kevindaysbutt:

Kevin probably took so long to admit that he wanted to recover. Wanted to get help for his alcoholism. He probably didn’t want to tell the team afraid he’d get made fun of. But he finally does. He goes to Neil first because the kids an asshole but Kevin knows if he really truly needed something Neil would 100% help him.

He tells the cousins next. He expected Nicky to crack jokes or Aaron to say some kind of bullshit but he’s not sure if Neil talked to Andrew and Andrew made threats but Nicky just hugs him and tells him he’ll help anyway he can. Aaron kind of just nods at him and tells him he’ll miss him at Edens which is the nicest possible outcome.

He doesn’t tell the rest of the team because he doesn’t drink with them anyways. He doesn’t really bother until they’re celebrating a massive win and they all want to party at the dorms after. Kevin is invited and he wants to go because he actually does like hanging out with these idiots as much as he hates to admit it. But he’s not really sure he can be around all that alcohol but even Andrew and Neil are going. He finally pulls Renee aside and explains because she’s sober and he wants to know how she does it. She explains that throwing himself into a situation before he’s ready won’t do him any good so he decides to just go back to his room.

Not even 10 minutes later the foxes are piling into the dorm room with snacks and sodas stacked in their arms and Nicky has a tower of DVDs falling onto the floor and he’s telling Kevin to pick one and Kevin is so??? But Allison just smacks him upside the head “you should have said something. As much fun as it is to get shit faced it’s not the only way to have fun. And Kevin suddenly realizes that there’s not a single liquor bottle in sight. They gave up their night of partying to watch movies and talk shit for him. Because he’s trying to get better and this is them supporting him.

It’s unspoken after that. If it’s a team activity that all of them are at there’s no drinking. Even Abby and Wymack have switched out their beer and wine at family dinners and when Kevin tells them they don’t have to they just shrug and tell him it’s the least they can do. Renee tells him eventually he can be around people who are drinking. Maybe. He might be able to but it’s okay if he can’t. And Kevin hates this team. Hates that they’re so difficult but he loves them. He loves his family.

taitalagi:

the foxesallison reynolds // #7 // defensive dealer

“I’m sorry,” Neil said.
Allison curled her lip at him in scorn. “Shut
up. No you’re not. You’re not,” she insisted when Neil opened his mouth
to argue. It sounded less like an accusation and more like an order, so
Neil reluctantly subsided. “Have you forgotten who has to paint you back
together every morning? If you’d let them steamroll you yesterday after
all of this,” she flicked her fingers up at her own face, “I would hate
you.”

Andrew/Neil prompt: Andrew being in the pros and Neil still in college and Andrew basically spoiling the actual hell out of Neil. Neil asks him to stop and save his money but Andrew of course doesn’t (but he’s financially responsible! He’s not gonna go broke from spoiling Neil)

wesawbears:

I went majorly overboard on this, but I hope you enjoy!

Neil doesn’t care about material possessions. Andrew knows this, knows that Neil would be content to live out of that fucking duffel bag for the rest of his life if Andrew let him. He tries not to let it get to him, he really does, but his mind can’t get over the fact that Neil should be able to own things like a key without looking at it like a dog with their favorite toy.

And if part of the reason it bothers him is that seeing Neil with that goddamn duffel just reminds him of “thank you, you were amazing” and Neil running and himself falling, then that is his business alone.

Once he’s gone pro, Andrew finds that without Neil and the other chosen Foxes to watch, he’s left with two dangerous things: a lot of time on his hands and a disposable income. So Andrew starts small.

A day after the gift is delivered, he gets a call from Neil. “Andrew. Why is there an Audi in the parking lot that I’m being told is mine?”

Andrew’s a little sad they’re not facetiming. He would have liked to watch the way Neil’s face is surely reddening with righteous fury. “I didn’t like the car you picked out,” he answers. “It’s ten miles out from dying anyway.”

“My car was-”

“I swear if you say fine-”

“It ran.”

“Barely.”

The silence on the other end lets Andrew know he’s won and he can imagine the way Neil’s mouth has probably pressed into a thin line.

Finally, Neil answers, “If it makes you feel better, fine. I’ll keep the car. But nothing else.”

Andrew doesn’t make any promises. He just says, “Good. You didn’t really have another choice, since your old car is halfway to the junkyard by now.”

“You asshole-”

He ends the call.

Andrew tries to refrain from any more lavish gifts, he really does, but Neil’s clothes still piss him off. He’s on the phone, complaining to Andrew for the fifth year in a row about not wanting to go to the Fall Banquet and what a travesty it is that they’re using his precious court from something that’s not Exy, so andrew interrupts, “Are you wearing the same shirt?”

“Yes?”

“No you’re not. It has holes in it.”

Neil scoffs. “No one is going to be close enough to see if there are holes.”

“I’ll know.”

Neil drops it after that and three days later, there’s a nice black dress shirt laying across Neil’s bed. Neil sends him a picture of him in it and it looks just as good as Andrew knew it would.

Another perk of living alone is no one can see when he makes it his new phone background.

They go on like this for a while, Andrew sending little things he thinks won’t piss Neil off too much. They can’t spend Thanksgiving together, with Andrew out of town for a press thing and honestly, they don’t really want to considering the history that day holds. But he can hear the way the end of the semester is slowly tearing Neil down, and he hears the echoes of a similar exhaustion in his own voice. So when Neil softly admits softly, “I miss you,” Andrew knows his next gift.

He makes it to Palmetto just before the end of afternoon practice. He can hear Nicky’s voice in his head cooing over how romantic the whole thing is, but he ignores it and grabs his gear out of his trunk.

When he gets to the sidelines, he opens with, “Hey, Coach. Sub me in for one of your goalies.”

Wymack’s eye roll is audible. “You couldn’t do this when you actually played here?”

“Come on, Coach. Think of how boring your life would be if I did what you expected.”

Wymack grumbles something about blood pressure medication, but Andrew is already halfway to the goal. Some of the freshmen start chattering excitedly, which prompts Neil to look up from where he’s talking to Robin by the goal. He freezes in the middle of a word when he sees Andrew and though Andrew’s loathe to admit poetic thoughts, he thinks he could live without the sun if it was replaced with Neil’s smile at that moment. All Andrew says in greeting, though, is, “Ready to get your ego checked, Captain?”

Neil’s face turns fierce and there’s a brightness in his eyes that makes Andrew want to try.

Wymack yells distantly at them to stop gabbing and start playing, so Neil heads to the center of the court, though not without turning to look back to Andrew. Andrew gives them his signatures salute and that’s all he registers until Wymack signals the end of practice.

Neil ignores everyone asking for his thoughts and makes a beeline for Andrew. “You’re here,” he says, a little breathlessly.

“Your teammates are staring.”

“Let them,” Neil says, pressing up close to lift the grate of Andrew’s helmet. “Let me kiss you.”

This time, it’s Andrew’s turn to answer “yes” and pull Neil in by the back of his neck. Their lips meet and he feels right for the first time in months.