Prompt: well now I have to headcanon that Killian enjoys cooking


Emma spent most of her adult life living alone, and a decent amount of her childhood essentially raising herself. She's gained a lot of skills from those experiences - the useful but depressing stuff, like clocking liars and abusers from ten paces, how to get a good deal at a pawn shop, how to shoplift, to break into cars, how to fill the silence with music so loud you stop thinking about how lonely you are, how to fire a gun, exactly how far ten dollars can stretch if you need. Sure, she's learned all that.

But some of the stuff is just plain useful. Emma's known for a long time how to manage her money, how to do laundry, how to keep a house clean, how to sew up rips in your clothes, how to cook. Some of those skills she hasn't needed in a long time, and others she doesn't use much just because she doesn't like to, and she no longer has to. Still, even if she doesn't especially love cooking, for example, she isn't actually forced to live on takeout. Before Storybrooke, that was more of… a choice.

(Eating alone in your own home has never been something she's liked. At least in a bar or a restaurant, she could hear other people, watch them.)

Living with Mary-Margaret, she wound up cooking a little more often, and during her time in New York she remembers making dinner with Henry most days. He was pretty awful in the kitchen himself, could burn water, so she didn't let him do anything too important, but it was more about the companionship. Even having him doing his homework in the kitchen while she whipped something up was just as good. Sure, there were still pretty regular order-in days, and they ate out sometimes, but for the most part they actually had real meals together. She remembers making a decision to do that when he was still small, to always set aside this time to cook and eat together and share their days.

It was a curse memory, fake, but Emma liked that routine. Even after moving back to Storybrooke, at least once everything eventually settled, she tries to keep that going. She still doesn't especially love cooking - it's more about the end result for her, having that time to sit down together as a family and enjoy something you made together.

So when she and Killian started living together, she made sure to tell him. Emma wanted him to know everything that mattered to her, wanted him to be involved in it. She… also wanted to know ahead of time, if he was terrible in the kitchen and shouldn't be allowed anywhere nearby. His other household skills were a bit of a hit-or-miss. He was really good at cleaning, but could never remember when to take the trash out. Maybe she expected him not to have any skill with plumbing or cleaning out the gutters, or using a washing machine, and to be fair he learned those all pretty quickly, but she was surprised when it turned out Killian didn't know how to fold anything neatly. If a lightbulb went out, he usually just ignored it, lit an actual gas lantern if there wasn't enough light. He actually had a lot of interest in how to decorate the house, but hated changing the thermostat for some reason, preferring to just wear more layers if it got cold.

Anyway, the point was - she was pretty sure he'd be fine with the idea of family dinners, knew he'd be willing to help even if it were just via setting and clearing the table and doing the grocery shopping, but she wasn't sure if he'd be interested in actually making the food. And more than that, she wasn't sure he'd be any good. He had, after all, lived most of his life on ships that had actual cooks to take care of that kind of thing. It might just be something he couldn't do.

She definitely didn't expect the way his face lit up at the idea.

"That sounds brilliant, love," he told her. "You'll show me how to use everything?"

Of course she agreed, and Killian had always been a quick learner (which was why she kept finding herself surprised at the chores he never seemed to pick up). So the way she only had to explain each modern cooking implement once was not a surprise. He was good with a knife, so she put him on veggie duty, and they made a simple but tasty chicken dish. Nothing unusual, pretty much the kind of cooking she always did. Quick and easy, healthy enough, didn't taste amazing but definitely not terrible either.

When they sat down to dinner Killian's face did… something.

It wasn't quite a sneer.

It also wasn't quite not a sneer.

"Well, it's alright," he said.

-xxx-

Those comments became increasingly common over the next few days. Emma's pasta sauce was "a tad runny, but not bad," and her tacos "could use a bit more spice," and her ribeyes were "perhaps a little too long on the stove, love?" and her Sunday morning pancakes needed "a splash more buttermilk, I suspect." Killian wasn't picky, he ate every bite, and he didn't exactly nag her about her cooking. Just one or two comments, not necessarily even directed at her so much as him musing aloud about the food. But every side dish he made tasted amazing, even if it was just a simple salad, and he very clearly had opinions and it wasn't like Emma even liked cooking all that much anyway. She'd never claimed to be a genius at it. But she'd never admitted to being bad either, and the little snubs over and over got increasingly irritating until one day she just snapped that he should be in charge of dinner then, if he cared so much.

Killian instantly looked contrite.

"I don't want to step on your toes, love," he said. "If you enjoy cooking - just maybe another shake of the pepper next time -"

"I don't like cooking," Emma snarled, "I just like eating together. Except I'm liking it a lot less when I'm constantly getting criticized!"

"Oh," he said, a little taken aback. "Oh. Well, then."

And then he completely took over.

It started with him making her own staple recipes, just being the one in charge of the actual meals. He told her she didn't have to help if she didn't want to, and Emma was pissed enough to agree that she wouldn't. Except then the simple pan chicken she'd been making for ten years came out tasting like it never had before, and there was this sort of lemon-y sauce with it? And he'd made asparagus and some kind rice pilaf thing as well, and even though he claimed he'd just "tweaked it a little" it was so clearly a completely different meal. A better meal. Definitely.

He went through all her favorites like that, completely elevating them beyond anything Emma had ever dreamed of making herself. They took longer, of course, but unlike her he didn't care. He'd be in there for an hour or more; she'd hear him singing sea shanties to himself as he kneaded homemade bread. Whenever she (begrudgingly, at first) complimented his cooking he'd get this very sweet smile on his face. He rarely seemed satisfied with his own efforts either, still making little comments about how it was a shame the bread had come out a little too chewy, after all -

It was ridiculous. And that was before he started trying to recreate various meals he'd eaten over the course of his long life, a wide variety of vastly different foods he cobbled together from memory and instinct alone. She started helping him out more often, definitely over her irritation at this point and dipping right into fascination. She liked to watch him think, the way he'd dip his hook into a sauce then suck on the tip with his brows knitted together, before adding a little more of some seasoning or other. Now that he was in charge and no longer holding back out of respect for her feelings - or whatever the hell he'd been doing at the start - he'd talk through his decisions. Whether that was muttering aloud about needing more garlic, or telling a long and convoluted story about the first time he'd had this particular curry in a tiny dockside tavern and then delayed leaving port until he could at least partially figure out the recipe from taste alone - thus setting off a chain of events that led directly to his first near-death experience at the hands of mermaids. When he'd come back five years later, the tavern was gone.

Their spice cabinet grew, and their fridge filled up. The pantries too, and the cooking implements, though that happened more gradually. They'd started off with a coffee machine that automatically brewed a pot every morning; five months into living together, Killian acquired a French press and, always an early riser, ground beans himself every morning as she woke up. By the time she got out of the shower and downstairs, he would hand her a cup with exactly the right temperature, flavor, and timing. This went along with the breakfast he'd made, of course.

Emma bought him a set of cookbooks for Christmas; Henry got him some kind of complicated food processor that led to a sharp increase in soups and smoothies and sauces. His repertoire increased. Instead of going to Grannies for New Year's Eve, they had a party for their family, and Killian went all-out on making a giant feast with Emma and Henry as his hapless assistants. She tried to tell him New Year's was really more about partying than dinner, but he insisted he didn't care and made a roast. It was obviously delicious, everyone who hadn't had much of Killian's cooking yet lost their minds a little and he alternated between incredibly smug and that familiar bashful grin. Later, they had some kind of pudding for dessert, and played board games for a while until everyone had digested enough to actually move - only then did more traditional festivities commence. They drank, danced, sang, all watched the ball drop and shouted the countdown together; and Emma kissed Killian at midnight, feeling a sharp burst of joy that finally, she could have something like this. Starting a new year surrounded by those she loved, and who loved her back, laughing giddily and dancing together with her parents and her son and the man she'd fallen so so hard for.

But even that paled, honestly, to the next morning. They hadn't bothered with attempting to clean up, just waved everyone out the door where they'd stumbled down the street in a loud, happy cluster. Emma'd sent Henry to bed, then grabbed Killian and yanked him to their bed, and they hadn't gone to sleep right away at all. When she did eventually fall asleep, it was blissful and slow, sated in every possible way - and well into the night.

When she woke up, late, it was to an empty bed, sunlight filling up the room. Going downstairs, she heard that familiar low croon from the kitchen; stepped over the streamers still scattered on the living room floor and rounded the corner to see Henry slumped at the table, yawning over a plate of pancakes. Killian at the stove, timing his song to a flip of the newest pancake. She could see blueberries in it. Coffee and orange juice waiting for her at the table. Bacon. Three different kinds of syrup.

Emma started crying.

Henry jerked up out of his chair, rushing to her in a panic. He held her arms and called her over and over, "Mom, mom, what is it?". Killian moved the pan off the heat so it wouldn't burn then came over to her too, gently touching her arm. He didn't say anything, just looked at her.

"Mom, please," Henry said, and pulled her into a hug - and he was so tall now, so much bigger than he'd been when he found her all that time ago. "Tell us how we can help."

She shook her head, unable to speak clearly enough to explain they already had, that absolutely nothing was wrong and it hadn't been for a while now. She didn't know how to tell them exactly how monumental it felt, walking in here and seeing them both calmly engaged in such a familiar routine. How she'd woken up alone and had been doing so for months and never once worried Killian was gone. She knew he was downstairs, making breakfast.

Emma didn't know how to say this was the moment she finally realized she had made a home, found a family, and that neither was ever going to be taken away. She didn't even know why this was that moment, after all the more significant events they'd been through. It didn't make sense that her deepest doubts would suddenly be banished by a simple breakfast she'd had countless times before.

"You made my favorite," she sobbed instead, hugging Henry back tightly. She pressed her cheek into his hair, reached out to catch Killian's hand and tried to blink past her tears to meet his gaze. "I-it's my favorite breakfast."

So stupid. So insignificant, after everything, so small, so - so important somehow, the most important thing in the world. Killian had made her favorite breakfast. Henry was there to eat it. Emma hadn't cooked herself or asked him to make blueberry pancakes specifically or for either of hem to share this moment with her, hadn't done anything besides sleep in. And it didn't matter. Here they were, and Henry was always sleepy in the mornings but affectionate still, and Killian's cooking was delicious and he always sang during and Emma loved them both so much.

Henry held onto her tightly, swayed on the spot a little. Killian reached out to wipe away her tears. He moved his hand to Henry's shoulder, squeezed gently until he stilled, and then touched the back of his hook gently to her cheek and leaned over Henry to kiss her temple. Soft and slow.

"I know, Emma," he told her after, smiling so soft and his voice rough with emotion. Emma had no doubt that he understood exactly what she meant; that he knew just what she couldn't say and he felt that wonder too. That same incredible contentment, somehow more stunning than the fiercest joy. "I know."