Winner Winner

Food day was yesterday but here have this anyway. Also for anyone wondering about the incredibly vague meal Q is making it’s actually this recipe made by one of our very own so go check that out

Contrary to popular belief, Q actually does know how to cook. He’s lived on his own for a long time, far longer than he’s been Quartermaster or worked for MI6 that’s for sure, so it’s only natural he’s learned to be self-reliant. He might not be the culinary artist that James seems to be in the kitchen, but he more than gets by.

It’s something James doesn’t find out right away, which seems impossible with how long they’ve been together. In fact, it’s something he learns through sheer coincidence more than anything else, an event set into motion by James showing up unexpectedly from a rare mission gone right, intending to do the surprising and ending up the surprised.

The flat smells amazing, and James would be tempted to think Q’s simply phoned in dinner if not for the clear sound of dishes and pots clanging around.

He doesn’t know what he expects to see, only that Q standing over the cooker — barefoot and dressed in a pullover two sizes too big — bouncing on the balls of his feet as he uses the flat of a knife to slide neatly chopped tomatoes into a frying pan isn’t it.

Q notices him a beat later and freezes, caught out, with the knife and chopping board hovering awkwardly in his hands.

He blinks, mouth dropped open into a tiny, silent ‘oh’.

“I didn’t know you were home.”

“I didn’t know you could cook.”

Q smirks wryly. “Well, look at us, keeping each other on our toes.” The oiled pan pops loudly, it’s contents sizzling dangerously, and then Q is turning again, attention once more on the pots in front of him.

And James — James leans against the countertop and waits, content to simply sit and watch. Q in action is a sight to see, all casual, confident movements and sharp focus as he glides seamlessly from one step to the next. It’s beautiful.

Q is beautiful.

It’s over far too quickly. Q’s just beginning to finish up, adding and stirring thin slices of chicken into the large saucepan when James finally pushes himself to stand and set the table. The food looks just as good as it smells once it’s set and plated, and James makes sure to say so.

Q shrugs, avoiding his eyes as he pokes at his plate. The tips of his ears burn just the slightest shade of red. “It’s just pasta.”

“And here I thought all you could do was boil water,” James teases.

Q’s nose wrinkles in displeasure and just like that his embarrassment is forgotten. “I’m lazy, not incompetent.”

James takes a bite and finds he agrees.

It becomes a regular thing after that, until wandering out into the kitchen to find Q already at the chopping board or standing over the hot cooker becomes a familiar sight. It only takes a handful of times before James is sliding in next to him, rolling up his sleeves, reaching for a knife of his own and pretending not to be affected by Q’s surprised little smile as they get to work.

That quickly becomes a regular thing too.

The rest of it comes naturally, with the two of them falling easily and comfortably into their new routine. It should worry him — the sudden change their relationship takes from then on — James keeps waiting for it to, but he can’t find it in him to care quite so much when Q is laughing and darting away from him, disrupting the cats and leaving puffs of white everywhere he goes to escape from James’ flour-covered hands. Nor when he stands, hands at his hips, and unashamedly argues with James over spices in the middle of the market.

Certainly not when he’s dressed down, wearing nothing but a thin shirt and tracksuit bottoms that aren’t his own as he stands in the delightfully smelling kitchen, face warm and ruddy-cheeked from the heat.

No, James thinks as he sits at the table, he isn’t worried at all. Across from him, Q smiles.

They eat.

And Then There Were Six

Martin is the first to join their little family. A small grey thing that’s got trouble written all over him from where he peers up at Q with too large eyes, unfitting for his tiny body, which is only made smaller by the large hands cradling him. James looks ridiculously pleased with himself as he presents the kitten, completely ignoring Q’s insistence that he doesn’t have the time to take care of another cat, let alone one that’s still so young.

But then James is pushing the little bundle into his arms where it meows and bats curiously up at him with clumsy paws, and that, as they say, is that.

It happens again years later, once they’ve moved in together and established a steady routine both at home and at work. The adoption is unexpected, and when James opens the door to their home he freezes at the rapid click, click, click of excited paws tapdancing against the floor — too heavy to belong to any of the cats, even the giant ball of fluff Q insists is just ‘well feed’.

He turns the corner. And stops.

The dog isn’t so much massive as it is stocky, all muscled chest and wrinkles, and, most importantly, wrapped in a large union jack flag. Beside it is Q of all people, grinning as he spreads out his arms and steps aside in some grand showing as he lets out a happy ‘surprise!’ Surprise indeed.

It’s ridiculous and sentimental but —

Jack stays, and their family grows a little bigger.

(Later that night, with Q curled against him and the telly on, James looks at Jack and can’t help but snort. M would approve)

WIP Wednesday

A Skyfall fix-it of sorts that I’ve been silently agonizing over for almost three months now. 

Q looks worlds better already, bandaged as he is, with hair drying into dark curls around a pale face and wrapped in warm sheets as his breathing finally evens out from the stuttering, pained ones he’d been struggling to take not two hours before.

They move him about easily in quick, practiced motions before they wheel him out. Bond trails lazily behind, watching closely for any signs of distress, but not once does Q react to the jostling. He considers, briefly, following them the rest of the way to medical.

It doesn’t feel right to leave him now. Partly because Bond can’t imagine Q wanting to wake up blurry eyed and alone in the hands of strangers and partly because the helicopter ride wasn’t quite long enough to flush out the adrenaline pulsing through him that tells him Q is to be protected. 

He spares one last look before peeling away. 

Q is in capable hands, strangers or no, and Bond has more pressing matters to attend.

He catches up with M at the tunnel’s entrance. She looks immaculately put together — rumpled clothes notwithstanding — eyes hard and mouth drawn into a tight line and once again looking every bit the head of MI6 that she is. 

Tanner, already at her side from the instant they arrived, looks very much the same, grim faced and speaking in hushed tones as he leads them confidently down one winding hallway after another.

“How’s our rat problem?” Bond asks. 

Tanner reaches into his pocket, pulling out a phone and waving it wordlessly in Bond’s direction until he grabs it.

“Taken care of. Q’s program did most of the work for us, really. Two in Q-branch and another in Accounting,” he supplies as Bond flicks his way through names and faces of people who look only vaguely familiar. “Just the three.” 

“Four,” Bond corrects.

Eve Moneypenny stares up at him from the screen.

WIP Wednesday

Bond giving Q a kitten and somehow convincing him to name it Martin because it’s grey, and sleek, and fast, and “it’s wonderful, Q, just adit it. You love it.”

“I’m not naming him Martin.”

He names him Martin.

“How’s our son?” He says casually, leaning up against Q’s desk and politely ignoring the sudden clattering of fallen equipment behind them.

“Collin,” Amara hisses, swatting his arm so hard he actually flinches back. It’s a minion, one Bond isn’t familiar enough with to recognize by name, but who’s face he remembers repeatedly flitting over in his quests for Q.

“Sorry,” he stutters, cheeks flushing and eyes widening behind wide frames as he rushes forward to gather the tools he’s dropped.

Q shakes his head at the commotion, not once looking away from his monitor, but his eyes flicker briefly to Bond before he turns away, reaching out blindly as he types one-handed to grasp at his phone. It’s just out of his reach. Bond leans forward just enough to slide it further so it nudges against Q’s fingers.

He types one last line of code that Bond has no hope of understanding and then the screen goes black.

“Dreadful,“ Q answers, finally, attention now on his phone as he swipes and taps away. “He’s pulled the curtains down on his own head twice already, learned how to get into my drawers, and doesn’t listen to a word I say. He gets that from you,” he adds disdainfully when he looks up and spots Bond’s pleased smile, then shoves his phone in Bond’s direction until he catches the hint and inches closer to make out what he’s supposed to be seeing.

When he finally does, he huffs a laugh. It’s Martin, buried beneath the drapes and caught in the middle of meowing mournfully up at the camera.

“Clever little thing, and absolutely beautiful.” He grins widely, turning to face Q and not making a single move to put respectable distance between them. “He gets those from you.”

Just Ideas June

That one self-indulgent amnesia fic that no one but me asked for.

Bond’s been gone for six long months, off making a new life with Madeleine Swann god knows where doing god knows what, when he stumbles back into Six. He’s bloody, bruised, and looking worse than he did even after the trainwreck that was Skyfall, with no car, no Madeleine, and no memory of the last seven years.

And that’s how they find themselves stuck with a James Bond who’s fresh off the death of Vesper and the dismantling of Quantum, and worryingly fixated on the new Quartermaster who took less than five minutes to figure out he wasn’t quite right.

sans vêtements

mentalmimosa:

Prompt: Undressing (undressing in front of someone for the first time; one character undressing another; fumbling clumsily to get undressed, striptease).

Bond has a different relationship with nudity than most people. Of this Q is quite sure.

It’s not simply that the man has no shame when it comes to his body; most of the other agents that Q’s worked with are similarly blasé when it comes to stripping off in front of strangers, be they doctors, potential informants, or startled quartermasters who don’t actually need to see them position the recording device, thanks–he can trust them to follow directions.

Some of them do it, Q knows, just to get a rise out of him, so to speak, to see if they can get him to blush. 008, for a time, seemed convinced that her bare bosoms would do the trick (they did not), nor did the broad spread of 004’s Adonis-like chest, or the ebony curve of 009’s very nice thigh. No, after eight years in the service, Q was immune to the peacocking of her Majesty’s professionals in the 00 service, and rather proud of it; it was, he’d observed in training his team, a rare skill.

So that Bond will peel off his shirt after a briefing, right there in Q’s workshop, is de rigueur, as is his unerringly collegial manner on such occasions. A prat he may be to Q on the comms–usually when his very life is on the line, natch–but in person, face to face or hands to skin, his treatment of Q is nothing short of proper.

No, the problem, Q finds, comes in when they’re out in the field, something that happens with a new and worrying frequency once they have a new M.

“It’s important,” M says the first time the order comes, the first time that Q bites back panic and marches past Eve to demand a reason why. “That should be sufficient, quartermaster.”

“But sir, I don’t–”

“And,” M says with a deadly sort of nonchalance, “I’m ordering you to go.” His eyes flick up from the envelopes in his hand, stiff and steady. “Unless you’d prefer not to be head of Q branch any longer. Is that it?”

That Q escape with his dignity is uncertain; that he gets out of there with his pension still intact is a cause for temporary relief.

The plane ride is awful, the airports even more so, and by the time he’s standing on the streets of San Francisco squinting into the sun, he feels disoriented and in desperate need of a drink.

He finds the hotel and checks in, drags his ass to the lift and down the bloody great hall, and collapses face first on the bed with a groan.

“My, my,” a voice says from behind him, a curled tail of amusement, “Travel really doesn’t agree with you, does it?”

“Ugh,” Q mumbles, his face still mashed in the covers, “really, Bond? I’ve been on a plane for eight bloody hours. Can you not give me two minutes of peace?”

Bond laughs. “I can do better than that.” He tugs at Q’s ankle, pokes at the trainers hanging over the edge of the bed. “Go drown your sorrows in the shower, eh? And then you can help me get ready.”

“For what?”

“To do my job. I’ve got dinner with our friend Mr. Kislyak in an hour, so don’t dawdle.”

“Ugh,” Q says again. He hauls himself up, feather ruffled, ready to fuss, but–

But James Bond is standing less than two feet away wearing a white, fluffy towel.

It’s pulled tight around his hips and carefully tucked; there seems to be no danger of an imminent fall. Everything even mildly obscene is covered; indeed, the thing is so long it falls practically past the man’s knees.

So he’s shirtless, essentially, a state in which Q has seen him a half dozen times, at least, and yet in none of those instances does Q remember his own mouth running dry nor his heart pounding hard. Of course it hadn’t, he tells himself, because this is Bond, 007, the barbed one, the old, and yet somehow, the sight of the man’s damp chest, of his glistening arms, of his wet hair and his ocean-blue eyes–turned on Q now, curious–makes Q feel like his insides are alight. He looks like some half-wild sea god, does Bond, some king of the deep who’s emerged in search of new world to conquer, except he doesn’t seem ill at ease; no, indeed, there’s an ease in his movements, a looseness, that Q’s never seen at HQ, and god help him, it’s fascinating .

“Q?” A step in his direction, the stretch of one slightly wet hand. “Are you all right?”

He blinks, looks down stupidly at Bond’s fingers on his arm. “I’m fine.”

“I doubt it. You’re dehydrated, probably. Here, let me get you some–”

“I’m fine,” Q says again, shaking free of Bond’s grip, sounding to his own ears like a petulant child. “I’ll just–I’ll just use the shower, shall I?”

Bond raises an eyebrow. He’s still standing too close. “Fine. But drink some water while you’re in there. I won’t have you passing out tonight at an inopportune time.”

“Fine,” Q repeats, “fine.”

It is not fine, not then, not the whole of the weekend they’re in California chasing Putin’s favorite puppets round the Bay. Nor is it fine in Taipei or Abu Dhabi or Niamey when he’s stationed at Bond’s beck and call, for Bond never stops being beautiful, much to Q’s chagrin. Nor is he inclined to cover up.

He doesn’t parade about sans vêtements all the time, as Q imagines 008 might, and he isn’t showy about it either, as no doubt 004 would’ve been. But even when they don’t share a room, when their cover story doesn’t demand it, Q sees more of Bond on those brief forays than he’s ever done in all his years in the lab.

Bond hates wearing socks, for example; will peel them off with his shoes at the first opportunity and sink his bare feet to the floor with a sigh. He’s fond, though, of leaving on his tie, of tugging the knot loose and opening his collar but letting the thing still hang from his throat. He favors sleeping without a shirt and–as Q discovers one morning when Bond gets up first–without shorts, too, when the mood strikes him.

Bond has the decency to be a bit embarrassed about that one, at least.

But in the day-to-day press of life in the field, it just happens, seeing Bond half-dressed, Bond with his fly open, Bond with his shirt open and his feet propped on the balcony rail, a sweating glass balanced on his chest his face turned up to the sun like a self-satisfied cat, and if these aren’t sights that Q gets used to, they’re ones he learns how to take in and then carry home: souvenirs of professional intimacy, small snapshots for him to reexamine at his leisure, snapshots of James Bond, the man.

He, on the other hand, never changes or even fiddles with his clothing anywhere in Bond’s sight. Why would he? There’s nothing about his knobby frame or city-pale skin that’s especially alluring, and besides, a state of undress is 007’s department, not his. The thought doesn’t even occur.

Ha. Except that it very much does.

That Q toils in a state of semi-incoherent lust, sometimes, safe at home, at the thought of Bond standing over him, those sharp eyes sliding down his bare skin, of the twitch of his hips as that hot, knowing gaze becomes a touch, well, he tells himself, well.

That he lies awake in the wee cold hours imagining Bond stretched out beside him, the heat of their bodies, of their breaths, tangled under the coverlet, Bond’s mouth on his moving in time with his fist, well, he tells himself, well.

That sometimes when he comes he wonders what his spunk would look like spread out on Bond’s chest, how it would feel to lean down and lap himself up, well.

That’s entirely his own affair.

At least it is until Bonn.

*****

It’s a last-minute trip, which is part of the problem. Bond’s in a jam and there’s no time to think; Q has to pack and go in a dash.

“Don’t worry about clothes,” M says offhandedly, careful to keep out of Q’s way. “Or any of your personal things. You’ll be back in two jiffs. Provided Bond’s not actually dead.”

Q can’t keep the snap out of his voice. “Oh, lovely, sir. What a confidence booster.”

M flicks his hand. “Tsch. There’s no need for sarcasm, Q.”

“Isn’t there?” Q slams a few drawers unnecessarily. It’s rather cathartic. “Really? I think this is the perfect bloody time for it, sir. ”

“Quartermaster,” M says in his I’m the boss voice, the one that Eve says makes even the Prime Minister quake. “I have every confidence in your success–once you finish your juvenile and frankly unbecoming tantrum, that is.”

“My–!”

“Your flight leaves in 90 minutes. Be on it. And let’s not have another word about it, hmm?”

And then he’s gone, oozing back upstairs to hide behind his leather door, and Q has only his gadgets to yell at, only his own people to startle as he bangs his case shut and stomps off towards the lift.

“Good luck, sir,” someone calls.

“Luck,” Q snarls to no one in particular. “The service’s best weapon, eh? Is that all we’ve got? Blind fucking luck?”

The lift doesn’t answer. Neither does the startled-looking analyst inside it. It’s probably for the best.

Twelve days of WHY DO WE DO THIS TO OURSELVES?? – Chapter 1 – AtoTheBean – James Bond (Craig movies) [Archive of Our Own]

ato-the-bean:

Chapters: 1/?
Fandom: James Bond (Craig movies)
Rating: Teen And Up Audiences
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Relationships: James Bond/Q
Characters: James Bond, Q (James Bond), Eve Moneypenny
Additional Tags: MI6 Cafe, 31 days of Bond, but really 12 days of Bond
Summary:

MI6 Cafe’s challenge for December is ‘12 Days of Bond’. This is my submission, planned to be a set of 12(ish) drabble(+) chapters filling the prompts and telling a Secret-Santa story, because I haven’t written one of those yet.

Twelve days of WHY DO WE DO THIS TO OURSELVES?? – Chapter 1 – AtoTheBean – James Bond (Craig movies) [Archive of Our Own]