It was perhaps no surprise at all to find that her husband had managed to find puns in one of their old magazines that they'd bought in the past and skillfully started sticking them in their kids' lunches.
The backs of them were quite sweet with the front of them containing puns like 'You are the bees' knees' or anything honey related for whenever they made a honey sweet for their kids' lunch the night before.
Marinette couldn't work up the energy to question why he did this, but she couldn't help smiling; once a pun master, always a pun master.
She pretended not to notice when Adrien leaned forward to slip a small, yellow card into their daughter's lunch as she was having honey squares for a sweet treat with her lunch today.
Marinette rolled her eyes in a direction that neither her husband or her daughter would see.
Adrien looked so excited and almost proud of himself as if what he'd just accomplished was a major achievement and even returned to her side with a brilliant smile as he kissed Marinette's lips and managed to give their daughter a kiss on her forehead though the girl tried to wriggle away from it.
She had though begged for honey squares for her lunch yesterday and had to have seen what her father left in her lunch at times.
Marinette smiled as she saw their twin sons leave their room, looking half ready and not at all prepared for the school day, a pout on one of their faces.
"Why do we have to go to school, Mommy?" The youngest twin demanded, fishing for an excuse to not go to school.
"You know when your dad went to school, it was an honor to go to school rather than stay home." Marinette told Devon firmly.
"Why?" Whined Devon's twin brother, Mauven.
"You see, your dad didn't get to go to an actual school when he was your age. He had private tutors and had to stay home or go to modeling shoots." Marinette smiled at her twin boys.
"Modeling shoots?" Her boys asked in unison, eyes wide, though completely unaware of what exactly a modeling shoot was.
"He was a model when he was younger for his dad's clothing line, so he posed for pictures at places like the park." Marinette smiled at the wide eyed recognition on her boys' face though she knew that they probably didn't find modeling all that exciting especially when they got older.
Marinette handed them their sandwiches with the chocolate chip cookies that they'd all baked together as a family just the night before.
She received two wide eyed kids and two excited grins for just handing them their lunch boxes.
Their favorite parts of the school days were seeing their friends and eating the lovely lunches that their parents packed for them the night before.
