Taarradhin: A compromise where everybody wins.
Loki absolutely hates it when the tub of Neapolitan ice cream that he has so carefully stashed away in the back of the freezer is tampered with. And Modi, that little trickster (Loki wants to believe that he was absolutely nothing like this as a child, but he would be lying) has been fond of leaving just a little layer of chocolate and strawberry at the tip of the tub so that it isn't apparent from the outside that there is almost none left. He doesn't do this with the vanilla flavour, just further proving Loki's theory that there was such a thing as hell.
"Could you eat the vanilla as well?" Loki has asked his son on more than one occasion, pulling out the nearly empty tub and glaring pointedly at Modi. Modi had told him that he did not like the 'white flavour,' and had skipped off, leaving Loki to his own devices and a tray of almost nothing except vanilla ice cream. Loki had ended up scooping out the teaspoonful of strawberry and chocolate that his son had so graciously left him, and had stuck the tray back in the freezer.
"Dearest," Thor hedges one night, after Odin has confronted him about the astonishing surplus of vanilla ice cream that seems to dominate the freezer space, "would it not be better to just buy chocolate and strawberry ice cream? This way, there will be no leftovers."
Loki looks at him incredulously, before rolling his eyes and going back to snapping his fingers and producing flames. Thor, that heathen, wouldn't understand.
Loki pretends that it was his idea all along when the boxes of strawberry and chocolate ice cream start appearing in the fridge, and nobody dares challenge him.
