Tumgik
#fallofneilhargrove
jaylikesrainbowtigers · 7 months
Text
My entry for day 3 of @fallofneilhargrove. The prompt was Public Scorn and Don’t make enemies of the local knitting club.
Tw: abuse, abuser point of view, arrest, jail and swears
————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————
Neil Hargrove was having pretty fucking good day. He had been to work, had Susan cook him a proper meal and had sat down to watch football. Like a proper man does.
Sure, things had gotten a bit sticky when attempting to get Billy to be a proper man again but that’s just what Neil had needed to do. Really the bruises were the boys fault. His lack of respect to his elders was a serious problem and there was only one way Neil could sort that. Eventually the pussy had to learn respect.
The game was on full blast and his fresh beer was nice and cold when Susan edged into the room. Neil’s forehead creased. That damn woman was ruining the game.
She stuttered out a “Neil. There… There’s a package for you.” She held out a brown, lumpy package addressed to him.
“Fuck off, woman. Can’t you see the game is on!” He snatched the package out of her hand and ignored her gasp of pain.
He ripped open the paper expecting a awful jumper or something. A belated birthday gift from a aunt or something.
Instead, he got an equally cushy lump of knitting. He scoffed and thought what grandma made this shit? The lump of brown knit unfurled in his hands revealing a bunch of what resembled letters. Neil twisted it around in his hands trying to make out the letter. Ne lnow vhol gau’re dainy. What? He looked a little closer and his blood ran cold.
We know what you’re doing.
———————————————————————————————————————————
Click, click, click.
———————————————————————————————————————————
It was the next week and Neil had put the knitting out of his mind. It was probably a mistake or a prank. Neil had absolutely nothing to be ashamed of. He was certain of it.
In fact he was so sure, he had burnt the knitted monstrosity outside. He wasn’t scared of some stupid message.
Which was why when Susan slipped in holding an identical brown package to the one the week before he paid her no mind. No, he certainly didn’t pause the TV to scream at her and snatch the parcel away from her.
He tore open the now familiar brown wrapping to see a flash of blue. He pulled the knit outside of its wrapping to show off the blue hat. The half he was holding looked normal.
The red lettering he revealed by turning the hat spelt was again hard to read. Or perhaps the reader was a little bit drunk.
Asshole.
———————————————————————————————————————————
The crunch of bourbons filled the air.
———————————————————————————————————————————
Wednesday had arrived again. Neil didn’t have the football on this time. He wanted to see if what he had did stopped the knitting.
He had been so sure it was some type of prank. It had to be one of the people in his house. Of course, his pathetic excuse for a son was first. Perhaps he should have held off on the punishment before searching his room to find nothing.
The next day he had been down to the craft shop of Hawkins. According to Claud or whatever her name was from the shop, the boy had never set foot in that shop in his whole life. She would have remembered as she was the only worker there. Neil felt the urge to smack her rise again. Alas he couldn’t smack another man’s wife. He’d go to jail because there would be obvious proof.
Next step was to check his stepdaughters room. An unlikely culprit but one to try anyway. The girl wouldn’t get into anything suiting for girls no matter what he did. She wasn’t going to start just to knit him stuff. Clear.
He told Susan not to go anywhere near the mail box today. There was no way she could have knitted them without him knowing.
He pulled himself up from the couch. Time to see if his counterfeit measures had worked. He opened the post box.
Lo and behold a brown package was crumpled in there. His hands had a slight shake to them as he pulled out the package. It was slightly bigger than the rest.
He unwrapped it in the living room. A green jumper came out of the mess, on it knitted a sentence.
Arrest me. I deserve it.
———————————————————————————————————————————
Giggles in the background as the net tightens.
———————————————————————————————————————————
Neil refused to sit this Wednesday. He stood looking out the window. It was package time. On a Wednesday.
The postman stopped at a house. Then the next. And the next. Geez, this guy was slow.
Finally, he arrived. Neil watched like a hawk as he produced the brown package filling Neil’s mind with dread.
In fact, over the course of a week when thinking about the package Neil had a) spilt boiling water all over himself, b) accidentally shaved off half of his moustache, and worst of all c) accidentally screwed up the biggest work project of the season. He was lucky to not get fired. He had gone everywhere feeling like everyone was looking at him. The paranoia of not knowing who was sending the packages. What did they know. Whoever it was had to be ruining Neil’s life.
As he looked out the window he though about who it could be. The lady from the supermarket with the wart? That woman with the blonde hair walking down the road Or maybe next door who he was constantly in a argument with? The odd pair of friends with ten cats down the road? Or that guy he beat at poker the other week? Or the man with the moustache and glasses sat in his car outside? One of his stupid boy’s friends? Or maybe one of Maxine’s friends? An unknown stalker?
Whoever it was still eluded him.
In his thoughts he had managed to collect the parcel. He held the thing in his hand and looked hard at it.
His hands shook as he pulled back the paper. A pair of red gloves fell out of the package. They lay side by side on the floor as if someone was wearing them with their palms facing upwards.
The black text clear for all to see.
Abuser.
Neil jumped as he heard a shout at the door and a group of men entered.
“Freeze! Police!”
———————————————————————————————————————————
The sloshing of wine as a toast to victory. But work wasn’t quite done.
———————————————————————————————————————————
Neil Hargrove was sat down again. It was the next Wednesday after his entire life had changed.
His orange jumpsuit itched and his bunk mate snored loudly. His bunk mate wouldn’t cower under him. The large man had left a bruise on Neil’s cheek from the only time Neil had tried to enforce his way on the man. It was supposed to be his house, his rules.
But jail certainly wasn’t his house.
And the worst thing was that he didn’t know how. How had it gone so, so wrong? The police had presented him with the photos and the files. Weeks worth of photos, videos and even recordings all painstakingly took. A solid lot of evidence to sink him down. Each strike left on his son. Recordings of his screams slid over his soul. Videos of what he did in his own house.
It had to be connected to the knitting. The evidence hadn’t started collecting until a mere week before that. The calendar in the background of so many photos had proved that.
And here he sat another brown package in hand. This time delivered by a prison guard.
Neil felt like weeping. But of course he didn’t because real men don’t cry. And Neil’s a man.
A orange scarf trailed out of the package. A perfect match to his prison garb. More bold black letters stared out at him.
You got what you deserved.
The contact card of the Hawkins Knitting Club lay forgotten on the floor.
———————————————————————————————————————————
Four beings of pure rage sat around a table six weeks ago.
Joyce a woman who had lived under a man like Neil. She had children living under a man like Neil. She wouldn’t let him get get away with it.
Claudia who had lost her husband but loved all the more fiercely because of it. No one would hurt a child under her watch.
Sue who was largely unspoken but Sinclair's fight for those who can’t. No matter what Sue didn’t let it slide and she would always fight.
Murray who ran on rage and spite. He was always ready to take people like Neil down. It was his shit, his life’s goal.
They raged in a circle when Joyce had met the brother-sister duo of Max and Billy. When she saw the signs. Neil had crossed the wrong club.
Don’t make enemies of the local knitting club.
So they did what they did best. They knitted.
Not only that but they were patient. Knitting was a craft of patience.
Murray and Joyce sat outside of the house. Everyone went out and they went in. They had plenty of experience planting cameras and listening devices. Murray continued watching and took photos when he could. Claudia made sure to put salt into that man’s coffee every time he asked for sugar. He never remembered her despite seeing her serve him at both the craft show and the coffee shop. Men like him never noticed women like her. Sue was the one who made the call as she compiled evidence meticulously. Erica obviously got it from her mom. She wouldn’t miss a single moment until this guy was finished. And all of them knitted. They knitted until their fingers felt like bleeding. They had a lot to knit as they needed to make this perfect. And perfection takes time.
In the end it was the rage of the knitting club that tore Neil Hargrove down. Because you should never underestimate a bunch of mothers and a journalist who are thriving off coffee, bourbons and wine.
28 notes · View notes
half-oz-eddie · 8 months
Text
Killer Stepdad
A Lifetime Movie-esque murder mystery short fic for @fallofneilhargrove
Tumblr media
6 months after moving to Hawkins, Susan dies suddenly, and Max is convinced that Neil had something to do with her death. Desperate to investigate the circumstances surrounding her mother's death, Max drags Billy (and eventually Steve) into a dangerous investigation into Neil's recent behaviors.
Tags: Graphic Depictions of Violence, inspired by lifetime movies, Murder Mystery, Domestic Violence, Sibling Bonding, Nosy teenagers fuck around and find out, Fake/Pretend Relationship, Body Image, Fat Shaming, Steve Harrington Has a Bisexual Awakening, Canon-Typical Violence, Drug Use, Underage Drinking, Child Abuse, Enemies to Friends To Lovers, Eventual Romance
Tumblr media
The day of Susan’s funeral, it was pouring. The air was thick and humid and the rain pitter pattered onto the casket. Lucas did his best to hold his umbrella over Max, and Susan’s casket, not caring that his suit was soaking wet. 
Max was sure Susan didn’t know all of these people very well, but it was a small town, and everyone showed their support for Max and Neil.
Poor, grieving Neil who sobbed but not a single tear fell from his eyes. 
Max glared at Neil, then glanced over at Billy who was giving Neil the same dirty look. 
They made eye contact and he nodded his head at her. She nodded back, then turned back to the casket, watching dejectedly as it was lowered into the ground, dragging her further and further away. The memories of her smile, her hugs, her soft little giggles, all buried forever, never to be seen again. 
Neil continued to sob, and Max found it a bit too theatrical. Max did all of her crying at home, and who you are behind closed doors is who you really are. 
Neil didn’t cry once. He didn’t say much at all. In fact, he was constantly out and about, sometimes coming in drunk, and laughing on the phone when he thought no one could hear.
But Max heard, and she didn’t like it at all. 
Neil seemed almost glad that Susan was gone…at least to her. But it wasn’t like she knew much about Neil, except the fact that he was a fucking terrible person. 
Read the full story on Ao3
59 notes · View notes
ihni · 7 months
Text
Off the edge
For the Fall of Neil Hargrove, day 2 prompt; "The Camaro"
~~~
The car is an object; not living per se But sentient, maybe, perhaps, in a way She knows her boy’s touch from the many repairs Knows that he loves her, and knows that he cares
He fixes her ailments and fills her with gas Washes her paint job and polishes glass Until they sparkle, until they gleam Together, they make such a glorious team
He’s a good driver, she’s a good car Together, they’re great; they go fast, they go far She doesn’t know feelings like hate and thereof But loves him, as much as a car can feel love
Some nights, he is hurting inside her, she knows His driving is reckless and angry, it shows On some nights he screams, on others he weeps Sometimes, he curls up on the backseat and sleeps
One night, he is shoved to the driver’s side door And held there, and screamed at, then shoved to the floor Another man enters her, sits in the seat And backs her away from her boy, to the street
The man drives her off, he is angry and strong His grip is abrasive, he drives her all wrong She knows; this is he who has caused her boy’s pain She knows; she will not let him do it again
So she speeds up, though the man tries to brake She turns on her own, and she drives to the lake She knows these roads well, and she knows where she’s going He tries the handbrake, but she is not slowing
Right up ahead, there’s a turn in the road They’ll crash, and they’ll drown, and they’ll sink and corrode She speeds through the fence and then they’re in the air The man in her seat screams, but she doesn’t care
She is an object; not living per se But sentient, kind of, somehow, in a way She doesn’t know feelings, but maybe it’s glee? She feels as she dies, and her boy is set free
~~~
@fallofneilhargrove
35 notes · View notes
dragonflylady77 · 2 years
Text
Neil gets what’s coming to him / dies a gruesome death fics - (a non-exhaustive list)
*disclaimer: I have read some of them, but not all of them so don't come at me. If you want me to add any to this list, send me an ask or a DM
Updated 4 October 2023 to say there is an event catering to this very special trope so go give @fallofneilhargrove a follow and read to your heart's content!! Here is the link for that collection on Ao3.
In no particular order:
ain't no rest for the wicked by desperat
Burying Monsters by Sir_Howdy
you can't cheat death when you're digging your own grave by @grabmyboner
cut the shit (handle it) by @holl0w-city
Seven Foot Wave, Six Feet Under (steddilly) by @writer-in-theory
No More Monster by @destroya2005
Forget About What Happened Here by @half-oz-eddie
The following by @bentnotbroken1fanfiction
Steve Goes To Jail AU
Max can't take it anymore
When Push Comes To Shove
The following by @lucdarling
stings like she means it (fear street crossover feat dead!neil)
kinktober 2020, chapter 19, poison (crime fam au)
Rumor Has It
Serious (as a heart attack)
Forged in Blood
the following fics by @dastardlydandelion
praefoco
tot acerba funera or, the ABCs of Neil Hargrove's death
edited + expanded supplicium (prompted by @keziahrain)
periculum in mora
dolor sicut ratio (the axe fics before axecution)
blasphemia(caos crossover, feat smooches with lilith)
axecution series
micis
nex
the gay garbage disposal au
famelicus(dark crack torture fic, dead dove: do not eat, pls read the notes + tags, billy’s mother/susan pwp)
repudium (solo susan pwp feat dead!neil, literal murder porn/gorn, also pls read the tags + notes)
191 notes · View notes
strangerqueerthings · 7 months
Text
A mix of multiple prompts for @fallofneilhargrove
Haunted (The Camaro), Public Scorn, "What Happens in Hawkins, Stays in Hawkins."
CW for veiled mentions of alcohol abuse, abuse and death.
He doesn't think much about it after the fact. It was just a car, and now it's just a wreck. A ruin in the vague shape of the loud, fast car that had been leverage against the wreck of a son he could never hammer into the proper shape of a man like himself. The squeal of tires on asphalt, spitting gravel and dust; the desperate, helpless fury of his protests, they were the same. Pointless noise. Feeble attempts at rebellion.
He doesn't think much about him after he signs the death certificate.
He never had a son, not the one he wanted. He took after his mother, and just like her, he was gone, a pointless life that winked out of his without trying to be better.
It was easy to forget him, to move on. It had been a momentary annoyance, knowing that he'd failed to get the boy to be anything other than a self-absorbed, violent little delinquent, but that wasn't his fault.
He took too much after his mother.
He doesn't think much about the car once he signs it over to be scrapped.
The town notices his lack of mourning. The whispering, busy body women that eyed the boy like a piece of meat mourn the loss of something so fine, taken down before even hitting his prime… and they notice how his father never shed a tear.
They went to his funeral, and noticed he was only there long enough to half-heartedly toss a few grains of dirt on the grave -a grave the mall had paid for, as part of the settlement.
He never would have paid that much money otherwise. A waste of money for a waste of time, a waste of a boy that never became a respectable man, and never would.
He notices the tracks in front of the house a few weeks after the service. They're familiar, but he brushes it off. Leftover skid marks from the many times the car went peeling out of the driveway.
He dismisses it, and doesn't think much about it.
It's her fault, really. She looked up to him, and picked up his smart mouth. She blames him for his death. She says the town is starting to put it together, starting to see what he really is.
The blood on her lip is bright, brighter than he remembers blood ever being, and it would unnerve him, but he's had one too many beers.
He doesn't think much about it.
He's out later and later each night. Alcohol doesn't seem to work anymore- and when it does, all he can think about is the lock on the door, swinging whenever he looks at it.
No one has been in his room since he died and it was cleared out. No one goes near it. Not even her.
He dismisses it as the wind, or the shifting of the house during the change of seasons, and tries not to think much about it.
Headlights seem to follow him every night when he goes to the bar. He swears they're familiar, but when he stops, pulls over to let it pass, they're gone. When he makes a turn and waits to see it pass, it never does.
The town is getting more folks moving in, or coming to pry, curious about the supposed curse on Hawkins. He dismisses it as another tourist playing lookie-loo and getting lost on the winding backroads.
He tries not to think about it, but he can't shake the feeling he's being watched.
He stops coming home entirely some nights, going to the Motel 6 to sleep off the alcohol that makes him slow, makes him heavy, but doesn't let him forget, won't make him numb, not the way it used to.
He doesn't get sleep.
He keeps seeing headlights pass back and forth past his window.
He peers through the curtains, his heart pounding in his chest, soaked in cold sweat that reeks of alcohol and fear, and he sees the car idling in the parking lot. He can't see the color, or even the shape, but he recognizes the headlights.
They're the same headlights that have been haunting him for months.
He locks the door and shuts himself in the bathroom, curled up in the bathtub with a pillow and blanket ripped from the bed. He spends the night shaking in a fetal position, hearing the barest hint of the car's engine idling outside all night.
It's gone as soon as the sun begins to rise, and the silence it leaves behind is deafening.
He can't stop thinking about it.
It has to be a prank. One of the meddling teenagers in town, maybe one of his whores, one of the delinquents he drank with, trying to drive him out of town. It has to be. There's no other explanation.
The new chief of police is skeptical when he comes forward with the complaint. The man lifts a brow, taking in his haggard appearance, the smell of alcohol that has become part of his natural odor. He doesn't take the report of a stalker seriously, but in a placating, sympathetic, almost mocking tone, he says he'll look into it, and advises him to go home and sober up.
He changes his work shift to nights. He's safe at work at night, and when he drives home, the sun will illuminate the thing that has been stalking him. He just has to switch his sleep schedule, so he takes a weekend off to rewire his clock.
He still can't stop thinking about the car.
She's gone more and more, and she takes her daughter with her. She's been doing that ever since that evening, with it's bright, bright, vivid scarlet, fixed in his mind.
He wants to lay hands to them both for daring to abandon him. For her daring to shirk her wifely duties, for her to be anything but a dutiful surrogate daughter figure.
They're both like him and his mother, and he hates them for it.
He can't sleep, and finds himself at the bar again. Before he knows it, night has fallen, and he has no choice but to drive- to the hotel, or home, it doesn't matter, he has to drive. He can't stay at the bar. It's closed, and his tab has been cut off until he pays it off.
It doesn't matter. Alcohol doesn't work the way it used to.
Adrenaline keeps him far more sober than he'd like.
Home isn't home. It never was. He hasn't had a home since she left and made him feel like he failed, because he couldn't hold onto her. Not her, with her daughter, but her, leaving, instead of submitting, leaving her son because she knew if she took him, he'd have a grasp on her until her son turned 18.
He had turned 18 and died, and there was no one to blame but him, and it was her fault the blame was on him. It was her fault the town whispered about him.
Drunk.
Wife beater.
Child abuser.
Fragile ego.
Failure.
The whispers circulate through his head, and he gets home, drunk on impotent rage rather than alcohol, and he starts throwing things into a suitcase. If she can leave, so can he. He won't be held accountable for another failure, for another child becoming a useless delinquent, a dead child that was a waste of time and money. Especially one that wasn't even his.
He tosses his luggage into the truck and starts driving. He doesn't even know where he's going, not precisely.
He doesn't think about it. He just wants to get the fuck out of Hawkins. Away from the whispers, the gossip, the pitying and skeptical gazes, the accusatory rumors, the too-bright blood on a girl's split lip, a grave he didn't pay for, and a car that should have been compressed into a metal cube.
A car that sits in the road, headlights dazzling, blindingly bright, blocking his path out of Hawkins.
He slams on the brakes, screeching to a halt. The sun will rise soon, and the car will disappear. It always does. It has to, because it's not real. It's scrapped. It's gone.
He stares at the car in the road, watching exhaust trail from the tailpipe, curling into the air like dragon's breath, dissipating like his sanity into the late night air. Above him, the stars seem to spin and dance, as if bouncing in glee, watching from the heavens in anticipation of what will happen.
He doesn't leave the truck. He's never liked horror movies, but he knows the main rule: never get out of the car.
The last bit of clouds drift away, revealing the full moon, and the cold white light glints on the curves of the car, and there's no mistaking the shape.
It's the Camaro.
And it's empty.
His mouth is dry, his throat stuck, and his tongue feels like sticky clay between his jaws. His eyes hurt from being open so wide. His heart is pounding at his ribs like a jackhammer, and fear grips his stomach like ice cold claws of iron. His pulse is heavy in his ears, but somehow it won't drown out the sound of the Camaro's idling engine.
The headlights flare, brighter than he ever imagined, blinding him, as the engine lets out a sound that could only come from something born of Hell- a metallic screech, a mechanical scream, and a roar from an engine that was supposed to be melted down months ago.
The car leaps at him like a wild animal, and in the throes of terror, flooded with adrenaline, he does the one thing he knows he shouldn't do.
He doesn't think about it.
He abandons ship, leaping from the truck to avoid being crushed inside it, hoping the impact of metal on metal will distract the impossible vision from his absence, that will spare him enough time to escape into the woods where it can't possibly follow.
It knew. It knows.
It swerves, tires screeching on the asphalt, smoke reeking of burnt rubber, and comes right after him.
Moments before the fender collides with his body, he stares through the windshield into the empty Camaro, only to find himself locking gazes with a pair of eyes that stare back at him with rage, sorrow, and bitter satisfaction.
He locks eyes with her son, only for a moment, before he's gone again, before the car breaks his spine, crushes his ribes, ruptures his innards, and sends him flying into the trees, plunging him into darkness that he sought so long in the bottom of his cups, but never found.
The police never know what to make of it. Neil Hargrove's truck is parked in the middle of the road, door open, luggage in the back. Skid marks trail away from his truck and towards the woods, but there's no evidence of the other vehicle actually leaving the road.
What they can't understand is why the truck is left where it was, and where the tracks started and stopped where they did.
There was a clean line, where the truck stopped, and the tracks began.
The boundary of Hawkins.
17 notes · View notes
kittyphoenix12-xx · 7 months
Text
@flufftober day 1 - "i've got you"
@fallofneilhargrove day 1 - deathbeds/funerals and day 2 - lingering essence
Neil Hargrove is dead. This is a good thing.
(i promise this is actually very, weirdly sweet)
11 notes · View notes
jaylikesrainbowtigers · 8 months
Text
This is my entry for the @fallofneilhargrove week, day 1: Death - rest in pieces.
Tw - mentions of abuse, alcoholism, attempted sexual assault of a minor, and death/implied murder
————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————
Dear Neil Hargrove,
I have only wrote this type of letter once before. A letter to a dead man.
A dead man who was far better than you ever were.
I remember when my mom introduced you to me. How you smiled and told me how you would take me in as your own. How I would love it with you. I would be the daughter you never had.
I’m glad you never had a daughter. What you did to your son was bad enough.
I also remember how Billy stood behind you. Meek and quiet but at attention. Seen not heard, just how you liked him. I remember walking in on a hot Californian day to your house and thinking ‘Max, why are you here? Why do you have to do this?’ But all my mom said was something along the lines of ‘you’ll come to love it’ and ‘this is your home now’.
She was wrong.
Your house was that of nightmares. And you didn’t even need to touch me. You didn’t need to touch me when you could hit everyone else in that house.
Billy cowered in the corner covered in bruises and scars. My mom shuddered whenever someone closed a cupboard too fast. I learnt to not tell people because no one would believe me. Or maybe they just didn’t care.
You didn’t care.You said you did but you didn’t. Nobody who cared would break bottles on his son. Nobody who cared would leave grip marks on his wife’s wrists. Nobody who cared would put locks on the outside of our bedroom doors.
I’m the one who you left with no physical scars. No. All my scars are from a different kind of monster.
I’m the one who you left standing.
I don’t know what happened to Billy’s mom. I don’t even know her name. He always thought she left whilst he was out. Maybe she did. Maybe I don’t think that. You let a lot of things slip when you were drunk, Neil. Whispers of hate and violence spewing out of your lips. Secrets of how to dig up some ground. Words about hitting a bit too hard.
I bring justice for her.
Billy was maybe your biggest victim. But I hate to compare. We are all your victims. The marks on his skin, so rumoured to come from petty fights. I don’t think I ever really saw Billy fight. Just the once when some creep tried to grab at me when I was twelve. How he hid when you were around in contrast to what he showed to the world. A angry boy who was really just so, so sad? No. Victimised by you. An abused kid who never got to recover. A hero in the end.
I bring justice for him.
My mom. Susan Mayfield. I used to wish she had never left my dad. I see now that she was unhappy. Now I wish that she had never met you. I wish that I never had to see my mom wither away under you. The person she was destroyed by your will. I don’t know how she still loved you. I think you forced it into her. Made her feel like she could never live without you. Like you were saving her from so much worse. You were like a leach, draining the life out of her. How did she love you after it all? She died, you know. The doctor said alcohol poisoning. She became an alcoholic after you left her. An empty shell desperately trying to fill the void you had torn into her soul. I think me getting Vecna’d pushed her over the edge. She was not the best. Not by a long shot. But she was my loving mother. And you took her away.
I bring justice for her.
And me. Left blind and battered. But not by you. You didn’t physically hurt me. You didn’t break me. You couldn’t. I had people protecting me. At least a little bit. A warning here. A move there. A shoulder to cry on. They are the reason I survived you intact. They are why I can stand here today saying a letter that I memorised because I can’t write it down. Supported by the man who loves me the most and my friends who are closer to family. More of family than you would ever have been. And it hurts. You hurt me. Despite it all you hurt me. The abuse and the way you hurt those I loved. You hurt me, Neil Hargrove.
I bring justice for myself.
I stand here surrounded by people who love. For the sake of those who you hurt. I stand here better than you. Stronger than you. Whatever you could do to me, I survived.
I stand above your grave and tell you that you are done. You have been brought to justice. Maybe not in the legal sense. But I bring you to justice. For all of us. You got your justice. A dead man’s justice. The justice is that I lived. I lived through you. I made it. And I carry those who didn’t with me and they get their justice through me.
Look up at us. Look at me on Earth. Look at them above it. Look how we have moved on. Look at what you didn’t manage. You didn’t break us. You didn’t destroy us. We rose above you. Together, even if we didn’t all know it in life. You are done.
Rest in pieces Neil Hargrove
Worst regards,
Max Mayfield
15 notes · View notes
ihni · 7 months
Text
Justifiable police brutality
For the Fall of Neil Hargrove, day 4. Prompt: "Justifiable police brutality"
~~~
When Hopper gets to Cherry Lane, the boy is black and blue It’s clear, by ways of welts and cuts, what Billy has been through An eye that’s black, a lip that’s fat, a shoulder dislocated He whimpers when he’s touched, a sound that can’t be fabricated Neil Hargrove’s cuffed, off to the side; his knuckles are all bruised He watches paramedics treat his son, and looks amused
Jim Hopper had a dad himself, the asshole long since dead He used to hurt Jim just like this, and beat him ‘til he bled No one will beat Jim today, he’s big and strong and tough But he remembers how it felt when nothing was enough Remembers feeling hopeless, and like there was no way out Asshole dads and pain is something Jim knows all about
He takes Neil Hargrove by the arm, and leads him to his car It’s just out through the door, across the yard; it’s not that far It’s strange, then, how the man can’t seem to keep himself upright How he keeps tripping – Hopper asks, voice flat, “Are you alright?” “You tripped me!” Hargrove spits, then groans and squeezes his eyes shut (It’s hard to keep on shouting when a boot is in your gut)
Jim yanks the man upright again, ignores the way he swears His fingers might leave bruises but it’s not like Hopper cares He gets the man into the backseat then, but not before He accidentally bangs his head against the Blazer door Slamming the door shut, he just makes sure that Neil can’t flee It’s really not on purpose that he clips the bastard’s knee
He gets behind the wheel and drives, then suddenly, he brakes Neil Hargrove crashes forward and Jim hopes that something breaks “Ooops,” he says, without remorse, and puts the car in drive He’s not a monster; when he’s done, Neil will still be alive But Jim is just a man, and he cannot resist temptation He decides that he will take the long way to the station
~~~
@fallofneilhargrove
27 notes · View notes
ihni · 7 months
Text
On the cross
For the Fall of Neil Hargrove, day 6, prompt: “Crucifixion" and also "The Wrath of God”
~~~
He doesn’t understand it He’s screaming himself hoarse He’s being held against the wall By some unearthly force
His son is in the corner He’s gasping for some air Suddenly, there were just lots of other people there
They turn their backs towards him to focus on his son All of them, except the girl; The otherworldly one
She’s holding both her hands out He feels the force increase A scream is trapped inside his throat Just begging for release
His joints are loudly creaking and threatening to pop He cannot get the air to beg the girl to make it stop
A sharp pain in his wrist, then He wishes he could scream His other wrist, the same again This has to be a dream
He cannot feel his fingers He doesn’t mourn the loss Too busy being crucified like Jesus on the cross
“You are no god” the girl says And Neil has to concur If anyone’s a God in here it’s definitely her
~~~
@fallofneilhargrove
24 notes · View notes
ihni · 7 months
Text
The death of Neil Hargrove
For the Fall of Neil Hargrove, day 5, prompt: "Monsters"
~~~
There once was a man from South Cali Who moved his family out of The Valley Alas, he got beaten And then he got eaten by bloodthirsty dogs in an alley
~~~
@fallofneilhargrove
21 notes · View notes
ihni · 7 months
Text
I hate Neil Hargrove
For the Fall of Neil Hargrove, day 7, Free day!
~~~
Neil Hargrove is an asshole I hate him very much He hit his wife and hit his kid And obviously, as such
he should have gotten worse, and they should have made him pay Instead they let him live and leave and simply run away
He took his family to a town where monsters seemed to reign He was the source of grievance and suffering and pain
But did he get to pay for it? Did he get his due? No, he got to ditch that town and live on, out of view
I hate how the show did it and that he got to live That’s something I will never be quite able to forgive
~~~
@fallofneilhargrove
16 notes · View notes
ihni · 8 months
Text
Rest in pieces
For The fall of Neil Hargrove day 1, prompt: "rest in pieces"
~~~
The man has been begging; been crying; been hurt There’s teeth on the floor and there’s blood on his shirt His breaths have been panicked, his screams have been shrill But now he is silent, and now he is still
His hands that have caused so much pain and distress no longer have fingers; the stubs are a mess Looking back, that was what finally broke him; His own fingers stuffed down his throat as to choke him
Held by the ropes, he is tied to the chair What has been done here is justice; is fair As he deserved, he has suffered and bled In his son’s name, he is finally dead
In front of him now stands a young man, fulfilled This isn’t the first time the young man has killed He isn’t a stranger to torment or death Now he looks around him and takes a deep breath
What he has done kind of scratches an itch It’s always a mess, though, and clean-up’s a bitch A body to bury, and garments to burn A room to scrub down and a car to return
He watches the body; his boyfriend’s dead dad In death he’s pathetic, small-looking and sad The man’s in a pool of his own blood and feces He kind of deserves to be chopped up in pieces
In pieces, the man will be easy to carry Easy to spread out and easy to bury No one will find him; the woods here are vast He will just simply have ‘left town, at last’
The dead man’s son’s boyfriend flicks blood off his hands And grabs both a saw and a knife as he stands He says to the body, “It’s your own fault, really, You should have known, no one hurts my boy Billy”
~~~
@fallofneilhargrove
15 notes · View notes
ihni · 7 months
Text
The talk of the town
For the Fall of Neil Hargrove day 3, "don't make enemies of the local knitting club"
~~~
“Your yard is so pretty” “Oh thanks, I had help” “By who?” “Billy Hargrove” “That Neil Hargrove’s whelp?”
“Who’s that?” “Oh the Hargroves, they’re new to this town” “From California, moved here, settled down”
“Oh right! I know Susan, is that Billy’s mother?” “Step-mom, I think, he is Max’s step-brother”
“Max, who is that?” “It is Dusty’s new friend, I pointed her out at the fair, last weekend?”
“The red-headed girl? Oh yes, I remember!” “They moved here, what was it? October? November?”
“November I think, it was just before snow” “No matter” “Well if you have lawns to mow
I recommend Billy, his prices are fair” “He’s good-looking too, have you seen that boy’s hair?”
“Karen!” “What?” “He is the same age as Nancy!” “Just SAYING, the way that he dresses is fancy”
“Oh shut it” “Joyce!” “What? I said what you were thinking” “This is why we don’t mix knitting with drinking …”
“THE YARD THOUGH” “Oh yes” “Back to that?” “It looks great” “He also cleans pools, which you know that I hate”
“He fixed up my car too” “The new one?” “The van” “He’s really a handy, well-mannered young man”
“Well I’m sure he didn’t get that from his dad” “What do you mean?” “You know Fredrickson’s lad?”
“Paulie? Yeah, why?” “Well I was at the store And Paulie was waiting for Jill at the door
And then Mr Hargrove saw him standing there And yelled at him, gave everyone quite a scare”
“What? What did he say?” “I’ll tell you, my dear; He called our Paulie a FAG and a QUEER”
“But he is engaged!” “To JILL!” “But, but – why?” “I don’t know, but it made dear Jill start to cry”
“I’ve heard that man use words like that once before” “Oh, really?” “When?” “When he called his ex-wife a whore”
“He did what?” “Such language!” “I feel for his wife who has to have that kind of man in her life”
“You know Mrs Rumfeld, on Old Cherry Road?” “The lady whose wheelchair ran over a toad?”
“The very same! She might be old, but she’s bright And do you know what she heard there one night?”
“Where?” “From the Hargroves, they’re living next door Well first she heard voices, then someone who swore
And then someone screamed, and she looked through the glass And saw Billy Hargrove, right there on the grass
His father was standing there, with his fist raised And old Mrs Rumfeld said he looked quite crazed!”
“What does that mean?” “Did he HIT him?” “Oh my” “That just isn’t right” “Ladies, this doesn’t fly”
“Billy’s so sweet” “Yeah, he doesn’t deserve it” “I think, that we should –“ “Oh we HAVE to!” “– observe it”
“In Hawkins, there’s standards” “And morals” “And views” “There’s no room for violent men or abuse”
“I think that we have a new project, my friends” “More than our knitting, and other odds and ends”
“Sharpen your needles, and gather around For we have a bad man to run out of town”
~~~
@fallofneilhargrove
13 notes · View notes
ihni · 9 months
Text
I came up with a lovely idea to kill off Neil, this weekend, which I'll probably use for the @fallofneilhargrove event. A girl needs something to look forward to. Mmmm <3
12 notes · View notes