A/N: Though late, I've decided to do Adrienette April this year. :)
I'm also super rusty, so please bear with me XD


1. AU

Marinette had thought she'd grown used to Chloe's bullying, having to had endure it since they were little. However, with high school came a new name that became a regular part of Chloe's vocabulary, alongside "hot" and "sexy" and "dreamboat".

"And Marinette would never catch the eye of someone so perfect."

Honestly, Marinette had thought she was over it, but on a particularly bad day, she'd snapped back at Chloe.

"Well, clearly he isn't that perfect if he fawns over someone whose only redeeming quality is pretending to be pretty."

That had led to a fire alarm getting pulled and Marinette left to blame for it. Anyone who tried to come to her defense was shut down, and Marinette had been suspended.

Which had started an all-out war.

After being stuck at home, wrongfully, for three solid days, Marinette had snapped. She'd decided that if Chloe was going to build a bonfire and poor on the gasoline that she would be there with a match. By senior year, Marinette's record had taken a hit for it but Chloe's reputation was in the toilet.

Marinette would take what she could get.

However, she supposed she hadn't fully thought out the consequences. As much as she played with fire, she should have realized she'd get burned sooner or later.

And she did. Third degree.

We regret to inform you your application has been denied.

Those were words she grew tired of seeing yet came back from every school she applied to. With that in mind, she'd called up her girl friends to tell them what had happened.

"Hey, Marinette," Alya had said upon seeing the letters. "Don't get me wrong, I feel really bad for you. But… I did warn you—"

"I get it," Marinette had surrendered, knowing that Alya was completely right. "You tried to warm me of the consequences, and now I'm paying for them."

The girls had slipped into a moment of silence before Alix spoke up. "Hey, I can ask Max if he can do a little digging so you at least know why, yeah?"

Marinette had raised a brow but agreed. "Only if he's not busy with his own college stuff."

"Oh please, he's too smart for college. He started up some robotics company in his free time and is already making bank on it."

It took a week for Max to come back with a full report. Marinette had to give him props for working fast as he did.

"Hacking into the system was the first thing I could think of," he'd explained. "In the side notes, there was mention of your attendance record and suspensions."

"They were all wrongful suspensions," Alix had countered.

"Doesn't matter to the school," Max had said with a shrug. "But even then, I thought there had to be more to this than just attendance. There were other students who had the same notes yet were accepted. So I shifted focus to digging up background on all the directors of the school. After hacking a few emails, I discovered Audrey Bourgeois happens to know a lot of directors or administration members in all the fashion schools of France. Considering the contents of most of those emails, it has become clear that Marinette was wrongfully barred from every school she'd applied to. And that there's nothing that can be done about it because we only discovered such scandal through highly illegal means."

"So…" Alya had begun, turning her attention to Marinette. "Where does that leave you, M?"

Marinette's lips had pursed in thought. It was funny how things turned out, because despite her anger, she somehow had been peace with what she was faced with. "I think that the last place I want to be is in an industry full of liars and people who use their words to manipulate anyone they damn well please."

That was how she ended up working full-time in her parents' bakery. They never said a word about it, but she knew they were disappointed. Of course they weren't mad about her still being here and working in the bakery with them, and she knew her parents still loved her more than anything.

But she knew that with as many dreams as she had and had shared with them, they were disappointed on her surrendering it all.

"Sorry, Maman, Papa," she whispered into the empty kitchen as she plopped the baguettes she formed onto a baking tray. "Just give me a little time to figure things out. Seems like lofty dreams are a lot easier to crush than I realized."


2. Rebellion

A son can only bear the world of their parent's expectations for so long. He wasn't Atlas, but after a few years of acting like him, Adrien decided to dump the globe. To hell if it broke. He'd smirk in satisfaction at his father's disappointment.

At the very least, the fact he no longer had the weight of the world of his shoulders made the far-too-common disappointment lecture easier to bear.

His strategic rebellion had started harmless enough. At sixteen with a rapidly growing forced modeling career, he'd given his father an ultimatum: he gets to grow out his hair, or it all goes. It had been shocking the amount of power the razor in his hand had given him. It was the perfect harmless threat. His father had been furious, throwing a fit about Adrien acting like a child, but after being gaslit for so long, Adrien had finally come to realize the abusive techniques for what they were. And he wasn't going to roll over and take it any longer.

That day had ended with Adrien being grounded but ultimately the victor of their stand-off.

After that, he'd begun ditching certain events. He'd always liked fencing, so he never ditched those lessons, but attendance for his home-school lessons, mandarin lessons, and piano lessons had all been decided on a whim. His father had hardly been pleased by this, but to Adrien, that was the point. The lectures soon washed into one another so much that Adrien could practically recite the words that roll off his father's tongue verbatim. He'd come to realize they were strategically meant to hurt. To humiliate. And as such, he'd stopped taking them personally.

Then came the fun part.

He got earrings. Honestly, Adrien hadn't really cared for the piercings one way or another. In one way, there were a hassle, and caring for new piercings was a pain in the butt. However, they had been worth it to see his dad so royally pissed off.

Then came the ditching of certain photoshoots. There was a reason Adrien had held off on this one for so long: he cared about the people running the shoot. There was no reason they needed to be collateral in this battle between him and his father. After all, they were just employees doing their job; Adrien didn't want them to suffer for his rebellion. With that in mind, Adrien had planned out his absences of these photoshoots. Again, he didn't want to drag anyone else into his mess, so he had always organized a replacement model. Shoot would always go on, just not as planned.

And that was enough to drive his father mad.

It always put a smile on Adrien's face.

The last touch was an unexpected one. He hadn't even thought about going this far. Yet, a friend of his not only put the idea in his head, but gave him the art to go with it.

"Is that a tattoo?"

Oh, how he wished he would have taken a picture of his father's face. The large black cat surrounded in a green, wispy smoke that wrapped around his forearm was truly a work of art. He'd had to think carefully about this decision, but in the end, he quite liked it.

"Yeah. I'm eighteen; I can ink myself if I want to. Why? Is that a problem?"

Adrien might be wearing a cat on his arm, but the grin on his lips was downright wolfish.

Eventually, it all had come to a head and blew up in his face. Adrien couldn't say he'd been surprised. In fact, he had been fully expecting it. He'd already found an apartment to rent and had begun sneaking most of his important things over there before his father could kick him out. So when Adrien found himself kicked to the curb as soon as he was handed his general education certificate, Adrien had been prepared.

But mostly, he was free.

What a joyous day it was.

However, now that he was free, he knew he needed a job. Not because he needed the money, per se, but because it was time he started acting like the average adult. He never got to go to school, so now, it was time to pick up a mundane, first job that everyone hated but would "serve him well later in life". Mostly, it would just be something normal.

The easy places to apply were food shops and retail stores. He'd work one for a while before deciding what his next life step would be. Chloe had been quick to offer him a job at her father's hotel, but Adrien was vehemently against the idea. Over the span of his rebellion, Chloe's behavior and attitude towards him had grown notably worse, and he had a feeling cutting ties with her would be his next step in life.

In the end, he'd scored a job he definitely was underqualified for. He'd applied partly out of spite and partly because 'why not?' He'd heard about this bakery enough times from Chloe to know the "cruel bitch who did nothing but mercilessly harass her" lived here, and that was enough to pique Adrien's curiosity. At a bakery as popular as that, though, he hadn't been sure he'd get a call. And when he did, he knew he would do everything he could to present himself as a reliable and respectable man eager to work, but he never thought he'd end up hitting it off with the owner.

Which somehow ended up with him agreeing to work at Tom and Sabine's Patisserie.

Going into that job, he swore to himself he would do what he could to prove himself worthy. He knew there had to have been better applicants, so Adrien didn't want to disappoint the very kind owners who dared give him a chance. Soon, his days were spent working hard while covered in flour and surrounded by bread all day. Well, bread and all the sharp and hot objects in your average kitchen.

He just didn't think that would include a wicked sharp and smoking hot young lady that happened to be his bosses' daughter.


3. Game Night

"Mama, Papa, please go. You two hardly ever get out of the house."

Marinette watched her maman put a hand over the mouthpiece of her phone while her papa turned to her. "But I'll be busy that night. We have a massive order scheduled for the next day."

"I can handle that," Marinette quickly countered with a grin. "You know I'm a night owl, anyway. I'll get it done, and you two can go enjoy game night with your friends."

Her parents spared each other a glance. "Are you sure about that, Marinette?" Maman asked.

"Positive. Papa already talks to the bread too much, so he really should talk to people for a change. And while you have to deal with people all day, I know you want more than to just have short conversations filled with small talk. So please, go out and have a social life for once."

With one last look, her parents relented. With a smile, her mother took her hand off the phone. "We'll be there."

Papa turned to her with a grin. "I was going to spend that time teaching Adrien how to handle those orders. I can leave teaching him in your hands, right?"

Her grin fell. Adrien Agreste. What the hell a washed-out model was doing working at her parents' bakery was beyond her. Admittedly, over the last month she'd been working with him, the most she'd say is that maybe he wasn't too bad a guy. Papa certainly sung his praises. But that still didn't answer the question of why he was working here of all places. After all, he was Chloe's friend and suspected lover.

"Don't think I don't see that look on your face, Marinette," her maman chastised. She'd hung up and set her phone down already, fully giving her attention to her daughter. "No matter your personal feelings, you really should give him a chance."

"He's a good kid," Papa said. "Maybe a little rough around the edges, but I can tell he really does want to learn and do his best."

Marinette sighed. This wasn't the first time this talk had happened. She remembered having a talk with her parents after his first interview. There were a few other people who were far more qualified for the job, but Papa said he liked Adrien's personality and spirit the best. So in the end, all Marinette's objections had fallen upon deaf ears.

She sighed. "Fine. I'll give him a chance."

With a smile that made Marinette loath to disappoint him, her papa patted her head affectionately. "Thank you, Marinette. I think you'd like him if you got to know him."

Not likely. "I'll do my best, Papa."

"Really, Marinette," her maman warned. "Unless you have a valid reason, you need to put aside your feelings for the sake of the bakery running smoothly. Can you manage that?"

Appropriately chastised, Marinette bowed her head in embarrassment. Maman brought up a good point: Marinette shouldn't let her anger towards Adrien affect the bakery. Her parents didn't deserve that. "Yes, Maman. I'm sorry."

With a smile, her maman came up and wrapped her in a hug. "Thank you, Marinette."

Marinette hugged her back. "No, thank you, Maman and Papa, for everything. I won't let you down."

Papa wrapped his arms around both her and Maman. "Thank you, sweetheart. We love you."

"I love you, too."