wears buck’s clothes.
-\_(’^’)_/-
I feel like those characters in a glue trap everytime I think about buddie poker date.
I need to make one of them
SOMEBODY SEDATE ME!
I don't know if this counts, but in season 3 there's this accident where a man falls through an escalator, and he seems fine until Buck tells the guy's fiance that he's gonna go help save him, then the guy died; His name? IT WAS DANIEL!!!!! And low and behold next season, on the exact episode number is when buck finds out he was born to save his brother Daniel who still died!!!
911 watchers what actual emergency on the show makes you go feral with emotion
Evan 'Buck' Buckley X Reader
4.1k word count
Summary You and Buck are both complete done with your respective partners. Eddie is the middle man.
Authors Note: Sorry for disappearing. 2025 has been the worst year for me. I worked my own break up into this story. I wish I had a Buck to help me. Oh well enjoy!
After a long day on tour, all you wanted was to come home and lay in the bath so long you turn into the world’s largest prune. You’d been daydreaming about lavender bubbles and scalding water since lunch. You smelt strongly of smoke and sweat, and your spine had officially decided to disown you.
But the second you opened the door to your apartment, reality slapped you in the face.
The first thing that hit you was the smell—Goose’s litter box, untouched. Again. Then came the sight: dirty dishes piled so high in the sink it was a game of Jenga waiting to collapse. Laundry—your laundry—scattered across the floor like it had exploded out of the hamper. And in the middle of it all, your boyfriend, Kyle, slumped on the couch in the same hoodie he’d been wearing three days ago.
Goose waddled toward you with an indignant meow, brushing his hefty body against your legs. The poor thing looked like he’d spent the entire day plotting your murder. You gave him a quick scratch behind the ears, noting how empty his food bowl was. Again.
Before you could even say hello, Kyle piped up without taking his eyes off his phone.
“Finally. I’m starving. What took you so long? Can you make that lasagna you did last week?”
You blinked. “What?”
He sighed, as if you were the inconvenience here. “I’ve been waiting for you. There's nothing to eat. You said you’d grab groceries yesterday.”
“I said I’d be working until tonight,” you said flatly, slipping off your jacket and dropping your keys into the dish by the door. “You’ve been here all day.”
He shrugged. “Yeah, but I didn’t know what to get. Besides, you always cook it better.”
Your mouth opened, then closed. You looked around at the disaster zone of your home—the dishes, the laundry, the cat fur rolling across the floor like tumbleweeds. Goose let out another mournful cry, and you knelt to fill his bowl while Kyle continued scrolling on his phone like he hadn't just dropped a match into a puddle of gasoline.
That bath you’d been dreaming of? Gone. Replaced by the sharp heat of frustration rising in your chest.
“I’ve been working nonstop for two weeks, Kyle,” you said slowly, carefully, like your words were made of glass. “And I come home to this. Again.”
He looked up, clearly annoyed now. “You don’t have to make it a big deal. I’ve been relaxing. You always freak out over little stuff.”
You stared at him, and something inside you snapped—quietly, neatly, with the same finality as a door clicking shut.
“You need to leave.”
He blinked. “What?”
“You heard me,” you said, standing up and grabbing your bag. “I’m done. You want someone to clean up after you, feed you, do your laundry—get a maid. Or better yet, grow the hell up. I’m not your mother. And I’m not your girlfriend anymore.”
“You’re overreacting,” he said, rising from the couch, arms spread wide. “You’re seriously breaking up with me over dinner?”
“No,” you said. “I’m breaking up with you because I’m tired. Tired of being the only one trying. Tired of coming home to a boyfriend who thinks my time and energy are his to drain. Pack your stuff. Be gone before I get back.”
You slung your bag over your shoulder, gave Goose another quick pat, and walked out the door—no bath, no prune time, just clean air and the kind of peace that comes from finally choosing yourself.
…
Bucks P.O.V
Buck’s shoulders sagged as he stepped out of the elevator and into the hallway, the weight of another brutal shift hanging heavy in every bone. Smoke, sweat, and exhaustion clung to him like second skin. All he wanted was a hot shower, a cold drink, and maybe five hours of uninterrupted sleep if the universe felt like cutting him a break tonight.
He unlocked the door to his apartment and stepped inside.
The lights were on.
That was his first red flag.
The second came when he spotted her—Maya—sitting at the kitchen table with her arms crossed, a full plate of food in front of her, untouched and long since gone cold.
Crap.
“Hey,” he said cautiously, shutting the door behind him. “Didn’t know you were coming over tonight.”
“Obviously,” she snapped, icy gaze locked on him. “You’re late. Again.”
He dropped his gear bag by the door, instinctively checking to make sure he hadn’t tracked ash or soot onto the floor. “We had a three-alarm warehouse fire. I texted you.”
“Oh, right,” she said, her tone thick with sarcasm. “The firefighter excuse. Again. You always have a reason, Buck. You’re always late, always too tired, always somewhere else. You never think about me. Or us. Or our future.”
He blinked, caught off guard. “Maya, we’ve talked about this. You knew what I did when we started dating. You said you respected it. You said you understood.”
“Well maybe I thought I could handle it,” she snapped, standing now. “But I’m sick of being second place to your job. What kind of future are we supposed to have if I’m always sitting here waiting for you to show up?”
He ran a hand over his face, grit scratching under his fingers. “It’s not like I’m out at bars or cheating on you. I’m saving lives. That’s my job. It’s always been my job. And yeah, sometimes that means being late. I can’t just walk out of a burning building because you made chicken parm.”
“You always do this,” she spat, voice rising now. “Turn it around on me like I’m being unreasonable.”
“Because you are,” he said, his own frustration bubbling up now. “You’re throwing a tantrum because dinner got cold. Meanwhile, I’m out there dragging people out of collapsed buildings, Maya. I don’t get to clock out when it’s convenient.”
She stepped closer, jabbing a finger at his chest. “Then quit. Quit the job. If you cared about me, you would.”
And that was it.
Something snapped.
He took a step back, staring at her like he didn’t even recognize the woman in front of him.
“You want me to what?” he said, low and sharp. “You want me to give up the thing I’ve dedicated my whole damn life to—because your dinner got cold?”
“No,” she said, but he didn’t stop.
“I pay the rent on this apartment. I pay your bills. Your phone, your car insurance, the shopping sprees, your nails, your hair—everything. I bust my ass every day so you can live like you do, and the second I’m late, you’re ready to throw a fit like a spoiled kid who didn’t get dessert?”
“Buck—”
“No. I’m done. If this is how you act when you don’t get your way, then I don’t want to be the guy you rely on anymore. Get your stuff, Maya. I want you out.”
She stood there in stunned silence, mouth parted like she had something to say but no words to fill the space. He didn’t wait for a response. He grabbed his bag, slung it over his shoulder, and walked back out the door, slamming it shut behind him.
He didn’t know where he was going. He just knew anywhere was better than here.
…
Eddies P.O.V
Eddie fumbled with his keys, eyelids heavy and muscles aching as he finally made it to his apartment door. The shift had been brutal—hot, chaotic, and long—and for once, he didn’t have to go home and slip right into Dad mode. Chris was spending the night at his abuela’s, and that meant one very rare, very sacred thing: peace.
He stepped inside, locked the door, and headed straight to the shower. Ten minutes under scalding water worked miracles. He emerged in clean sweats, reheated some leftover enchiladas, grabbed a cold beer from the fridge, and collapsed onto the couch like a man finally free.
He picked up his fork, raised it toward his mouth—and that’s when the knock came.
He froze. Chewed air.
With a heavy sigh, he set down the fork, got up, and opened the door.
There she was—one of his best friends, still in her jacket, eyes sharp and stormy. Before he could say anything, she brushed past him and made a direct line for his fridge.
“Uh… sure, come in,” Eddie muttered, mostly to himself, as she popped open a beer like she owned the place.
He barely had time to process her arrival before another knock came. He turned, still halfway to asking her what the hell was going on and opened the door again.
Buck.
Eddie stared.
“Hey,” Buck said, looking sheepish and slightly windblown. “Mind if I—?”
Eddie stepped aside with a sigh, waving him in.
“Thanks, man.” Buck clapped his shoulder in passing, heading straight for the kitchen like this was all part of the plan.
Eddie shut the door, turned slowly, and finally followed them into the kitchen, where the two stood—backs against the counter, bags dropped nearby, bottles in hand—like they'd claimed the place as neutral territory in some unseen war.
He stared at them for a beat. “Okay. Why are you both standing in my kitchen, drinking my beer?”
They exchanged a look and, like it was rehearsed, both said at the same time:
“I broke up with my boyfriend.” “I broke up with my girlfriend.”
Eddie blinked. “Seriously?” He rubbed a hand over his face. “One at a time. You first.” He nodded at her.
She sighed, the fight draining out of her a little now that she wasn’t alone. “I walked in the door and all I wanted was a bath and five minutes to myself. Instead, he starts whining about how he’s starving and wants a big dinner. Meanwhile, the place is trashed, Goose hadn’t been fed, the litter box was disgusting—and he just sat there all day doing nothing. Again. Like I’m supposed to come home from work and play housekeeper-slash-chef for a grown man.”
Buck let out a low whistle.
She took a long swig of her beer. “I told him to pack his stuff and get out.”
Eddie nodded slowly, impressed. “Good for you. You?” He turned to look at Buck.
“She could’ve done better from the start,” Buck muttered. “That guy was a walking red flag with a superiority complex. I never liked him.”
Eddie turned to him. “That’s not what I meant, Buck.”
Buck blinked. “What?”
“I meant your breakup. Not hers. Why did you break up with your girlfriend?”
Buck shifted his weight. “Right, yeah—okay. So, I get home, she’s sitting there with this whole meal set up, cold as hell, waiting to ambush me. Starts going off about how I’m late all the time, how I don’t care about her or our future. I try to explain—again—that I can’t control fires, or emergencies, or the clock.”
He took a swig. “She starts screaming, like actual screaming, demanding I quit being a firefighter if I care about her. Like, she really said that. ‘Quit your job.’”
Eddie’s eyebrows shot up. “Seriously?”
“Dead serious. So I lost it. Told her I’m not her sugar daddy or her emotional support firefighter. I pay her bills, her shopping, her nails—everything—and I’m done. Told her to get out.”
Silence settled for a second.
Then Eddie sighed and walked past them both, grabbing a third beer from the fridge. “I was this close to a quiet night,” he muttered, holding his fingers an inch apart.
She gave him a sheepish look. “Sorry, Eddie.”
Buck raised his beer. “We brought drama, but at least we didn’t come empty-handed.”
Eddie just rolled his eyes, dropped into a chair, and motioned between them. “You two are lucky I like you. But if either of you tries to use my shower, I’m tossing you out the window.”
…
Your P.O.V
Eddie had grumbled the whole night, but he never kicked them out.
After a shared late dinner of lukewarm enchiladas and three more beers each, the three of them ended up sprawled across his living room—Buck face-first on the carpet, you curled up on one end of the couch, and Eddie passed out in the recliner with the remote still in his hand. It wasn’t comfortable. It wasn’t quiet. But it was safe. And after the emotional dumpster fire that was the night before, that was more than enough.
The next morning, after caffeine and mutual groans of “never again,” you and Buck left together, splitting off to check your own places. Both were blessedly empty. No texts. No calls. Just space.
You should’ve felt lonely.
But you didn’t. Because over the next few days… then the next week… then the one after that—Buck kept showing up.
Sometimes with coffee. Sometimes with food. Sometimes with Goose’s favorite treats. A few times with nothing but a tired face and a, “Hey, is it okay if I hang here for a bit?”
He started crashing on the couch. Then staying for dinner. Then leaving a spare toothbrush in your bathroom. Then a few shirts in your drawer. Then Goose started sleeping on his chest instead of yours.
You didn’t question it at first. You were just glad to have someone who saw you at the end of a shift, someone who talked to Goose like he was royalty and didn’t expect you to cook unless you felt like it. Buck washed dishes without being asked. He vacuumed. He once left and came back with a new litter box because, quote, “Goose deserves a throne.”
Eventually, though, you noticed the way he lingered.
He never seemed in a rush to go back to his apartment. Never mentioned it, really. He'd get quiet if you asked what he’d been up to there. And one night, when you found him still sitting in your kitchen at 1 a.m. nursing a beer, eyes glassy with the kind of tired he rarely showed, you finally pressed him.
“Buck?” you asked softly, standing in the doorway. “You good?”
He blinked, pulled back from wherever his mind had wandered. “Yeah. Just… thinking.”
You stepped into the kitchen, opened the fridge more for something to do than anything else. “You’ve been here a lot.”
“I can go,” he said quickly, sitting up straighter. “I didn’t mean to—”
“No, no,” you interrupted, grabbing your own drink. “That’s not what I meant. I like having you here.”
He smiled at that—small, unsure.
“But,” you added gently, leaning on the counter across from him, “you’ve basically been living here. What’s going on, Buck?”
He hesitated. Twisted the bottle cap between his fingers. “I’m not… used to being alone. I thought I’d be fine after Maya left, you know? Like, good riddance and all that. But that apartment feels... empty. Cold. Like I walk in and the walls echo, and suddenly everything’s quiet in a way that makes my skin crawl.”
You watched him for a second, your heart softening.
Then you said, “Well… you don’t have to be alone. Not if being here helps. You can move in.”
His eyes snapped up to meet yours. “Wait—are you serious?”
You smiled. “I’ve already lost half my fridge space to your energy drinks and Goose likes you more than me. Might as well make it official.”
He laughed, that big, boyish sound that made something warm bloom in your chest.
“You sure?”
You nodded. “Yeah. I mean, we already know you’re good at cleaning and Goose has claimed your lap as property. Consider this your unofficial roommate interview. You passed.”
He looked at you like you’d just handed him something he didn’t know he needed. And maybe, in a way, you had.
“Thanks,” he said quietly. “Really.”
You clinked your drink to his. “Welcome home, Buck.”
…
The first few days felt like a weird kind of vacation.
Buck brought over the rest of his stuff in a series of chaotic trips, including (but not limited to): two duffel bags, an entire crate of protein powder, at least six fire department t-shirts you were pretty sure he stole from other people, and a worn-out hoodie you immediately claimed as yours.
Goose sat in the middle of the living room and watched the entire process like he was supervising the transition. He didn’t complain, and that was saying something—Goose hated everyone.
By the end of the week, your apartment felt... different. Lived in, but not in a messy, suffocating way like before. It was the kind of lived in where the coffee was already brewed when you woke up, and someone left a note by the door that said "Kick ass today." Buck had that rare kind of presence that made everything feel just a little lighter.
You’d always gotten along well—working together created a kind of shorthand between you—but something about having him in your space all the time cracked things open a little wider.
Like how you noticed the way he always turned toward you when you laughed. Or how he paused a movie to ask what you thought would happen next because he “likes hearing your theories.” Or how he always cooked enough for two now, even if you said you weren’t hungry.
But it wasn’t all easy.
There were the little things, too. Like the way he left his wet towel on the floor even though the hamper was right there. Or how he used all the hot water on long showers because “thinking is a full-body experience.” One night, he accidentally used your fancy shampoo and tried to play it off like he didn’t, even though he smelled like vanilla and chamomile for two days.
You bickered sometimes—snapped over dishes or laundry or who forgot to buy more coffee filters. But somehow, it always ended in laughter. Or one of you giving the other a peace offering in the form of snacks.
The shift was slow, creeping in like sunlight through curtains you forgot to close.
It was the comfort of hearing him hum off-key while making pancakes. The way he knew exactly how you liked your tea, or that you needed silence for the first thirty minutes after a shift. It was the way he looked at you sometimes—soft, unguarded, like you were a home he hadn’t known he was missing.
One night, after a long shift that had left you both emotionally wrecked, you came home and didn’t say a word. Just sank into the couch, kicked off your boots, and stared at the wall.
Buck wordlessly brought you a blanket. Sat beside you without crowding. Waited.
After a while, you leaned your head on his shoulder.
“You ever feel like the job just... hollows you out some days?” you asked.
“Yeah,” he said, quiet. “But being here? With you? It fills the rest of me back up.”
You didn’t respond. Just sat there, heart stuttering like maybe it had finally caught on to something the rest of you hadn’t.
You weren’t sure what this was—roommates, best friends, something else—but for the first time in a long time, it felt like you weren’t just surviving. You were healing.
Together.
…
The heater had gone out.
Of course it had—on the first truly cold night of the season. You were both bundled on the couch, buried under every blanket the apartment owned. Buck had even added one of his flannel shirts to Goose’s bed, who seemed personally offended by the drop in temperature and took it out on the both of you by yelling dramatically from his spot atop the radiator.
Buck was scrolling on his phone, one arm lazily draped around your shoulder. You’d spent the past hour wedged against him, and by now it felt so natural you almost forgot you weren’t alone on the couch.
Almost.
“You know,” he murmured suddenly, voice low and a little hoarse, “I’ve been thinking.”
“Dangerous,” you teased, nudging him gently with your elbow.
He didn’t laugh. Just turned his head slightly, watching you. “About us.”
That made your stomach tighten—just a bit. Not in panic. Not quite. But in anticipation.
You glanced up. “What about us?”
Buck’s eyes searched your face, like he was checking if he was about to say too much.
“I didn’t plan this,” he admitted. “Didn’t plan to move in. Didn’t plan to get... attached.”
The word landed heavy between you, but not unpleasantly. It didn’t feel like a warning. It felt like an opening.
You exhaled slowly, your hand resting where his hoodie bunched near your ribs. “But you are?”
He gave a small smile—just one side of his mouth. “Yeah. I think I was before I ever moved in.”
Your heart thumped once, hard. Then again.
The blankets shifted as you turned more toward him, the soft brush of knees and hands and something else hanging in the air like static.
“I care about you,” he said, quiet but sure. “Not just in the roommate, crash-on-your-couch, eat-your-snacks kind of way. I think you know that.”
You did. You’d felt it in every small thing—every look, every laugh, every night he found his way back to you. You just hadn’t let yourself admit it.
Until now.
“I think I’ve known it since you walked into Eddie’s kitchen with a beer like you lived there,” you murmured. “And honestly? I haven’t stopped thinking about it since.”
Buck’s hand found yours beneath the blankets, fingers curling gently.
“We can take it slow,” he said, as if reading your mind. “I just… needed you to know. I’m here. I’m all in.”
You didn’t answer with words. Instead, you leaned forward and kissed him—soft, tentative, but no less certain than anything he’d just said. His lips were warm against yours, familiar in a way that made your chest ache.
He kissed you back like he’d been waiting for it.
When you finally pulled away, you didn’t move far. Just rested your forehead against his, smiling when Goose meowed loudly from across the room.
“We’ll take it slow,” you whispered. “But you’re not getting out of paying half the rent.”
Buck grinned, pulling you closer. “Deal.”
…
They didn’t mean for Eddie to find out.
Not like this, anyway.
It started innocently enough—just the three of you catching up after a hellish double shift. The station had been chaos, the call-outs nonstop, and by the time the sun dipped below the horizon, you were all running on fumes and pure stubbornness.
So naturally, someone suggested beer and burgers. You didn’t say no. Buck didn’t either.
Now, you were all gathered around Eddie’s kitchen island, fries in one hand, beer in the other, talking over one another like usual. Goose had even come along for the ride and was currently sleeping under Eddie’s table like it was his second home.
Which, to be fair… it kind of was.
Everything was normal—until Buck did it.
You didn’t notice at first. You were mid-bite, something snarky on your tongue, when he casually reached over and brushed his fingers along your wrist. Just a light touch. A reflex.
But Eddie noticed.
Because of course he did.
He went completely still. Not a blink. Not a sound. Just slowly turned his head and looked at you both, brows raised in that signature really? expression that spoke volumes without him having to say a damn thing.
Buck froze, halfway through a sip of beer. “What?” he asked innocently, though he was definitely already blushing.
Eddie narrowed his eyes. “No. Don’t ‘what’ me.”
You swallowed your bite with a bit more force than necessary. “Okay, so—maybe something’s… happening.”
Eddie didn’t break eye contact. “Happening.”
Buck shifted in his seat. “It’s new.”
“Clearly not that new if he’s doing the wrist thing,” Eddie replied, pointing at Buck with a fry.
You looked at Buck. Buck looked at you. Then back at Eddie.
“So you’re not… mad?” you asked, cautious.
Eddie leaned back in his chair, arms crossing loosely. “Why would I be mad?”
Buck blinked. “I don’t know. Because we didn’t tell you?”
Eddie snorted. “I’m not your dad, Buck.”
“Feels like it sometimes,” Buck muttered.
Eddie just rolled his eyes and took a drink, then looked between the two of you again—this time, a little softer.
“I figured it was coming eventually,” he said. “You’ve been orbiting each other for months. Was just waiting to see who’d trip first.”
You gave Buck a sideways glance. “It was him.”
“Hey!”
Eddie laughed, for real this time. “As long as you’re good to each other, I don’t care. Just—” He paused, raising a hand. “No PDA in front of me. I already have a teenager. I don’t need you two acting like hormonal high schoolers in my living room.”
Buck held up both hands. “Noted.”
You grinned. “I make no promises.”
Eddie groaned. “God help me.”
denial4denial now on abc
the trials and tribulations of evan buckley. a tragedy in ninety-seven acts.
slight flash/strobe warning