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#post season 3
prisonhannibal · 6 months
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"Dads and the dog they said they didnt want" cannibal edition.
He's using reddit on his ipad to post in cooking subreddits anonymously from wherever he lives with will and their dog
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valtoon · 1 year
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cw: angst/major character death
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but you had to go
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like a wave that crashed and melted on the shore
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kutpot · 1 year
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Prompt 41: Getting together post series
@daredevilexchange
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metalhoops · 11 months
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Everyone who’s touched grief knows it’s bigger than two hands can hold. The inexperienced try to string together the right words to lighten the load and those who grieve wear a momentary mask of comfort, feeling instead heavier. Those who’ve experienced grief know there are not enough words in the world to replace something as simple as a small action. 
You don’t remember the platitudes and false virtues strangers assign to the dead, but after a long day when you find your fridge full of precooked meals, you’ll remember who dropped off the potato salad. Max was sick of people who didn’t know her, telling her how kind her brother was. How funny he could be. How talented he was. 
No one, save the rare few, know what to do with complex grief. Max didn’t know how to unpick her thoughts, let alone put them into words and hold them up for someone else to see and understand. That didn’t mean she didn’t want to be understood.
She didn’t know how she could miss someone so deeply while being in some small part, glad they were dead. No one tells you what to do when your thoughts betray you. 
By the time Max and her mother moved into the trailer park, people had stopped telling her how much they missed Billy, which was a small blessing. They’d also stopped dropping off food or offering to do their laundry. Max and her mother had been too proud to take anyone up on that offer, but she missed the thought. 
Two months had passed, and it felt like everyone forgot Billy existed, that anything had happened. Lucas and the other boys had started asking her to hang out again. The unspoken grace period given to her and her mother for mourning had ended. Now it was back to business as usual. Her mother returned to work, and Max was left alone in an empty trailer full of boxes. 
That was when Steve arrived with a Tupperware container under one arm and a fancy untouched toolbox under the other. 
“Figured you’d need some help,” the boy muttered, kicking off his shoes, not waiting to be invited in. 
He knew better. If he’d asked, Max would’ve told him to piss off. She couldn’t understand why Steve of all people was able to read her moods so well. 
Steve hadn’t been much help rebuilding the furniture, but he’d supplied the Allen key and screwdriver so she couldn’t complain. He was good at unpacking boxes. With the two of them working, the task had taken a day, as opposed to the week it would’ve if she’d done it on her own. She was meant to be in school that day, but she couldn’t bring herself to go. She’d expected that to be the last she saw of the older boy but instead, he made a habit of checking in on her. 
Steve kept dropping off meals. After a week he started driving Max around on the days the mere mention of school threatened to topple her. Sometimes she’d hang around the back of the video store. On other days he’d drop her off at the arcade and she’d play Dig Dug until her eyes burnt and her fingers cramped. 
She didn’t know exactly when it’d happened but somewhere along the way, she found herself getting strangely attached to the guy. She’d lost one brother but gained another. 
That was why when Steve stopped driving home at night, she’d sent Eddie to get him. 
Max didn’t know much about Eddie Munson. His uncle and Max’s mother infrequently drank coffee together at the communal picnic tables. Nothing ever happened. Max knew her mother and how she acted around her boyfriends. This was different. They just sat together, mostly in silence, watching the sun go down. It kept her mother from drinking so much or so early. What Max did know about Eddie Munson was that he owed her. 
One night when her mother was out, the cops came poking around the trailer park, asking her if she’d seen anything suspicious. Max wasn’t dumb, quite the opposite. She knew Eddie sold drugs. She also knew the cops wanted to pin something on him. She wasn’t altogether sure why, maybe there was some pressure to put someone behind bars from the kinds of places that had neighbourhood watches. 
It was only when crime started to leak into the suburbs that people went searching for the culprits. Some rich kid spikes a girl’s drink in Loch Nora and the next thing you know, they’re looking for drug dealers in trailer parks. The guy will get a smack on the wrist, while Eddie? He’ll get thrown in jail and the people of Hawkins will sleep a little better at night, knowing all is right and just in the world. Until the same guy does it again. Then another trailer park kid is marched off to the stocks. 
Max had learnt how the world worked young. It’d been out of some strange sense of solidarity that she’d kept her mouth shut about Eddie. When the cops split, she’d given him the heads up to keep his nose clean while there was blood in the water. She hadn’t done it for a favour. But if nothing else, she was opportunistic. 
Steve wasn’t driving home most nights. Max knew because she’d take note when the Beamer shot past the trailer park. Some days it was in the dead of night, others, the early hour of the morning. He wasn’t staying over at girls’ places like she’d first thought. Even if he wasn’t the golden boy he’d once been if someone slept with Steve Harrington, the whole town knew within the week. 
She’d followed him one afternoon, riding her skateboard at a safe distance. He’d drive around, past their houses, as though on his own neighbourhood watch. He’d finish his patrol and pull up at any number of odd locations, the train tracks, the junkyard, the woods. At first, she’d worried he, like Billy, was possessed. After long days of silent observation, she realised the kind of ghosts that possessed Steve were of his own making. 
Max didn’t know what to do until she saw the light on in the Munson’s trailer past midnight. She stalked across the way, pounded her fists on the fly screen, and called in a favour. She asked Eddie to check on Steve. He’d looked at her like she’d grown a third head but agreed. 
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Eddie Munson didn’t do favours but Red was a good kid, so he’d made an exception. He began his quest by driving past the Harrington’s manor, hoping for his own sake to find the BMW parked in the drive but Max had been right, Steve wasn’t home, nobody was. 
Eddie was tempted to check all the usual spots he’d go if he were a meathead jock with ample time and money. There was skull rock, the notorious Harrington make-out spot and a has-been jock party was going on in the next suburb over from Loch Nora, but Red’s instructions had been clear. If Steve wasn’t at home, she’d rattled off a list of places he might be, each one growing stranger. 
That was how Eddie Munson ended up in the junkyard. The place was surprisingly well-lit, despite the late hour. He worked his way through an overgrown thicket, cursing himself for wearing his white Reeboks. He’d be scrubbing out grass stains with a toothbrush for the next week. 
Mounds of trash and scrap metal shot out of the dried grass like rocks rising from the ocean. Amongst it all, burning bright as a lighthouse was a rusting yellow school bus. It stood in stark contrast against the blue, black night. A dull glow bled out of the vehicle’s shattered windows. 
Eddie found himself drawn to the little island of light as a moth flocks to a flame. His feet moved swiftly, eager as a young child at the prospect of adventure. He slipped in through the half-open door of the bus and was greeted by another body slamming into his. 
Eddie’s head cracked against the metal bus frame, making him groan. It wasn’t until he tried to move that he realised there was something sharp pressed against his neck. Against all his better judgment Eddie swallowed, feeling a broken bottle nip at his skin. 
Eddie’s eyes flickered to the wielder of the weapon. A once mighty king had fallen like his surrounding kingdom, into a state of disrepair. Steve Harrington. Heavy is the head that wears the crown.
“Harrington,” Eddie spoke, keeping his voice soft and even, as though speaking to a wild animal that could startle. 
There was a manic look in Steve’s eyes Eddie knew well. He’d never thought he’d see the ghost of himself dance across such a pretty and foreign face. The days before Eddie moved in with Wayne were better left alone. He knew the wide-eyed vigilance of people who’d grown used to fending for their lives. It was a look he’d never imagine Steve Harrington capable of. 
A glint of recognition shifted over Steve’s face and the eyes of years long past were gone as though a trick of the light. The bottle disappeared from his neck, shattering as it dropped against the floor of the bus. 
“Shit, Munson. Sorry,” Steve uttered, moving out of Eddie’s space. 
Eddie was surprised Steve remembered his name. Across the six-odd years the two had gone to school together, Harrington had spoken to him a grand total of three times. The first, to ask for a pencil in Spanish. The second had been a disgruntled ‘hey, man’ as Eddie sidestepped his lunch tray on one of his biweekly jaunts across the jock table and the third, which Eddie only now recalled, had surprised him. 
He’d gotten a D in history. It’d been the final nail in the coffin, solidifying the fact that he’d once again have to repeat his senior year. Eddie spent the rest of the class carving his name into the underside of his desk with his thumbnail until it was bloody and covered in splinters. 
He’d almost lasted until the end of class before he had to excuse himself with little plan of where he was going or what he was doing. He knew he wanted to get away, that he needed to be anywhere but there. He wasn’t sure what’d tipped Harrington off but as he shuffled past the former king’s desk, his eyes downcast, a hand shot out to snag Eddie’s forearm. 
“Hey, Munson? There’s always next year,” Steve muttered under his breath.
From anyone else, it would’ve sounded condescending, but Steve genuinely meant it. Eddie hadn’t known what to say. He’d felt a sudden lump rise in his throat. He took off, thinking it’d be the last time he’d see Steve Harrington. He’d wished he’d been so lucky. 
“So, Harrington, what’s someone like you doing in a place like this?” Eddie asked when his heart rate returned to a regular rhythm. He heard a snort escape Steve’s throat as he leaned back against the opposite wall of the bus. 
“You wouldn’t believe me if I told you.” 
Eddie wanted to know when Steve had started to sound so world-wearied. Nineteen-year-olds shouldn’t sound so worn thin. The closer he looked at Steve, the more he saw. His eyes were chaliced with the kind of purple, blue bruises that came from weeks of sleeplessness. There was a pale pink scar, slicing a line from his bottom lip to his jaw. In time, it’d fade into obscurity, but for now, in the cold of the night, it stood out like a crack in fine china. 
“What are you doing here?” Steve asked, sliding down the wall to a seated position, as though once again settling in for the night. Eddie heard glass tinkle and grind under Steve’s body. 
Had his parents kicked him out? Was he hiding from someone? Eddie knew fuck all about Steve Harrington and he’d liked it that way. Screw not doing favours. Red owed him one after all this was said and done. 
“Finding a new place to pedal goods. New chief of police has been riding my ass,” Eddie lied. It wasn’t as though he was going to tell Steve he was sent on a fetch quest by a fourteen-year-old. 
A flicker of pain shifted across Steve’s face before disappearing. It was a moon sinking below the horizon line, leaving no trace of the momentary night as a false smile painted his face the colour of a sunrise. 
“Can’t say I’d recommend this old rust bucket. Isn’t drug dealing in a junkyard a little cliche?” Eddie rolled his eyes and sank to the floor of the bus, nudging Steve’s foot with his. 
“Keep giving me lip and you’ll have to pay double.” 
Harrington never brought from him. The freckled asshat, he used to hang around with would buy weed once in a blue moon, but never Steve. 
“You got anything on you?” He asked to Eddie’s surprise. He hadn’t exactly come prepared. He searched the depths of his pockets, finding two small ziplock bags and half a pack of rolling paper. He threw them Steve’s way. 
“On the house. Looks like you need it,” He mused and watched as Steve’s fingers worked, quick and methodical. Hagan had obviously shared his stash with Harrington.  
“Got a light?” 
Eddie fetched his Zippo from his back pocket and leaned over to light Steve’s joint. The guy looked surprised. He should’ve handed the lighter over. Too late now. 
Steve’s lips were poised so close to Eddie’s fingers. His face illuminated by flame, caused Eddie to shift closer. He lifted a hand to Steve’s cheek, acting under the guise of trying to shield the flame from the breeze filtering in through the broken windows and half-open door. 
“You got anything stronger?” Steve spoke, breathing a plume of smoke into the night air. Eddie wasn’t sure it was wise, but he’d never counted wisdom as his strong suit. 
“Back at my place.” Steve snorted, smoke billowing from his half-pursed lips, his eyes beginning to haze over. 
“People’ll talk.” 
People always talked when it came to Steve, but surely not in the way the boy was implying. Ramrod straight, Steve Harrington couldn’t make a gay quip, not about himself. Maybe he was embarrassed about what being seen with Eddie could do to his dwindling reputation. 
“I’m pretty good at keeping a low profile,” Eddie supplied, and Steve nodded stoically. 
“Stealthy, like a ninja,” Steve replied. 
It was Eddie’s turn to choke out a laugh. Goofy had never been a quality he’d assigned to Steve Harrington. He supposed the trait had its charm. It worked on Eddie. 
“Like a ninja,” Eddie echoed. 
When he’d said yes to Red, he’d assumed he’d drag Steve’s likely-intoxicated, ex-jock ass home and call it a night, but looking at the boy across from him with the joint tucked between his lips and the thousand-yard-stare, Eddie had to admit there was a change of plans. 
“Have you heard about the world’s best ninja?” Eddie asked, his once pristine shoes nudged themselves beneath Steve’s Born in the USA style blue jeans. 
Steve shook his head, a flicker of curiosity dancing over his face, his stupid floppy hair, falling in his eyes. 
“That’s why he’s the best,” Eddie insisted and felt his insides grow warm when Steve cackled. He was pretty when he laughed. He looked more like the guy he’d been back in high school, more carefree. 
Eddie wasn’t a stranger to sitting with people and talking them down on their worst nights, but a relative stranger was new. 
Eddie stood and extended a hand to Steve. The boy clasped onto his ringed fingers and pulled himself up. 
“My van’s parked half a mile up the way, you coming?” Steve shrugged and followed close at Eddie’s side.
The two walked in relative silence, standing so close their hips played the role of balls in a Newton’s cradle, knocking against one another in a rhythmic pattern. 
Back in the familiar landscape of his van, Eddie was once again hit with the strangeness of the situation as he watched Steve slide into his passenger seat, snubbing out the remains of the joint in the ashtray. He thought of their spit mingling in the little petri dish and pushed that thought aside. He’d always been good at holding back those kinds of thoughts. It came with the territory. 
“Why do you need something strong?” Eddie asked as he turned the ignition. 
If he’d learnt anything from his uncle, it was that hard conversations were best had behind the wheel. That way no one could storm out. He’d admitted to his uncle he’d failed his first senior year as the two sat at the juncture between Maple and Main. He’d come out to Wayne along Lakeside Dr. 
“Why did you really come to the junkyard?” Steve countered. He was smarter than he looked, or at least, smarted than Eddie had assumed. 
“I’ll show you mine if you show me yours,” Eddie quipped after a second, watching as a bemused smirk twitched onto Steve’s face. 
“It’s been a hard year, man. Hard couple of years,” Steve confessed. Eddie wasn’t going to let him get off that easy. 
“Is this to do with you getting unceremoniously shunted off the top of the Hawkins’ High totem pole?” Eddie asked.
He had a feeling whatever it was ran far deeper than just popularity, but this was Steve Harrington. Steve was pretty and popular. He wasn’t allowed to have real problems. That’s not how the rich and stuck-up operated. 
“Honestly? No. Think that might’ve been a good thing.” Steve drummed his fingers against the passenger door. 
“Then was it the thing with Wheeler?” Eddie asked, watching Steve cringe. Maybe he should leave it alone. 
“Part of it. I don’t know.” What followed was a loaded silence. 
Eddie kept casting glimpses from Steve to the road, watching as his face screwed in concentration as he searched for words. 
“I feel like it’s my job to protect everybody,” He admitted, his voice barely raising above a whisper. 
“And I don’t know how. I feel like I’m supposed to have all the answers but I just... I feel like a kid, who’s in way over his head.” Steve pulled his knees up to his chest, and settled his chin on them, not daring to look in Eddie’s direction.
He was a year older than Steve and he felt like a lost kid most of the time, as though he was an imposter masquerading as someone who knew what the hell he was doing. He wondered if that feeling ever went away. 
“Red sent me to check up on you. The kid’s worried,” Eddie confessed watching as Steve’s head snapped to look in his direction. 
“She’s got enough on her plate without worrying about me.” 
Steve didn’t need to say what Max was dealing with. Eddie knew. Hawkins was a small town, and Billy Hargreaves was infamous. Eddie had a bad feeling about the guy from day one, but that didn’t mean he couldn’t feel sorry for him, dying in a mall fire. Hell of a way to go.  He’d heard rumours Max had been there when it happened. Then again, he’d also heard talk of Steve slinging ice cream at the mall. Eddie could see a picture beginning to form. He didn’t like it. 
The two didn’t speak for the rest of the drive back to Eddie’s trailer. There was nothing left to say. Steve continued to tap his fingers absentmindedly, so Eddie leaned over, turning on the radio. The tape deck played the thrashing guitar and pounding beats of the latest Slayer album. Eddie liked it well enough, but he cringed, preparing for Steve to chew it up and spit it out. He didn’t. He shut his eyes, rested his head against the passenger window and promptly fell asleep. Eddie would be damned.
Unsure of what to do with the sleeping boy and the blaring music, Eddie drove in circles around all the familiar back roads of Hawkins, steering clear of the potholes and dirt tracks. It wasn’t until Eddie’s eyes started to droop that he called it a night, pulling up outside his trailer, flicking his floodlights twice in the direction of the Mayfield’s, letting Max know he’d gotten Steve home safe. Well, he’d gotten Steve to his home safely. 
Eddie was contemplating the logistics of getting Steve out of the car when the boy began to stir. His eyes fluttered open for a second to meet Eddie’s before he groaned and turned to bury his face into the car seat. Damn it all. Eddie had managed to go for years without developing a crush on Steve, it wasn’t goddamn fair he was about to do it now. 
“Good morning, Starshine,” Eddie teased, walking around to open the passenger door for Steve. 
“Welcome to my humble abode. I have drugs or you know... a comfortable bed. Pick your poison,” Eddie spoke as the two made their way to his trailer. 
As they stepped into the main room, Eddie watched as Steve’s eyes scanned the place, lingering on Wayne’s collection of mugs and novelty hats, a ghost of a smile on his face. Eddie grabbed onto Steve’s wrist and led him down the hall. 
“The drugs and the bed are in my room,” Eddie explained as they went. 
Eddie nudged the door to his room open with a flourish of his hands. 
“This is where the magic happens,” Eddie explained and watched as Steve quirked a brow. 
“Mind out of the gutter, Harrington. I was talking about literal magic.” Eddie smirked gesturing to his stack of Dungeons and Dragons’ manuals, handbooks, and campaign notes. 
“You’re such a nerd,” Steve grumbled flopping onto Eddie’s bed. 
Maybe it was the high that’d made him seem looser, but Eddie liked a Steve who took charge. He crawled under the covers, making himself at home in Eddie’s bed. 
“Demogorgons suck ass,” Steve uttered after a moment, his face muffled by Eddie’s pillow. He wondered if he’d fallen asleep on the ride home and driven them into a ditch, because there was no way Steve was in his bed, talking about D&D. Eddie liked demogorgons, something he elegantly articulated by muttering,
“You suck ass.” As he flopped beside Steve in bed. Steve snorted.
“That’s one thing I haven’t tried,” he confessed. Yes, he was high. Eddie couldn’t imagine a sober Steve making that confession openly. 
Eddie settled on top of the covers, hyperaware a sober Steve might not be as receptive to waking up beside Eddie. He was in over his head. 
“Are you okay with this?” Eddie questioned as he rolled over to lay on his side, propping his head up to get a better look at Steve, half smothered in his sheets. As much as people talked about Steve’s love life, they also talked less favourably about Eddie’s, or his lack thereof. 
“You’re not going to punch me in the face in the morning?” Eddie concluded, voicing his concerns. His heart was tugging him closer to Steve, but he wasn’t willing to do anything they’d both regret. 
He’d been shockingly open to letting the boy into his innermost sanctum. Maybe he had a saviour complex, but he wanted to know how much of a commitment the two would have, how long was the piece of rope that tied them together? Was it a momentary truce or the start of something? 
“No,” Steve breathed after a beat, seeming equal parts understanding and offended Eddie had asked. 
The two lapsed into silence. Eddie was left wondering if Steve had fallen asleep again, but the rise and fall of the boy’s chest was too shallow. Steve eventually let out a groan and rolled to face Eddie. Whatever momentary reprieve had allowed him to sleep in the car had passed. 
Eddie’s gaze was once again drawn to the growing blue beneath Steve’s eyes. He had stuff that could help Steve sleep, but he knew from experience, drugs could only do so much. They were numbing jell on a knife wound, a momentary relief from pain without fixing the real problem. 
“Can’t sleep?” Eddie spoke, trying to get inside Steve’s head, to unpick what was going on with him. Steve nodded miserably. 
“Anything I can do to help?” Eddie wondered. 
There were no guidelines for the strange turn the night had taken. Steve opened and shut his mouth, gaping like a fish on dry land. He had some thoughts, it appeared, but none he was willing to voice right away. Eddie felt strangely endeared to the boy in his bed. He’d give him anything he asked, even if he didn’t think it was smart. 
“Is it true, what people say about you?” Steve asked after a long pause. 
That wasn’t what Eddie had expected. He blanched and watched as Steve’s eyes swelled, his panic rolling off him in waves, crashing head-on into Steve. 
“Never mind, don’t answer that. Christ, that was invasive. Sorry,” Steve fumbled, sinking further beneath Eddie’s sheets to hide his face. It appeared it was a night for confessions.
“Were you asking about the satanic shit or the gay thing?” Eddie spoke candidly, his fingers knotting in the covers. 
You didn’t come out to just anyone. You sure as hell didn’t come out to someone like Steve unless you had a death wish, though Eddie was quickly learning the Steve Harrington that existed in his head and the one lying in his bed were two different creatures. 
“Forget I asked,” Steve repeated, rolling over to turn away from Eddie, a faint flush dusting his cheeks. 
“I don’t worship the devil and I’m not gay,” Eddie found himself confiding.
He watched as Steve’s body went still. Eddie couldn’t see his face, but he could tell his mind had kicked into overdrive. 
“Oh, cool,” Steve spoke sounding suddenly distant, as though that hadn’t been the answer he was looking for. Eddie didn’t know Steve Harrington at all. 
“But I’d be lyin’ if I said you were the first guy I’ve had in here, Steve,” Eddie continued, giving away more than he’d intended. 
Steve peered over his shoulder and quirked a brow. He didn’t look shocked or disgusted as Eddie had anticipated. He looked relieved. 
“Like Bowie?” He wondered aloud. Eddie couldn’t help but roll his eyes. 
“Yeah, like Bowie- I mean, I have a preference. Guys suit me better, I guess. But sometimes a girl’ll surprise me.” 
The conversation felt intimate, surprisingly more so than when he’d admitted it to the guys in Corroded Coffin. With them, there hadn’t been follow-up questions. The guys had been supportive, but they hadn’t known what to say. It’d been another fact about Eddie they’d taken in their stride without much acknowledgement. He hadn’t felt the need to explain himself. He didn’t know why, but when it came to Steve, he felt like he needed to explain the whole thing in intimate detail. 
“Me too,” Steve muttered, sounding entirely unlike himself. He was quiet and unsure; two traits Eddie had never assigned to the Steve that lived in his head. 
“I mean... for me, girls are easy. Guys are... new?” Once more, Steve sounded unsure. 
“Maybe not new because it’s always been there but I just left it alone.” Eddie wondered what’d spurred on the change, whether it was a near-death experience or something else entirely. Eddie was good at reading between the lines. 
“Steve, I’m going to ask you again, okay? What do you want me to do?” 
Steve sucked air in through his teeth, gripped the sheets and finally let his shoulders sag. 
“Can you just... hold me, for a bit?” Steve asked at last, sounding as though Eddie had placed a loaded gun to his head. Of all the things Eddie had been expecting, that wasn’t it. 
Eddie moved closer, lining up his hips and Steve’s back, throwing an arm around the boy’s waist. It was different. Eddie was used to closeted guys wanting to have sex with him, but they didn’t hang around long after. 
He thought back to Steve’s words. The guy wanted to protect everybody, from god knows what, but who was looking out for him? He hooked his chin on Steve’s shoulder. He smelled faintly of cologne and something chemical, hairspray. 
“This okay?” Eddie clarified. Steve’s body felt stiff and unresponsive in his arms. 
Steve hummed. It took him a moment to relax but when he did, he practically melted into Eddie. The boy pushed back, fitting their knees together. Eddie was thankful they’d decided to keep their jeans on, fearful of what any more skin-to-skin contact would do. Steve cradled Eddie’s palm to his heart and dropped his chin to his chest, so Eddie could feel the ghost of the boy’s breath dance across his fingertips. Steve was a renowned good lay, but the Harrington charm went deeper than that. The guy was good at cuddling, something Eddie hadn’t thought was possible until he had every inch of Steve pressed and curled against him. 
“This okay for you?” Steve asked after a moment, his breath tickled against Eddie’s knuckles. 
“Great for me,” Eddie confirmed sounding as breathless as he felt. 
Steve’s heart beneath his hand thundered, letting Eddie know the boy wasn’t as cool and collected as he was pretending to be. He didn’t point it out. He did two things very out of character for Eddie Munson. He remained still and silent. Steve’s breath grew deep and even. Eddie leaned closer, pressing his face into the nape of Steve’s neck as the boy began to whimper in his sleep. 
“I got you,” He assured. 
“You’re safe. M’not going to let anything happen to you.” Eddie promised. 
It took time, but Steve settled and at last, Eddie let the long night swallow him whole. 
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Max decided Eddie Munson was useless. She’d watched him pull up outside his trailer around three and she hadn’t heard from him since. She’d thought the idiot would at least give her a heads up on how things had gone with Steve, but it appeared she had to do everything for herself. 
At 10 a.m. when there was still no sign of life from the Munson’s trailer, save for Eddie’s uncle pulling in around six, Max stalked over and wrapped her knuckles against Eddie’s bedroom window. After a moment a mop of curly brown hair popped into view. 
“Wha?” The boy grumbled, still half asleep. 
“How did things go last night?” Max asked, taking the tone of a scolding mother, talking to a very small, very dumb child. 
“Good,” Eddie confided a goofy grin crossing his face. It confirmed Max’s suspicions. Everyone else, save her, was useless. 
“Well, where the hell was he? Did you talk to him? Did he seem weird? Is he okay?” Max rattled off a list of rapid-fire questions only to be hushed by Eddie. 
“He’s sleeping, Red. Keep the volume down.” 
Max opened her mouth to ask what the hell Eddie was talking about when she caught a familiar glimpse of styled, sandy hair peeking out from beneath the sheets. Max, unlike most people, wasn’t an idiot. She’d grown up in California, she knew the way the world worked. She didn’t need anyone to spell it out for her. 
“Gross,” She grumbled. Not because Steve and Eddie were both men but because Steve was like her older brother and Eddie was- she didn’t want to think about it. 
Max let out an elongated sigh, squared her shoulders and spoke. 
“You like scary movies, right Munson?” He seemed like the type. 
Eddie nodded. 
“Michael Myers hasn’t got a thing on Max Mayfield. You do anything stupid with Steve and I’ll show you how I got the nickname Mad Max.” 
Eddie swallowed thickly and nodded. It was all for show, but someone had to say it. Someone should always be in Steve’s corner. Max had the feeling Steve wasn’t used to people looking out for him. She knew the feeling.
“Sir yes sir,” He breathed, faking a salute. Max rolled her eyes. 
She had a feeling she was going to regret bringing Steve and Eddie together but when hours later, Steve showed up at her house with a Tupperware container full of spaghetti and a secret smile on his lips, she had to admit, for once she might be wrong. 
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samstree · 9 months
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“Isn’t it beautiful?” Jaskier asks in wonder, the golden sunset casting long shadows behind them.
They sit side by side on the beach, toes buried in the sand. There is no one else on the coast for miles, only the two of them. They could be the only two people in the world.
It’d be enough, Geralt realizes.
He looks back at Jaskier, turning away from the sunset. Jaskier wears happiness well, his cheeks round with a smile, eyes flowing with warmth. It’s a state rarely shown around anyone else. A bard performs to an audience, but never to Geralt, never when it’s just the two of them.
“Yeah,” Geralt whispers, “it is.”
Jaskier meets his gaze, the crinkling around his eyes deepening. He looks at Geralt like this, like he’s seeing his favorite person in the world, the one that makes it all better.
“Don’t be cheeky, witcher,” Jaskier says, putting his chin on Geralt’s shoulder. “You are supposed to be watching the sunset.”
“Rather watch something else.”
“I’m not going anywhere, you know?” Jaskier’s grin stretches. He pokes Geralt’s cheek so he turns his attention back to the sight in front of them. “But this is fleeting.”
“Hmm.”
The sun dips into the horizon, where the crashing waves blend into the sky, the clouds painted with an upturned palette.
“Close your eyes,” Jaskier says softly, “just for a moment. Go on.”
And Geralt does. He lets the sun kiss his eyelids.
Jaskier sighs happily, leaning against Geralt’s shoulder. “The sun will set today. Tomorrow it shall rise again, but never the same. This moment isn’t meant to last, and for the rest of our lives, we can only live with the knowledge that this sunset has been lost.” He pauses, breathing in, and out. “Keep your eyes closed for me, dear, because right now, it’s like you are already living it. You’ve already lost this sunset. It only exists in your memories now, and yet…”
“And yet?”
Geralt nearly melts into Jaskier’s voice.
“And yet,” Jaskier continues. “Open your eyes.”
Geralt opens his eyes, and the incandescent light spills into his vision, nearly blinding him. His breath catches at the beauty of the same sunset.
“Oh.”
“Oh,” Jaskier agrees. “Just like that, you’ve briefly experienced the joy of finding something that is long lost.”
They sit in silence until the sun completely disappears, the golden orange fading into a blue canvas, illuminated by the stars.
There are tears in Geralt’s eyes. He blinks them away before turning towards Jaskier again. The stars are in his eyes too.
“It’s lost anyway,” Geralt says, chest heavy with a grief he cannot name.
“Not the same.” Jaskier shakes his head. “You found it once. It will always be with you, right here.”
When Jaskier presses a hand on Geralt’s chest, his touch is warm, like the sunset lingering in Geralt’s heart.
Brokilon forest is quiet when Geralt wakes up from the pain, his back covered in cold sweat.
The aches flare up at night, deep in his bones, when the air is cold and the dew is heavy. There are wounds magic cannot heal, like Yen said. He groans against the discomfort, breaths coming out erratic.
“Hey, Geralt. It’s alright.” Jaskier is next to him in an instant. “You are alright.”
Cool fingers brush away the hair on his forehead soothingly. Jaskier sits beside the bed with soft words and gentle touches, his presence steady and calming as Geralt slowly breathes through the throbbing pain.
“Jask—” he reaches out, catching Jaskier’s hand in his. “I’m fine.”
“I know. I know. All healed, as you claim.” Worry still strains Jaskier’s voice. “I’m not quite convinced. Are you sure we shouldn’t stay for a few days more? Just a bit longer.”
Geralt pulls himself up on the bed with Jaskier’s help, leaning against the bark and the leaves. He winces at the way his knee pops.
“We need to leave tomorrow,” Geralt says, his brow still tight.
Jaskier looks away, but Geralt can make out the hesitation in his movement, in the way he seems to want to say something, but thinks better of it.
“Of course,” he says, in the end.
Geralt stays there, waiting for the pain to fade. It doesn’t for a long time.
“Jask,” he asks tiredly, tugging Jaskier’s hand, “will you come here?”
Jaskier doesn’t move. “I don’t want to hurt you.”
“You won’t. Just… let me look at you.”
Geralt moves to the side, leaving room for Jaskier to sit side by side with him. He opens his arms when Jaskier carefully climbs into bed, curling into his side. Something clicks into place when Jaskier fits into his body like this. Too many things are going wrong, but this…
This is right.
“Hey,” Jaskier says softly. He guides Geralt to look at him with a hand on his cheek, eyes bright like the fireflies in the forest. “I’m here.”
Geralt closes his eyes, resting his forehead against Jaskier’s. There’s too much lost in too little time. He doesn’t dare to think about losing Jaskier too, the last person by his side. He shudders to imagine being here alone, injured and dying, with no gentle hands holding him.
But Jaskier is here, with his lute and his songs, his unconditional loyalty. Jaskier found him.
Geralt opens his eyes with an exhale.
“You are here,” he says. “You found me.”
In the moonlight, under the canopy of the forest, Jaskier lets Geralt rest on his shoulder, a smile under his breath.
“I always will,” he whispers the promise. “I won’t lose you, Geralt, not too often, not for long. You see, I found you once, all those years ago in that terrible tavern. I’ve kept you with me since, right here.”
He takes Geralt’s hand and presses it over his fast-beating heart. A human’s heart, fragile and breakable, but unbelievably strong at the same time.
Geralt is tired. All he feels is the rhythm of Jaskier’s heart under his fingertips.
He sleeps with Jaskier next to him, the last piece of his home, murmuring soft things to ward off the faint echoing of his injuries.
They sleep in the quiet forest, when their family is out there somewhere.
Tomorrow, the sun will rise, but never the same. Because tomorrow, Geralt will find the rest of their family too.
247 notes · View notes
passivenovember · 4 months
Text
Night Shift (for @catharrington )
--
The first thing he sees when he comes to is Max. 
She’s crying in her sleep, the liquid timbre of it slipping loosely in time with a heart monitor, somewhere to the left, fading in and out of view as the steady drip of morphine fights to drag Billy under.
He realizes, that. The heart monitor is his. He’s plugged into it and he hurts. More than Neil. More than anything.
What’s left of his mind is liquified, sloshing around in a body strapped to a bed. It turns the memory of Maxine over in his hands like a rubber duck in an ocean of guilt.
She’s alive. Billy made sure of it, so. She’s alright. She’s okay–
It aches to breathe, burns so bad that his vision blacks out and Billy thinks, eyes glued to the grounding shock of red hair on his sister’s head, that he’s too young to die. 
The first time Billy’s strong enough to crash awake and stay there, he wishes for death. 
Fuck being too young. 
Everything burns, and then he’s gasping around a pain unlike any he’s ever felt as warm amber light filters through his eyelashes. He’s bleeding, from the very center of his chest, watercolor seeping through a cloth. He watches red bloom, bloom, bloom over white gauze and thinks. He should call for help. 
But then someone snuffles, deep in sleep and Billy flinches toward the sound, teeth on edge. 
Maxine looks like she hasn’t moved or showered or eaten in days, and Billy grunts. Her angry, cave-man big brother even knocking on death’s door. He tries to sit but something else escapes him, a fucking. Whine. 
More blood.
He’s crying. He doesn't know when he starts crying, but he’s fighting to get to Max, he’s wading through shit and fire and and then someone says, “Don’t move, Hargrove, you’ll rip yourself open again.”
Steve Harrington looks like he went three rounds with a meat grinder. Like someone tried to kill him. Like Billy–
“Shh, it’s alright,” Steve’s fingers are soft, through the searing pain, gentle as butterfly wings on the caps of Billy’s shoulders. “Lay back,” Steve tells him, blue and black and purple, like spilled paint, “Lay down, okay?”
Billy gets lost in the fat bulge of Steve’s bottom lip. Thinks. 
He probably did that to Steve. Everything’s fuzzy, he doesn’t remember anything but he remembers wanting. Steve. Everyone dead. Everyone and then himself. 
He didn’t think everyone included Steve Harrington.
“It’s alright,” Steve cards those soft, sweet fingers through Billy’s hair. “Lay down,” He says, “Rest.”
Billy does.
The next time he wakes it’s because Maxine is throwing a temper tantrum. 
Billy would know the sound of her voice in death. The shrill, ear-splitting soprano of Max’s screams could yank him out of hell and catapult his body through the lid of his coffin, startled lips gathering earth between his gums until he’s awake, again. 
Alive.
A man in a white lab coat tells Max to calm down. 
She spits, instead, phlegmy and gross and just like Billy taught her, in the Doc’s face, “You’re not moving him.”
It’s half-way unintelligible. Billy squints, like there’s sunlight streaming bright and relentless from his sister’s throat and he’ll go blind if he doesn’t protect himself. 
“Kid,” The Doctor says, “He’s not awake. He’s not getting any better–”
“If you take him to Chicago I’ll kill myself,” Maxine declares. Stubborn bitch. “If you take him, I’ll. I’ll chain myself to the bottom of the helicopter. I’ll stop eating. I’ll starve myself–”
She will. She’s a man of her word, the fuckin’ loser. 
“A hunger strike?” The Doc frowns, regretful. “You can try, kid. Won’t bring your brother back.”
Billy smirks. Almost. It hurts and his head splits open and across the room, on his feet and ready to restrain Billy’s very own red-headed tornado from punching a hole through the Doctor’s sternum, Steve Harrington watches Billy. 
His face looks normal now. 
Almost. 
He’s yellowing, sort of, like an old photograph, but. He’s beautiful. 
Billy’s chest aches. 
“--His entire life is here,” Maxine says, voice wobbling dangerously. Billy knows she’s about two seconds from decapitating this Doctor with her bare hands, “His family. I’m his family, you’re not just going to take him away from–”
“--Kid–”
“--Don’t call me kid, you fucking asshole,” Max says, “Don’t–”
“--If we can’t get him somewhere he’ll wake up, he’ll die.” The Doctor says. Not a teensy bit regretful.
Billy doesn’t exactly blame him. 
But you’d think a bomb has gone off. You’d think society’s on the brink of collapse, by the way Maxine goes shocked still, and then.
She moves. 
Or, She tries to move, screaming and screaming as Steve holds her back, never once taking his eyes off of Billy. “Max,” Steve says. His lip’s not bulging anymore. 
Maxine wails against the Doctor, anyway, her tiny fists not packing much force because the fucker just looks sad, about it. For her. Max will break her thumb, doing that. 
Billy tries to call her a dumb fucker and fails.
Tries to sit up and fails.  
“Max,” Steve tells her, putting himself in front of the Doc, “Look.”
Her eyes are blue, like his.
Somehow Billy forgot about that while he was treading water in the sea of everything else. Billy and Max stare at each other for ten long, breathless seconds. 
And.
All Billy can think is that he should’ve stayed dead. He should’ve followed his mother’s voice into the pits of hell, like she wanted him to, he should’ve stopped fighting and in that stretch of breathless anticipation, he knows. 
Maxine is going to open her mouth and tell him that he fucked it up. Again. Die, she’s thinking. If you’re not going to do it, I’ll kill you myself.
Max blinks and then she opens her mouth. Makes a terrible noise. It’s the worst fuckin’ thing Billy’s ever heard, and turns out he was right, her fists don’t pack much force but she knocks him one across the jaw, anyway. Maybe an accident, but then again. Maybe not.
“You fucking asshole,” She says, scratching and clawing until Steve Harrinton grabs her around the chest in a barrel hug, lifting her off the hospital bed like she weighs nothing. 
It’s alright, Billy wants to say, I deserve it. It’s the least of what I deserve. And besides. It’s the only place on Billy’s entire body that isn’t screaming in pain, so. 
Small victories.
“Let me go,” Max shouts, but Steve doesn’t. He holds her tight, watching Billy. 
The Doctor stares, too, like he’s witnessing a miracle. Like he isn’t sure what to make of all this. Like he’s going to run screaming into the halls and take all the credit even though he was ready to ship a corpse off to Chicago this morning.
Immediately, Billy hates him. 
Max elbows Steve Harrington in the gut. He drops to the floor, groaning, and Billy has the nerve to feel proud as his sister climbs over the lip of the bed with a fire in her eyes, unlike anything Billy’s ever seen, and.
He was standing at the mouth of hell, once. 
Billy notes, distantly, that he shouldn’t have worried so much about her. Shouldn’t have risen from the dead to make sure she’d be, not. Alright, but. Something. Maxine can take care of herself and Billy never should’e doubted it. She’s gearing up to take care of him, now, let the trash out to roost, but.
But.
Maxine collapses on top of him, instead. Billy thinks, distantly, that she might be trying to suffocate him because she’s laying flat across his oxygen tube. 
But. 
She’s crying. Her body shakes hard enough to rumble the bed and the linoleum floor and the entire building beneath that. It hurts. Billy wants to lift his arms and hold her to him, but he can’t. He can’t feel his arms, he can’t–
“I’m sorry,” Maxine says, clutching at his neck, “I’m so sorry, Billy.”
Steve Harrington and the Doctor are gone before Billy thinks to ask about the hole in his chest. When the door slams shut behind them, Maxine sits up and O2 hisses through the plastic around his nose. 
Billy can breathe, again.
“What did it feel like?”
Billy’s grateful that his room has a window. The trees have been good to him.
Maxine knocks her sneaker into the hospital bed, shooting pain up Billy’s left side. He ignores it, biting against the fleshy patch of his cheek until blood drips on his tongue. “Billy.”
Billy shakes his head.
Steve Harrington stands watching, backlit with bright September skies. He’s been perched under the window for hours with his arms across his chest, holding vitriol in the birdcage of his ribs, just. Watching. Billy and Max together.
“Dipshit,” Max says, “I know you can hear me. You’re mute, not deaf,” Max kicks him, ignoring his wince of pain, “What the fuck happened to you while you were–”
“Max,” Steve tells her, coming to life, “He can’t talk.”
Or think, Or move. 
“I know.”
“You’re stressing him out.”
“How the fuck do you know, Harrington?”
Billy smirks, a little, watching the roll of Steve’s neck muscles. Irritated, like Billy. Like a brother. “Look at him,” Steve says, “He’s begging me with those big blue eyes, Harrington, she’s stressing me out, make her stop.”
Billy wants to smile. He tries to, but.
“I can’t stress him out,” Maxine says, kicking at him again. “He’s not even doing anything.”
It’s lighthearted. As bright as things can be when Billy’s still on a respirator, but he knows she’s pissed. Out of everything, he knows that. The shape of Maxine’s rage. 
“Jesus Christ, Mayfield,” Steve exhales, exhausted, and every tree branch outside the window moves with him. “You have to give him time.”
Maxine kicks the bed again, hard and insistent until Billy has to look at her otherwise his lungs will explode with the pain. He doesn’t want to. He manages, anyway, and. Maxine deflates. A wilted red balloon.
She’s crying. Suddenly. 
He frowns at her, like. What, shitbird? 
Max seems to hear him. “What happened to you?”
Blue eyes, blue like his. Their anger falls the same way, like a sledgehammer against tempered glass. Pain spiderwebs out from him, varicose veins devouring all the light and warmth from the room with guilt.
Max’s face wrinkles, a raisin in the September glow, and Billy forces air through his lips. I’m sorry, he wants to say, I’m sorry I can’t put words to it right now. I’m sorry I can’t make sense of it for you. I’m sorry you have to carry it on your shoulders like a backpack full of algebra homework. I’m sorry–
Her fingers are cold when they curl into the palm of Billy’s hand. He’s sorry this is happening to them. To her, so.
“See,” Harrington says, “You stop flapping your gums for five seconds and he’ll give you what you want.”
Billy rolls his eyes and holds her fingers tightly, trying to press every syllable into Max’s thundering pulse. Billy hopes she understands, knows she does, and when he turns back to the window Steve Harrington is there. 
Watching Billy with pink cheeks, a pink nose. Not sepia at all anymore. 
Healed. 
“We have to change your linens,” The nurse says. 
Billy doesn’t know what a fucking linen is. He wrinkles his nose, waiting for Maxine or Steve Harrington to jump in and gather context clues, but they’re useless. Basically wallpaper, anytime the nurses come in. 
He’s never seen two storybook heroes more squeamish at the sight of blood or the sound of discomfort.
The nurse raises her eyebrows at them, already pissed off. “Bedsheets,” She says. “We need to change them so he doesn’t get sores.”
“Sores?” Maxine says, finally serving as Billy’s voice box.
“Yes, he hasn’t learned to walk yet–”
“--What if he never learns to walk again?” Max wonders, “Will he get sores from laying around all the time–”
“--He’ll learn,” The nurse says, done deal. She’s a bitch. Billy’s favorite, so.
He knows right away that it’s going to hurt. Makes a noise like a fork caught in a garbage disposal, completely involuntary, and his backup helper snaps out of it. “How do we change his bedsheets?” Steve asks. Which. 
Douses Billy in cold water. 
He would rather die than let Steve see that. And he has. He almost stayed dead, too, and now–
“Little girl,” The nurse says to Maxine, “Wait in the hall.”
“No way,” Max says, crossing her arms, “No fucking way I’m leaving you in here with my brother, alone–”
“--I’m here–” Steve says.
“--Little girl, do you want to watch your brother thrash in agony and wet himself?”
The nurse waits, her eyebrows disappearing into her hairline while Max comes to terms with losing the bitch-off in a hospital room, of all places.
“No ma’am,” Maxine says finally.
“Perfect. do as I say.”
Max nods, pinning Billy with a flat stare. “I’ll be right back, okay?”
He nods.
The second the door shuts behind her, the nurse tears the blanket from Billy’s legs, “You hold him still while I jimmy the sheet out from under him.”
Steve Harrington looks nervous. Comical. “Isn’t there another nurse who can help–”
Billy’s torso lights on fire when the nurse yanks on his bed sheet and one of the elastic corners snaps around his foot like a claw. She’s not gentle but she’s fast. The linen drags him into a sea of pain, Billy’s arms move independent of the rest of his body, yanking the I.V. out of his arm, and he’s embarrassed but he can’t stop. 
Humiliated when the nurse says, “Lay still, sweetheart,” Like his chest isn’t a gaping wound. “You’ll just make it worse for yourself.” 
Billy screams as best he can. Thrashes. Tries to center himself in the reality that Steve Harrington is watching him, nervously shifting his weight from foot to foot.
Billy’s asshole nurse shouts, “Come hold him down, alright?”
Harrington has the nerve to look terrified.
“Alright,” Steve says. “Okay. Yeah.” His jaw squares with determination and then he’s leaning over Billy, palms white-hot and stubborn against Billy’s shoulder caps. 
He smells good, like pine needles.
“Hey,” Steve says, smiling softly, “You’re alright–”
Billy’s nurse yanks the sheets out from under him, jostling Billy up and back down again on the lumpy fucking horrible mattress.
He must scream. 
It must be awful, because Steve rubs his palms up and down, up and down, trying to soothe him, “There we go, Malibu, doing so fuckin’ fantastic,” He says, “Just a little bit longer, right nurse?”
Malibu.
Malibumalibumalibu–
“We still have to sit him up to put the new sheet on the bed,” Billy’s nurse says, just to spite him.
He won’t survive it. He’s being torn apart. Billy thrashes in Steve’s hold. Can’t take it. Won’t–
“Hey. Look at me, Hargrove.”
Billy. Gets lost in the expression on Steve’s face. It reminds him of the court, of a time when Billy wasn’t this pathetic, whimpering mess of torn skin and bones. 
Steve rubs his thumbs, gently, over Billy’s jawline, “I’m not going anywhere. I’m staying right here with you, yeah?”
Billy nods, blinking against tears. 
“Good,” Steve says. He turns to the nurse, “Alright, when do we–”
Billy bends at the waist, sitting heavily in Steve’s arms. 
And.
Death smells like pine. Feels like warm hands, rubbing circles into his back.
He lives.
It’s like the flood gates open. Steve touches Billy whenever he wants, after that, and when Billy goes into surgery to replace the tattered skin on his ribcage, Steve’s there.
Holding Billy’s hand when he falls asleep. Holding Billy’s hand when he wakes up.
Eventually, Steve starts talking.
He brings up high school, which has disappeared into the rear-view of where they are now. Rivalries and broken plates and bloody knuckles don’t matter, anymore, in retro-spect. 
Maybe they never did.
Steve helps him learn to use his vocal cords, again. He waits with patient, sparkling brown eyes, stubbornly insisting Billy can answer small questions.
When it finally happens, Steve calls him a hero.
They share stories, dreams, pudding cups and cold lasagna from the hospital cafeteria. 
Steve Harrington is funny. 
Billy never gave the possibility much thought. Steve’s earnest and loyal and beautiful, but Billy never considered that Steve would say and do things that make Billy laugh so hard his stitches nearly pop. 
The hospital staff hate Steve as much as they adore him, and when Billy learns to sit again, Steve Harrington is right there, holding Billy’s hand. Rubbing circles into his wrist that Billy senses like lightning in the heartland. 
Steve. Has tears clinging to his lashes, looks like he’s never been more proud of anything in all his life, and Billy thinks. He could be worth something, again. Someday.
Worth Steve.
“I’m so fucking proud of you,” Steve says that night, when they’re alone, in the dark. “You’re not what I thought you’d be, you’re. Billy; you’re amazing.”
Billy can talk, again. He thinks he should say something, but the words won’t come.
Maxine has to go home at the end of the day. That’s the deal. 
The hospital Billy’s staying in may know about monsters and dimensional tears but they still make preteens go home to sleep in their own bed once their brothers are out of the woods. It’s the worst part of Billy’s recovery. The dark.
Max fights it, tooth and nail. They both do. 
Round and round she goes with the Doc. She’s his sister. She can’t leave him alone because she doesn’t want to leave him alone, blah-blah-blah, and. 
Maxine screams and cries so much that, eventually, Owens and his goons make an exception. Steve Harrington volunteers to serve as Billy’s discount little sister because he doesn’t have school or a job or a girlfriend. No one to miss his body like Billy does, so.
He's always at the hospital. 
Not much changes, in retrospect, because Steve was there on that first afternoon and he’s there always, day and night and back again, Billy blinks and then suddenly he can’t remember a time when Steve Harrington wasn’t two feet away from him, complaining about whatever cassette tape Max brings from home that week. 
Steve’s only ever gone for an hour at a time. He disappears in the early morning to go home and shower, change his clothes, and then he’s back, again, to keep Max’s cot warm for her while she’s playing Only Child.
Neil never comes to the hospital. Like Billy said. Small victories.
Will Byers is the first to notice that Billy’s a faggot.
Well.
He’s not the first but he’s definitely the most gentle. 
Billy clocks that about him the first time someone knocks on his hospital door and he has to do a double take because Maxine is doing her calculus homework on the cot next to him, and Steve’s the one that pulls himself away from Billy’s dinner long enough to swallow a hunk of cold lasagna to open the door.
Everyone in the entire world who cares about him is already here, but Will Byers leads a group of doe-eyed, worried looking people behind him, all bundled up in winter coats because it’s February. Somehow. 
Billy slept through most of 1985 so he’s shocked when Little Boy Byers is tall enough that his mom looks like a munchkin when she bullies her way into the room. Joyce, Billy thinks she’s called. 
Mrs. Byers introduces herself while she drapes a blanket over the foot of Billy’s hospital bed and scolds Steve Harrington for picking at Billy’s dinner. Freak Byers stands next to his brother looking high and uncomfortable.
Mostly high.
“Waa?” Steve demands, Bambi through and through with a roll sticking out of his mouth, “But. Joyce, Billy said–”
“It’s alright, Mrs. Byers,” Billy tells her, wary when the Chief of Police lumbers over to clap a huge, concerned paw onto Max’s shoulder, “I don’t like the hospital food, anyway–”
“You have to eat, honey,” Joyce says.
Honey. 
Honey feels like Malibu but tastes so, so different.
When Bill doesn’t say anything, Mrs. Byers nods. “I’ll bring you something. And. It’s Joyce.”
“No, that’s alright,” Billy tries to sit, wincing when his chest bandage tugs at the tender, curling pieces of raw across his pecks. Steve leans forward with the lip of a putting cup in his mouth and helps him settle against the pillows, hands warm where they stay, sleeping against his stomach. 
Like he’s worried Billy might stand up and run away.
“Don’t be ridiculous,” Mrs. Byers says, piling another blanket onto the foot of Billy’s bed, “If you’re going to get out of here, you need your strength. You need your food,” Mrs. Byers says, yanking the pudding cup from Steve’s teeth.
She tosses it to him and Steve grabs it from the air.
“Alright, open up, hero,” Steve tears it pop tab loose with his teeth and feeds it to Billy, one spoon full at a time. A little gets on Billy’s nose and Steve uses his thumb to wipe it away, lingering.
“Your nose,” Steve says quietly, voice thick with vanilla, “You’ve got a cute nose. Like a goddamn rabbit.”
Billy smiles. They smile at each other, big and dumb like always, only.
Across the room, Little Boy Byers watches them. 
Billy thinks he might catch on fire.
“I want to take you out of here,” Steve says in the dark. 
It’s late. So late the sky has started to turn silver. 
Steve’s thumb rubs circles into Billy’s wrist, where they’re stuck like paper dolls. It’s the only way Billy can sleep, but. He’s awake, streaming with consciousness when Steve says, “You have to get strong. You have to get better, for me.”
Billy. Feels the press of lips against his hand. Thinks.
He’d crawl if he had to.
Wherever Steve wanted to go, he’d crawl.
He learns to walk. Has to get out of here, someday.
Steve Harrington asks what Billy’s going to do when he gets out of here. 
Doesn’t know that Billy was awake, that night.
Doesn’t realize–
Billy just got the clear to ditch his oxygen tube and it’s got them both giddy. Smiling at each other and the Doc when he says, “Almost home free, son.”
It’s the closest Billy’s felt to joy in longer than he can remember. Steve’s laugh soothes a part of Billy that’s been aching since before the monster made a home inside of him, and the question fills him with an unfamiliar kind of hope.
Steve’s eyes sparkle when he says it. “What are you doing after this?” Like they’re finishing up an afternoon of basketball practice and Steve’s been trying to work up the nerve to ask Billy. Not on a date, but. Something. 
Billy feels naked without his oxygen tube. Exposed. “What do you mean?”
“When you’re strong enough to go home,” Steve says, sinking lower onto Maxine’s cot. She’s at school, and they’re both graduated, so. Steve takes up residence in the daytime, eating Billy’s hospital food and listening to him read whatever books Max leaves behind. 
Usually, they sit close together, thighs pressed close together, but.
Not today.
Billy without an oxygen tube is unstoppable. Free. He almost misses it. Thinks. Can’t be worth it if Steve’s not holding him together.
“I dunno. Maybe I’ll go back to California.”
“Can’t do that,” Steve says, like. Done deal.
“Why not?”
“Because,” Steve says, searching for the words. His nose scrunches like it does when he’s deep in thought and Billy fills in the blanks for him. You can’t leave because we’re friends now, Ghost Steve says, even though they’ll never admit it. You can’t leave because I want to play basketball with you, again, even though Billy’s still about an inch from blowing a fuse when his legs pick up speed. You can’t leave because. 
I love you.
Steve hums, still searching for the words. Billy sits on his hospital bed and waits for him to sort through, heart pounding, until Steve grins at him. “You can’t leave because I need a roommate, Malibu.” Steve decides.
It’s a relief and it’s not. It’s death. 
Billy’s dying. “What?”
“My parents never use the house,” Steve tells him, sitting forward so his elbows leave little indents on his thighs. Billy’s always thinking about Steve’s thighs. “I have a million empty rooms. Empty beds.”
“Plural,” Billy teases.
“Yeah. I was born with a silver fuckin’ spoon in my mouth, sue me.”
“I’m not a charity case.”
“You’re not a charity case,” Steve says, grinning, “You’re my roommate.”
Billy imagines it, as those brown eyes pin him to the hospital bed. Steve Harrington in his space, or Billy in his, always. Forever. 
Billy shrugs. Nothing hurts so much he can’t breathe, anymore. Not in the physical sense. “I can’t.”
“Why not? Better offer?”
“No. I’m an invalid.”
“So am I,” Steve says, “Mentally.”
“You’re not, you’re–” Perfect. Billy ignores Steve’s eyes as the go soft and gooey, cookies fresh from the oven. “I can’t make you take care of me.”
“I want to,” Steve says loudly. Stubborn like Billy. Like Max. “I like taking care of you–”
“We weren’t friends before.”
“That doesn’t matter, I didn’t know you before.”
Billy smirks, “And you know me now?”
“Yeah,” Steve pokes at him with one cold index finger and leaves it there, “Yeah, I. C’mon. Move in with me. Let take you out of here.”
In the middle of night sometime just after May Day, 1986, Steve Harrington has a nightmare. Maybe he was always having them.
Billy wakes slowly and then all at once, surprised that the pain doesn’t knock him out cold, anymore. Apparently. Steve is a shaking meld of blanket on the cot next to the hospital bed. Billy can just make out the pad of Steve’s foot where it vibrates, toes flexing the cotton expanse of his sock like he’s climbing something, in never-never land.
Billy lies awake and counts the steady beep-beep-beep of his heart monitor, too afraid to get up because Steve’s monsters might eat his head and crawl out of the mass of him, plopping wet and slimy onto the hospital floor.
But.
Steve thrashes violently, and Billy can’t take it anymore.
“Harrington—”
Steve huddles away from the sound of Billy’s voice and it’s a war, not to take it personally, to harness his bravery and toss his blanket to the side, to shuffle off of his lumpy and uncomfortable mattress and stand over the cot, thinking he’s not afraid of me. We’re friends now. Steve–
“Steve,” Billy tries again, teeth clenched against the sound Harrington makes in the throes of his nightmare. Like he’s being chased. Hunted. He twists under the blanket, and the dull, eerie light from Billy’s health monitor catches the sweat on Steve’s forehead, and. The fuckin’ look on his face–
“Please,” Billy says thickly, “Please, Harrington, wake up–” 
Steve jolts, ripped out of dreaming by Billy’s hand on his shoulder. The usual calm, sugary warmth of his eyes has disappeared and he zero’s in on Billy, face contorted with rage and fear. 
Steve swings wildly, shoving until Billy falls back onto the hospital bed. Harrington watches the fall, coming back to himself just as the air knocks loose from Billy’s lungs.
He hurts, again. Like last summer. Like he always has, the beautiful boy in front of him flashing like lightning, and. 
For just a moment. Looks like Billy’s father.
“Billy,” Steve says, cheeks dripping with emotion, “Billy, I’m so–”
Billy flinches away from him on impulse, and.
Steve cracks. Breaks. Before Billy can tell him that it’s okay, it was accident, Billy’s stronger than he used to be–
Harrington bolts from the room, door slamming shut behind him.
Freak Byers starts driving Max to the hospital.
Billy can’t say he’s surprised when the only people who come to see him are his sister and her stupid little friends, riding their bikes to spend all day at the hospital when the weather is nice enough. 
They’re loud and annoying but Billy likes them. Will, at least. 
Steve vanishes, so.
It hurts and it doesn’t. They were on to something good, before that night, something Billy wants with the same intensity that he needs air and water. He’s grateful, in a way, that the possibility of roommates has died before it ever began. 
Less he can fuck up. Less that can make him bleed.
Bygones. All that.
On July 20th, a year after death, Billy moves into Joyce Byers’ house because he has nowhere else to go.
It’s as simple as Will Byers helping Billy into the clothes he brings from Jonathan’s closet, clutching Billy’s elbow until Joyce’s tiny brown car swings into view. “Let’s go home,” Will says.
So they do.
Steve never comes to visit.
Two months after moving into the Byers’, his Camaro appears in the driveway good as fuckin’ new. On the windshield they’ve taped a check for five hundred thousand dollars and a note that says, sorry for your loss.
Billy watched a monster tear his only friend in half, dozens of people in half, and all of them were carted around in this fuckin’ car like lambs to the slaughter. 
He had to learn to walk again.
It’s good to know what their lives are worth, Billy guesses. What Big Brother is willing do to keep him quiet.
“I saw you, once,” Will says, not long after Billy settles onto the couch. 
The Byers’ place smells like pancakes and cigarettes all the time and it’s fuckin’ weird. Joyce is trying to quit for Billy and so is Hopper even though they don’t know that Freak Byers rolls joints for him, and the whole thing is huge and uncomfortable. Like how kids hide things from their parents to protect them.
Billy’s starts to think of the living room as his. 
All that time he hid on Cherry Lane in that fuckin’ room and all it takes is the soft care of Joyce Byers and a beer from Jim Hopper and Billy’s home. The safest he’s ever felt even though he’s out in the open and vulnerable to Will Byers’ soft declarations. Eleven’s wide, staring eyes.
Billy looks up from the book he was reading, startled, “Huh?”
Will fidgets in the doorway, dressed and ready for the first day of school. Billy resists the urge to snap at him, spit it the fuck out. Will’s not tough like Maxine. He’d melt, probably. Keel over, and. Billy likes the kid. 
Sue him. 
So he waits, fiddling with the worn edge of his library book, until Will exhales everything all at once. “I saw Steve Harrington feed you pudding at the hospital that day, when you were just learning to talk and walk again–”
The book falls shut.
“--He said you were cute. That you have a nose like a rabbit. And. I was just wondering,” Will says, choking on his words, “I was just thinking. That.”
“Don’t think about it,” Billy says. “Steve and I–”
“--I just–”
“Will,” He says softly. Thinks he should probably be afraid. Hopper’s in the kitchen. Joyce is at work, and. She won’t be able to stop him if Hop gets the wrong idea about Billy. Or the right one. 
But.
He knows he’s safe. In the pit of his stomach, curling like warmth through his bones, Billy knows it.
They’re safe, here.
Will shakes his head. Afraid of other things, himself maybe, so. He shakes his whole body. “Billy, I think I might. I might be–”
“I’m driving you to school,” Billy stands up, his blanket falling to the ground. 
It’s hot enough now that Billy’s arms stick to the leather in the Camaro. 
He doesn’t let anyone ride with him, but not for the reasons he used to pull out of his ass pre-’85. Now it’s wrapped in bodies, the skin of dozens and dozens of people who will never make it home because–
Will is silent most of the way, fingers white-knuckle on his knee caps.
Billy loosens his hands on the wheel and it feels like his knuckles are breaking. He itches for a cigarette. Plays Eagles instead. Waits for the other shoe to drop.
They’re parked in front of the high school, watching the excitement of everyone’s first day, when Will says, “I think I like boys,” and. 
His voice cracks under a pressure unlike anything Billy’s ever heard.
He gets it. And he doesn’t. 
In his own life it was never news. Neil let him know what was happening right away. Three letters thrown back at him, sharp enough to leave scars in their wake.
This is supposed to be news, for Will Byers. The end of the world. Billy’s supposed to look over at the kid and call him a faggot, tell him he’s an abomination, fuckin’. Whatever. He won’t, though. Pot calling the kettle, right?
Billy watches hundreds of teenagers on their path toward a higher education. “Me too,” He says. Life goes on.
Will turns to him, shocked. “You do?”
Billy’s closet is glass. Always was. “Thought you saw me and Steve.”
“I didn’t know Steve likes–”
“He doesn’t,” Billy replies, not. Swallowing. His throat might click with unshed tears. Break and split open, so. “He’s just. Good. A good person, to me.”
“I understand,” Will tells him, “My friend, Mike, is. He’s like that, too. Not like us.”
Us. 
Billy breaks for him. Didn’t think he was capable of it, but. 
He breaks, anyway.
In November, Billy opens the door to his bedroom and Steve Harrington is sitting on the couch right where Billy sets his pillow every night. He jumps to his feet, hands balled at his sides as if caught. Guilty of something else, and all Billy can think about is burning his hand-me-down pillow and sleepin’ with his nose pressed to the place Harrington was sat, watching the front door.
“Billy–”
“I’ve been calling all day,” Maxine says, steamrolling him. She grins at Billy, planted firmly in Hopper’s chair. Queen of the castle. 
Neil doesn’t like them to see each other, so. 
Billy’s chest expands like a springtime rose at the sound of her voice. He doesn’t take his eyes off of Steve, “I don’t sit around waiting for you to call me, Max, I’m not glued to the phone.”
Steve flushes red. Spilled paint.
“You should be, it’s the only way I can ever get a hold of you,” Steve’s bright yellow sweater is eclipsed by red when Max pulls Billy into a hug, crushing him. “How are you?”
He doesn’t take his eyes off of Steve, “I’m fine.”
“Good, is Will home?”
Billy looks at her, then. “I thought you were here to see me?”
“No. We’re starting a new campaign and you happen to live here, now, I figured,” Maxine pinches him, “Two birds one stone.”
“Great, thanks,” Billy rolls his eyes, padding toward the kitchen, “He’s probably over at the Wheeler’s. Did you check there?”
“No,” Max says, “Steve–”
“Fuck Steve,” Billy says, not caring. Caring so, so much. “They’ll be back soon. If the station wagon’s gone that means Joyce went to grab him.”
Max hovers in the doorway, frowning when Billy digs through the refrigerator for a beer. 
Her eyes are blue like his, judgmental like his. “You’re not supposed to drink that shit,” Max tells him, wrinkling her nose.
Billy cracks the pop top. “And you’re not supposed to play DND on a school night.”
“Things are different, now.”
They watch each other, silent, until the front door swings open and a hundred teenagers swarm the living room. Max hugs him once, right around the middle, before following their voices to Will's room. The door slams shut and all the fuckin’ racket gives way to muffled silence.
Different.
Things are different now.
Billy leans against the sink and sips his beer. Waits for Joyce or Freak Byers to round the corner into the kitchen until he remembers that they’ve both got work tonight and Hop’s at the cabin.
Joyce does that. Carts teenagers around in between shifts at the general store because she’s a good mom. Good person. 
Steve Harrington appears, arms crossed over his chest. “Fuck Steve, huh?”
Billy’s heart thunders in his chest. It’s been months, and. 
He shrugs.
The air rushes from Steve’s lungs. “Don’t have to be an asshole about it.”
“That’s just what I am,” Billy says, “An asshole.”
“Maybe.”
Billy holds his can out, “Want a beer?”
Steve stares at him. Then the slick rim of the can. Then at Billy. “No.”
“Suit yourself,” Billy says. “Where’ve you been?”
“Playing chauffeur, I guess.”
“Couldn’t stop to say hi in between shifts?”
Steve flushes. “Billy–”
“You never came to see me again,” Billy says, “You disappeared. I made it out of the hospital and–”
“I shoved you, Billy.”
“It was a nightmare.”
“Right. Exactly,” Steve shakes his head, like. It doesn’t matter. But the thing is, Billy knows shoving with intent. He knows men who plot to draw blood, and he knows monsters and Steve, just. 
Isn’t that.
He is an asshole, though. “Maxine couldn’t ride her bike over?” 
And Steve folds like a house of cards. “C’mon, you know Neil doesn’t let her ride that thing around, especially when it’s cold like this.”
“I know Neil. He was my dad.”
Steve looks ready for a fight. Poised to run at any second. 
Billy’s never been more exhausted in his entire life. “Glad you can be her big brother, now.”
“Billy–”
“No, they’re some huge fuckin’ shoes to fill. I’m dead, anyway.”
“You’re not dead–”
Billy tosses the can into Joyce’s recycling bin. It clatters and causes a scene and Billy wants to take it back. Steve deflates like a balloon. “Shouldn't you rinse that before you throw it away?”
“Yeah well. I make a shitty roommate.”
Steve watches, spooked, as Billy shoves past him and disappears.
Christmas 1986 and January, 1987 come and go. 
Joyce gets him a sweater. 
Billy wonders if he’ll ever feel alive again.
In April, he starts to miss the sea. 
Conscious enough to think of home.
“I think–”
Max stares at him, a cigarette pinched between two fingers. 
“--I think I want to see California.”
She cut her hair over spring break so it twists, too lazy to be called a curl, under the determined jut over her chin. It’s what girls are doing, in 1987. Cutting all their hair off. Max looks older, all of a sudden, and Billy doesn’t know when he missed it. 
She hands him the cigarette because he’s comin’ up on two years post recovery and, dramatics aside, he could shave a couple years off the impending decades. The smoke burns through his lungs pleasantly, paints the sky purple when he lets it go. 
“You want to see California,” Max repeats, staring out across the quarry as the words settle on her tongue, “Like–”
“--I think I could stand a change of scenery.”
She takes the cigarette from him. “That’s not a change, you’ve lived there for most of your life.”
“I’m not looking for LBC, I want–”
“--Mountains?”
Billy thinks about it. Really, he wants two-thousand miles between him and everything, but. “Yeah,” he says, because it’s simple. Low stakes. “Mountains could be good, like. A cure.”
“Like tuberculosis victims?”
“Sure. Claws aren’t that different.”
Maxine snorts. They smoke for an eternity in silence, basking in the sunset, and Billy thinks she’s on board. She’s okay with it, because she’s older now, but then she throws the lit cherry at him and it scathes his jaw. Sears him to the bone. 
“Ow, Maxine, what the fuck–”
“You’re pathetic,” She says, full of venom.
“Probably.”
“Why are you always running away?” Max slides off the car hood and gets in his face, and Billy.
Two years ago he would’ve–
He can’t think that way anymore. 
“Max–”
“So, what? You save everyone and become the hero and fuckin’. Sulk around for two years like a dickbag and now you want to run away? Just when everyone’s starting to love–”
“No one fuckin’ loves me,” Billy says. A non answer. Tastes like a lie, but. It’s the truth. He clears his throat. “I don’t want to run away.”
Max shoves him, “I love you. Asshole.”
“I know. Love you too.”
“Don’t I count?”
Billy grabs her hand, “Of course you do, dipshit. The most.” Maxine’s crying for real, now. Billy hates it so fuckin’ much. 
“Can I come?”
“Your a minor,” Billy supplies. Regrets it more than anything that he’s got to leave her behind, but. “Don’t worry. Not about anything, alright? Steve’ll–”
Max shoves him again, “This is about Steve Harrington, isn’t it?”
“No.” Billy lies.
“Steve’s going to–”
“--He’s not gonna do anything,” Billy snarls, “He’s not. We haven’t spoken in months.”
“He always asks about you,” Max says simply, and. 
Billy’s got a flat tire. It lets all the air out of the sky. It shouldn’t matter, shouldn’t put his brakes on, but. 
He blinks. “Okay.”
“You’re so fucking stupid,” Max says. “He’s not going to let you leave, Billy. Not without–”
“--He doesn’t get a say, in this.”
Maxine stares at him, eyes polished like Riverstone. “Are you going to say goodbye to him? At least?” 
“No.”
“Alright,” Max says. She shoves him again, “Dumbass. I hate you. I hate you so much–”
Billy hugs her. 
Loves her, just. So much his chest aches and burns like he’s back in the hospital, day one, July 20th, 1985, and. 
He thinks.
Worries about how many people he knows he can’t say goodbye to.
Will takes it the hardest. June just makes the pain turn raspberry on his cheeks and Billy hates to see him cry, so. He isn’t surprised when Little William locks himself in his bedroom to make shit easier on the both of them.
Freak Byers hugs Billy, slips a joint in his pocket, ruffles his hair.
Hopper gives him a beer. The last they’ll share in all the world. Maxine tells him to call. El tells him to write, and.
Joyce Byers slips a sheet of paper in his glove compartment. 
It sits funny, in retrospect. He took his hush-money and ran off to the sea and she left him something to remember her by, and that’s death. Burial. It’s her fault and it’s not. It’s the thing that breaks the dam. The last straw and suddenly the weight of everything is too much. 
Really, it starts before that. With the rumble of truck tires into the cracked driveway of a new home, thousands of miles from the sea. It begins with the pier, months before that. A boy with beautiful brown eyes that could only ever raise suspicion in Neil’s gut because he was right about this. Everything. Billy. 
Truthfully, it starts with a phone call and a shitty, half-baked apology from a woman Billy would never see again. 
He isn’t smart enough to keep track, though. 
So he almost dies and then doesn’t, and decides pretty quickly that it's Joyce. It starts and ends with summer air licking at the tender, still-healing pink of a hole punched through his chest 630 days ago. It begins with the glove box, and a note that’s gotta weigh less than an ounce.
It starts with Joyce Fuckin’ Byers.
Billy figures maybe Hop did the dirty work for her. That he took a rolled-down window as an invitation, once Billy caved on the beer he was always offering and let it spill that he was leaving so they thought. Now is the time for action. Hop slipped the thing in between Billy’s vehicle registration and insurance proof when he wasn���t looking. He played his part.
The paper is definitely from Joyce, though. 
He’s seen her handwriting, before, all over the fuckin’ place, swooping, swirling cursive that reminds her to get milk the next time she’s at Melvalds. Billy’s seen it pinned to the fridge in sappy, sweet-sick notes that she leaves for Hop and Freak Byers and Byers’ little brother, telling them to eat something while she’s gone, to remember to take out the trash, fuckin’. Whatever.
Point is, Billy knows it was her. And when he finally digs it out of the glove box, when he runs into it looking for an old pack of smokes somewhere outside of Nebraska, it’s folded in half three times and stamped with his name and feels like an attack.
Billy. 
Only, Joyce calls him William when it’s something heavy and important, so. William. Might as well be, as far as Billy’s concerned. 
Billy, she starts. Good a place as any, sparking a fuse she isn’t equipped to monitor. He doesn’t deserve shared beers and hidden notes.
Billy, Joyce says, with all the weight of William. I know that you’re having a hard time adjusting. I should’ve checked on you but I wasn’t sure what to say and now you’re gone. I wasn’t always the best mother to my own kids, and sometimes old habits die hard. I know you’ve had a hard life, even though you never talk about it, and I know all of this shit must hurt like hell, but you have to know that I’m proud of you for everything. Making it out of the hospital in one piece. Especially that–
His palms sweat, smearing the page when he flattens it against the wheel, smoothing its surface in the moonlight so he can read it, and can’t, because Hop insisted they have one more beer before Billy took off for the coast, and now–
We should’ve checked on you before. That’s all I want to say. You’re a good kid, Billy. You pretend not to be, but you are, and seeing you with Hop, how he loves you like a son…I’m here for you. We all are. I’ve included a list of phone numbers you can call any time. We’re here to help–
Phone numbers for both Wheeler kids. And Lucas Sinclair. And Dustin Henderson. And the Byers’ place. 
Call anytime, Joyce says. 
Anyone. Anytime.
Seeing you with Hop, how he loves you like a son–
Billy sniffs and chokes on a sudden, violent wave of emotion. Joyce Byers doesn’t know what the fuck she’s talking about.
He should’ve said goodbye to the one person that came second to mattering the most.
It eats at him, tearing away chunks of his flesh with small, sharp teeth. He moves into his new apartment by the sea and thinks about drowning himself in it.
A month after landing in California things are different.
Worse.
He tries not to think about Steve Harrington, who he hasn’t spoken to since that cold, shitty night in November when they shed each other’s apologies like old winter coats.
Everyone else came to say goodbye, but. 
Not Steve. Should be a clear enough answer that what they had was nothing but that doesn’t matter to Billy. Could never matter. Steve’s memory comes up like gray water in the bathroom sink. Not there one day, and then. 
There.
Sits like a ghost in the corner in the same outfit he wore the last time Billy saw him, delivering Maxine to a brand new campaign. Soft yellow sweater like swallowing canyons in the morning light.
“You look like shit,” Billy tells him. The Doctors said it could happen, off and on, for the rest of his life. Seeing the dead and the left behind, it’s the cruel result of playing bitch to an interdimensional monster. Taking a claw through the chest and surviving an IV drip of internal bleeding that still acts up when Billy takes a fist to the head.
It never happened, when he was in Hawkins, but. 
That’s just Bill’s luck. It’s a punishment. He’s in hell. No two ways about it, because.
Ghost Steve Harrington shrugs his yellow shoulders and everything looks worse, here. Drab. Billy thinks California wasn’t made for gray weather but since it’s November, the sea foam has scrubbed the color from everything until only acid remains.
Ghost Steve’s sweater looks brown in Billy’s bedroom. 
Billy gets used to him, more or less. Ghost Steve never says anything, but he watches Billy fall into bed every night and his eyes spell judgment. Why don’t you unpack these boxes? Why haven’t you used any of that green to buy a half-decent setup? Why don’t you call Joyce, you know she worries–
Once, Billy throws a pillow at Ghost Steve Harrington’s head. “Go away, already.”
Billy wonders if the real Steve, alive Steve, is as pretty as his memory makes out for him. 
He is. Always was.
Billy hates himself. “You’re not real, you know. You’re alive. Most of you is alive, back in Hawkins.”
Ghost Steve just smiles at him, slow and terrible as if to say I’m dead here and so are you. 
It fucking sucks. Billy tugs the blanket over his head and ignores Steve Harrington the Ghost. He ignores everything until it starts coming up like sludge in the bathroom sink.
Billy writes a letter to the only person in the world who understands what it feels like to harbor shit for a man who never once noticed him, until they had each other’s blood under their nails. 
So.
As soon as the landline is installed, Billy breaks his rule and scribbles the number down, addressing the envelope to Little William Byers, Who Can Always Hold His Water.
415. 667. 8224. For Emergencies only.
From, Big William Hargrove. 
Will can be trusted. Billy worries about him and it’s a roiling, sore-spot weakness. He’s terrified that Will’s made up his mind to never speak to Billy again.
He sends the letter, anyway. 
Billy starts seeing other people, too. In his house. On the street. 
Ghost Steve Harrington isn’t too thrilled with all the extra company, but the only other memory in the world brave enough to stand in his bedroom used to tuck him into his He-Man pajamas at night, so. Nothing Martha Hargrove hasn’t seen before. 
Billy starts to wonder if he’s going crazy.
Heather’s got dominion over the bathroom. Looks exactly like the last time Billy saw her, in that dumb-fucker Lifeguard uniform, except her arm is gone. Torn away. Little bits of her blood get on Billy’s cheek when she turns from her reflection in the mirror, eyes brimming with vitriol and lost potential as if to say, you fed me to that thing. We were friends, Billy, I was your only friend–
“You’re not real,” Billy tells her. Pisses in the toilet bowl, as if to prove his point. 
Heather’s not real. 
None of it’s real. 
A week before Thanksgiving Billy calls to tell Joyce he’s suffocating. To tell her that he misses Freak Byers and his little brother so much that Billy can’t breathe sometimes, and it’s Joyce’s fuckin’ fault. She’s a bitch, and Hop’s a loser, and he misses them both so much that he’s packed and unpacked and repacked his apartment four times because California doesn’t feel like home anymore. 
He misses the couch. He wants the dead to stay buried. He wants to go home.
So Billy drinks a bottle of schnapps and calls to say that Joyce can go fuck herself hard, Billy hates her for turning him into this, but Steve Harrington answers the phone.
It’s two o’clock in the morning Hawkins time, so Billy hangs up.
Steve calls back immediately, “Everyone’s asleep,” He says, voice rough with unuse. “Make it quick.”
Billy’s killed himself thinking about Steve, like this. Fresh from sleep. Warm. “Uh,” He says intelligently, “Sorry.”
“Who is this?”
He wonders if Ghost Steve is still in the bedroom, or if he went back to Hawkins. Floating on the clouds. “This is, uh. This is Billy.”
“Billy Hargrove?” Like he didn’t spend months in Billy’s hospital room. Didn’t cry when Billy learned to walk again.
“Yes.”
“Hi,” Steve says, soft. 
So warm and fleece-lined with emotion that Billy wants to curl up inside of it and never, ever leave. Something ruffles as Steve shifts his weight, waking up a little bit. “Hold on, Bill, let me–”
“No,” Billy says, “She’s asleep. You don’t need to wake her up.”
“You called.”
“I know.”
“She won’t want to miss you, you never call.”
“I know, alright? I just. I don’t want to wake her up,” Billy says, swallowing against the threat of tears. He hates Joyce but he doesn’t want to make anything worse than he already has by just. Living.
“Are you serious?” Steve snorts like Billy’s the most ridiculous, stupid fucker on the planet. “You called at two o’clock in the morning and you don’t want to wake her up?”
“Yeah, I guess.”
“That’s so weird.”
Billy sniffs, exhausted, “Who asked you?”
“Nobody,” Steve tells him easily, “No one, I just think–”
“Why the fuck do you care enough to think about it or me or Joyce?” Billy snaps. The receiver groans a little in his fist, “It’s not any of your business–”
“--You know I care about you, Billy.”
“Do I?” Billy sips at his bottle, angry enough to see red, “You say shit in the dark. When you’re tired. When–”
“Hey, dickshit, you woke me up.”
“It’s not dickshit, it’s dip shit–”
“--Okay–”
“Fuckin’ Einstein.”
Steve doesn’t hang up. Billy considers it, seething until he takes another swig, and then Steve asks, “Are you alright?” 
The world comes to a sudden, screeching halt. The tender pink and still-healing parts of himself inflate with vulnerability, which only makes him angry. “I’m fine.”
“Really?”
“Yes, asshole.” 
“You’re drunk and it’s two in the morning–”
“--It’s only midnight where I am–”
“--Well, people who are actually fine don’t drink schnapps at midnight on a fuckin’ Tuesday.”
Billy freezes, back going ram-rod straight against the drywall. “How. How’d you know–”
“Only schnapps gets you slurring like that,” Steve says. Then, catching himself, “I mean ‘you,’ as in. The royal you.”
They partied in high school. Never together, but near. Billy–
It feels like a lie. He lets it go.
“I don’t know what schnapps does to you, as in. Billy Hargrove.”
I miss the way you say my name, Billy doesn’t tell him. He tosses the bottle back, swallowing fire as it bubbles up the lining of his throat. “Kay, well. Tell Joyce I called.”
“You could call back tomorrow and tell her yourself.”
“No,” Billy says, fiddling with the hole in his jeans. 
“Why not?”
“Because it’s none of your fucking business, Harrington, that’s why.”
“She worries about you,” Steve says, fully awake now. Sitting, probably. 
Billy tries not to get caught up in the mental image of Steve Harrington with bed-head and pillow lines on his cheeks and blankets pooling around his hips. 
Fails. 
Steve says, “Joyce loves–”
“--Why are you sleeping at her house?” Billy demands. Remembering himself. Remembering that the couch used to be his, before he ran away. 
“I get nightmares,” Steve says. Billy knows that. Billy knows– 
“Bullshit,” He’s angry about it. What tore them apart. “What’s there to be afraid of, anymore?”
“I saw you get punched through the chest,” Steve says, “On July Fourth. I was up there in the rafters, and I just. Saw. Does something to a nineteen year old, you know?”
He was there after, too. Until he wasn’t.
Billy’s palms grow wet and clammy against the bottle.
He has the sudden and familiar urge to apologize. Sorry Steve had to see that. Sorry the image of it meant nothing, in the long run. Nickels and dimes. He lived and, really, what was the trauma for?
Billy opens his mouth, chin wobbling and–
“Is that why you. The hospital. Why you–”
“Shit, it’s late,” Steve yawns. “I’ll tell her you called.”
“Sure,” Billy says, scrubbing the wet on his cheeks. “Thanks. Appreciate it.”
“No problem.”
Max sends him letters. Another thing he caves into, later on.
For Emergencies only. 
From, Billy Hargrove. 
She writes immediately. The envelopes are always crinkled by fingertips and nails, the ink always smudged with tears and grief. He has to imagine that they get that way, dilapidated because a journey across six states can’t be easy on them.
He can’t imagine Max crying as she writes to him. Can’t imagine her crying at all. 
He thinks about her in that house, sometimes. 
He hopes. Prays. The guilt swallows him whole.
– 
Billy develops a system for determining if the person he’s talking to is real. 
“You’re a beach bum,” The guy says. All tanned skin and small, curved lips. No black sludge leaks from his eyes, so. 
Real. Things have gotten worse on the coast.
Billy stares up at him from the sand, counting the seconds. He doesn’t have a towel. Joyce tried to get him to take some, one, but Billy is the spitting image of his father. Old habits die hard, so. He’s got minerals seeping through the holes in his pants and his hands feel grimy, covered in sea stuff for his pride.
“I see you here,” The guy says, “Every day.”
“Sure.”
“Ain’t you got a job, man?”
Billy turns his attention back to the waves. The foam.
“Guess not,” The guy shifts his weight, blocking dull gray sunlight. “You from around here?”
“LBC, originally,” Billy says, surprising himself. He pulls his knees to his chest with a burst of salty, stinging wind off the shore. Somewhere, about a mile into the deep past Manila landing, something massive is rotting in the waves. Feeding the ecosystem. Circle of life, and all that.
The guy nods, “What brings you to Arcata?”
“Just moved back from the midwest.”
“Mm, Chicago?”
“No, Indiana.” Billy says, not in the mood for conversation.
“Got used to small and shitty, then?”
Billy laughs, surprising himself. It's the first noise he’s made in weeks with a person who’s not caught in a ten-second delay over his landline. Feels okay. Weird. “Yeah,” Billy determines, “I like that Arcata’s on the bay and not wide open. Out there, you know?” Billy gestures to the ocean with his sleeve cuff.
Can’t see the other side of it. Landlocked or not.
The guy seems to understand. He watches the shoreline for a long while and then he says, “What’s in Indiana?”
Monsters. My sister. Shadows. “Nothing,” Billy says. “That’s why I’m on the beach.”
“Nothing here either, amigo,” The guy says, grinning slow and easy, “Looks like you traded shit for shit.”
“Alright. Thanks.”
“I’m Argyle,” Argyle says. 
“Billy,” He lifts his hand toward the sky for a shake, just like his daddy taught him. 
Argyle just nods at him, chewing on the inside of his cheek. Billy’s palm falls, dejected, to the sand. 
They watch the shoreline. They watch a seagull try and swallow a crab and then laugh when its throat is nearly torn open from the inside. It’s good to laugh. Weird. Dark thing to find humor in.
“I own a surf place,” Argyle says when the seagull takes flight. “Ever heard of it?”
There are a million out here. “Sure.”
“Not really a surf place, in the conventional sense. I do longboards too. And Mary Jane. Pizza, for Miss Mary’s lovers.”
Billy nods, pulling his knees close again, watching sand tumble from the grip of his leg hair. 
Argyle sparks something that looks like a cigarette and smells like a joint. “You need a job?”
“What kinda job is it?”
“Selling surf supplies. Longboards and weed and pizza–”
“Is that legal?”
“Not yet. Legalize gluten,” Argyle says, with a triumphant fist.
Billy shrugs so Argyle shrugs, casting shadows. Teasing. “If you ain’t got a job, how’d you afford to leave LBC for Indiana, and then bum-fuck for Arcata?”
“Big Brother hush-money,” Billy says, serious as a heart attack but Argyle laughs, and like. 
The skies, fuckin’. Break. Open and pour. 
It’s the best thing Billy’s ever heard. The timbre of it licks at the pink, still-healing skin on Billy’s chest through his jumper. Argyle’s lilting, chaotic beat lights him up and magically casts itself out of Billy’s lungs until they’re laughing at each other. Laughing together. 
It’s weird. Good.
“You’re a bizarre fuckin’ guy, beach bum.”
Billy shrugs, again, self-conscious. “Where’s your shop?”
Argyle points over Billy’s shoulder at a small, driftwood shack he hadn’t noticed today, or yesterday, or last week. The sign looks brand new. Says, Surfer Boy Pizza, In bright, shining letters.
“That’s her,” Argyle says, in love.
Billy stares at the shoreline. “That’s a dump.”
“Hey, I’ve had to hoard money from the Government. We’re not all as lucky as you,” Argyle grins, slow and easy, “You want the job or not? Could use a little silence in the shop. The other guy I work with, Eddie, he’ll talk your fuckin’ ear off about nothing if you give him the chance. Look to me like you won’t give anyone a chance.”
Billy feels like he’s been doused in cold water. 
He rocks back and forth, breathing in and out until the feeling passes, “Maybe,” He says. The best he can do. A non-answer. A remedy.
“Alright, well. Stop in sometime, if you get bored staring at the ocean,” Argyle grins at him, beaming itself onto Billy’s face until they’re mirror images. “Freak.”
Billy watches a lot of T.V. 
His living room is cast in a permanent silver hue, painting his hair gray and his lips purple. All that money rotting in his bank account and he’s only pitched together enough to buy a standard television box, and a place for her to sit, and a place for him to sit. 
His apartment is functional, like a prison. His kitchen is made of one bowl, one cup, one spoon (because he can saw into things with its blunt edge, should anything ever come to that), and a hot plate. He doesn’t have a skillet or a soup pot or anything so the shit is practically useless.
He eats dollar tacos from the hut. 
He starves. 
He drinks enough water and beer to send fluid leaking from his pores, and he watches T.V. 
Always. Blue.
This close to Christmas, all three stations are swamped with targeted Ads. Can’t go half a beer without enduring another fuckin’ commercial, selling sneakers and Atari game consoles and brand new VW station wagons. 
Billy chugs another PBR and thinks he could buy a hundred VW station wagons, thanks to Big Brother. He could buy a private plane, and an eight-bedroom house on the coast, and if he ever runs out of green there’ll be more where that came from. That’s the perk of getting possessed by a monster, so. 
Billy finds a scrap of newspaper border and jots down the number that flashes across the screen. Thinks, he could probably visit VW tomorrow. Could pay for the entire thing in cash. Could pack a bag and drive back to the Midwest–
Hallway through an ad for hair plugs, the phone starts to ring. Billy ignores the shrill ding of the bell until it stops. Starts up again. Stops. Starts.
Eventually he yanks his telephone off the hook, swallowing a mouthful of beer. “What.”
“That’s not how you’re supposed to answer the phone.”
Billy pulls away, staring at the receiver. “Who is this?”
“Steve.”
“Steve Harrington?” Billy asks, a mockery of their first phone call. Like Steve didn’t take care of him in the hospital. Wasn’t there when Billy learned to walk again. When Steve doesn’t say anything back, Billy swallows. “It’s two o’clock in the morning.”
“You were kind enough to call at two my time, thought I’d return the favor.”
His stomach swoops, low and dangerous. “That was weeks ago, now.”
“You never called Joyce.”
“So?”
“So, I promised I’d do a wellness check.” 
Billy mutes the T.V., his arms breaking out in goose pimples with Steve’s next inhale. Feeling warm breath against his cheek from two thousand miles away. 
“Well. I’m alive.”
“Barely. Tell Joyce that.” Steve Harrington exhales into the phone. Billy imagines cigarette smoke and fire. 
Wishes it could burn him to the ground. “Look, I appreciate you reaching out or whatever, looking me up in the phone book so I can apologize to Joyce for being the shittiest of all her adopted children–”
“--I didn’t look for you in the phone book–”
Billy’s mouth dries up, tacky and uncomfortable. 
“--No one could look for you in the phone book. Way you run your life, you don’t exist, Hargrove.”
Billy stands. His knees crack. “How’d you get this number?” Sounds like a shitty, drunken cop in a shitty, dark thriller/drama about his shitty, shitty life.
“I asked Joyce.” Steve says easily. The hero.
“Where did she get this number?”
“From Max.”
Billy’s stomach swoops. “That’s bullshit. Max knows my address, not my phone number.”
“Maybe Joyce got it from someone else, maybe she didn’t, maybe she found it on a crumpled piece of paper that was thrown into the trash,” Steve says, “Does it really matter?”
“Yes. You had no right to do that,” Billy says, voice shaking. He wonders if Will threw his note away. If he’s angry. “None of you have any right to do this to me–”
“Totally,” Steve says, “Your sister has no right to know where you are. Joyce, who put a roof over your head for a year after you left the hospital, is supposed to stop worrying and missing you because you want it. Screwed that we care about you, the asshole who saved the town and all our lives and the fuckin’ world, on top of that.” 
We. 
Screwed that we care about you.
Billy’s stomach is full of rocks, roiling and knocking into one another. They throw him off balance and send river water pulsing up his throat. He’s drowning, he–
“You can’t save everyone and then disappear.”
Billy swallows. “I didn’t.”
“You didn’t even say goodbye, Billy.”
“Neither did you,” Billy says, furious. “Before that. At the hospital–”
“I don’t want to hurt you, okay? I. When I pushed–”
“Stop,” Billy says, “Please. Stop.”
“Sure,” Steve Harrington scoffs, full of rage. “My bad. Forgot you can’t accept that you’re a regular fuckin’ hometown hero and I’m a piece of shit.”
Billy hates this. He left Hawkins, to. To get away from this, and. He ran.
Might as well admit that, now.
Billy must make a noise, must fall apart, because. Steve’s stubble scrapes against the phone. “Billy. Look, I–”
“What do you want?” Billy’s voice shakes. Sounds weak. 
Harrington doesn’t seem to hear. “I just called to check on you.”
“Feels more like you’re beating me over the head with a rock.”
“Funny,” Steve says, “Cain and Abel, right?”
“You know what I mean.”
“Not really,” Steve tells him. An awkward silence yawns between them, stretching on until Billy thinks the call must’ve dropped, and then; “I didn’t call to check on you.”
Billy snorts. “And after all the steam you put into that speech?” He’s grateful that they’re even, now. Neither looking down their nose at the other. Liars and crooks, two of a kind. “Jesus Christ, what will Joyce say?” 
“I haven’t slept in two days. I’ve tried everything, but. I keep thinking about Starcourt.”
It takes the air out of Billy’s lungs. 
“I can’t stop thinking about you,” Steve mumbles. Soft enough that Billy isn’t sure he heard it right, but then, “Billy. I just. I needed to hear your voice. Are you okay?”
Billy can’t say anything back. He’s learning to speak, again, he can’t walk, he’s on the brink of death–
“Malibu? You there?”
Not a damn thing can be funny, anymore. “I’m sorry, Steve.”
“It’s alright.”
“If I hadn’t been at Starcourt, you’d be asleep right now.”
Steve snorts, “Don’t be stupid.”
“It’s true,” Billy mutters, sick, “In a roundabout way, if I hadn’t been on the road that night, if that. Thing had never crawled inside of me–”
“If that hadn’t happened we wouldn’t be together now,” Steve says. 
The weight of the world, on their shoulders.
Billy cracks. “I’m sorry.”
“You don’t have anything to be sorry for. You. Hargrove, you’re the only person left who doesn’t have to apologize,” Steve Harrington breathes deeply, into the receiver, and Billy swallows it. Fills his own lungs to taste cigarette smoke. “I called because I knew you’d be up. I just. Knew you would be. Cain and Abel, right?”
“Brothers’ keeper,” Billy says. The television screen flickers. The world is blue, and Billy is. Cast in its light.
“Can you sit with me? Just until I fall asleep.” Steve sounds like he’s drowning.
Billy can’t help but to jump in and save him.
Surfer Boy Pizza is even uglier on the inside. 
Argyle wasn’t kidding about the surf supplies plus description. From the moment the door shuts behind him, Billy’s at a loss trying to figure out what anyone would stop in here to buy since it seems like the kind of place people are exiled to.
The air is stale. Beach salt and sweat permeate the air as the result of a broken cooling unit, leaking onto the ground that hasn’t been scrubbed clean in months.
“Hello?” Billy asks, barely above a mumble, “Anyone home?”
“Back here!”
Billy tugs his flannel closer, cherry-picking his way through piles of useless shit and garbage. Surfer Boy’s walls are messy with knickknacks and shitty wire shelves pushed haphazardly against white and red checkered tile. Piles of fishing nets, lead-bellied life preservers, and vintage scuba gear mark the landing of the main desk, which has to be a repurposed McDonald’s check-out counter.
Behind it, covered in swirling, snaking tattoos, a man stares at him. 
He’s cute. His fist turns white around a water-spotted glass jar that says, Eddie’s Homemade Fishing Bait. The H has been drawn to look like the devil. 
“Uh,” The guy says smartly. 
“I’m Billy,” He puts his hand out but the guy doesn’t take it, he just stares. Stares and Stares.
“Okay. I’m here to see Argyle,” Billy points to the jar, “I’m guessing you’re Eddie?”
“I’m Eddie,” He says, cheeks turning bright pink. 
Great.
“Okay, uh,” Billy fiddles with the cuffs of his flannel. “I sit on the beach, sometimes.”
“Every day,” Eddie tells him, still not moving, “I see you out there sometimes.”
“Every day, uh. Yeah. Is Argyle–”
“Are you here for a job?” Eddie asks, tacking his jar behind a sign that says the exact same thing. Eddie’s Homemade Fishing Bait, like maybe he’ll lose one or the other if he doesn’t keep track. “If you’re sniffing around for a job–”
“--Look, man, Argyle asked me to come and work for him.”
“Right, yeah, but I’m his partner,” Eddie says, scrubbing his hands on his jeans. “I’m his silent partner. Do you know anything about crabbing?”
Billy frowns, “Crabbing? I thought this was a surf shack.”
“And a fishing place, we sell longboards, too. Contraband t-shirts, homemade banana bread and vintage earrings, bait–”
“--And weed–”
Eddie jumps over the counter, slapping a damp, smelly hand over Billy’s mouth, “Dude, what the fuck? That’s private. That’s a private–”
Billy shoves him off, chest heaving like he’s just been chased. He’s been caught.
Eddie tracks him, eyes wide and afraid. Big eyes. Brown. Pretty.
“Don’t touch me.” Billy says, moving away.
“Sorry. I’m sorry.”
“Your fingers taste like fishing bait,” Billy spits, scrubbing his own hand over his mouth. 
“Sorry, I was making–”
“--Sure–”
“--Weed brownies,” Eddie says, wagging his eyebrows. 
“Weed brownies,” Billy repeats, tasting fish on his tongue. “Why the fuck do they taste like pond scum?”
“That’s my special ingredient,” Eddie says, and. He cackles. High and bright and frightening, like a man brandishing a knife who knows something Billy doesn’t. 
It’s strange.
It startles a laugh out of Billy, anyway. Weird and good but terrifying. Argyle in another font, scribbled in the shape of swirling tattoos and pretty brown eyes. 
Eddie watches him. 
“What?” Billy says. He rubs a palm over his face, suddenly self-conscious.
“Nothing,” When Billy stares at him, wide-eyed and confused, Eddie grins. “When you laugh, you’re just. You’re beautiful. Know that?”
Billy scoffs, “You’re a fuckin’ weirdo.” He says, but his stomach swoops. The Bastard.
“Yeah. When can you start?”
“I got a job,” Billy says, instead of hello when Steve calls on Friday. It’s warm, for late January, California finally giving up her quest toward the unfamiliar.
Steve chuckles. “Got a job as, what, a government spy?” 
“No.”
“Supermodel, then. Undercover CIA ops, government supermodel–”
“--Like Nixon?”
“No, what the fuck? Have you seen yourself in the mirror, Malibu? You’re more JFK,” Steve says, sleepy and warm.
“I’m working at a surf place,” Billy tells him. It’s no fun to make Harrington guess when he sounds a minute from sleep.
“No shit? Didn’t know you surfed.”
“Used to,” Billy says, grinning when Steve makes a low, impressed noise. “Don’t get excited, I stopped when Neil moved us to corncob hell.”
“Maybe you’ll get back into it. Being around that stuff all the time, y’know.”
“Maybe,” Billy says. His belly flutters with possibility. He’s strong enough to run now. Hopeful enough to work. “It’s more than just surf stuff, actually. We do fishing bait, and crabbing and long boards–”
“--They sell hand blown Christmas ornaments too?” 
“Probably,” Billy can hear the smile in Steve’s voice, dawning over his perfect pink lips. “High people love interior design.”
“What’s high got to do with it?”
“We sell Miss Mary.”
“Criminal,” Steve says, “I leave you alone for two minutes–”
“Eight months,” Billy tells him. A pin drops. “Not that I’ve been counting.”
Billy prepares himself for something, though he can’t put a finger on what’s got him ready to pace the fuckin’ floor, geared up for the deafening click! Of Harrington’s receiver as it hits the cradle. 
They’ve never hung up on each other, but. Then again, they’ve never held a conversation this long either. Usually Steve just calls so he can fall asleep to the sounds of Billy swishing beer around in a can, pissing into the toilet bowl, blowing his nose when the weather’s cold enough.
But.
There’s a first time for everything. 
“Has it been that long?” Steve wonders, surprising him. 
“Yeah,” Billy says. Lying, because it’s more than that. Two Novembers and a New year, a cut and dry four-hundred days trying to acclimate to all of the rot they’ve been dealt. But who’s counting? 
“When do you start your new job?”
“Sunday,”
“Got the whole weekend to, fuckin’. Skinny dip, rollerblade on the pier, and hike in the mountains.”
“I don’t live in the mountains.”
“Huh. Maxine said–”
“Jesus. Girl runs her fuckin’ mouth too much.”
“She’s just excited,” Steve tells him. Sounds like a big brother, a proud mom. “She talks all the time about joining you out there.”
“She’d hate it.”
Steve snorts. “Kid was born for the ocean. Like you, you know? Your eyes.” When Bilyl doesn’t say anything back, Steve yawns. “I’m sure you’ve got your reasons. Bay Watch not her scene anymore?”
Billy shrugs, “Not as beachy, where I am. LBC was quintessential California.”
“Where are you?” Steve asks, voice full of wonder. “Hold on, lemme get a pen and paper–”
“Not falling for that, Harrington.”
“Why not?” Steve demands, pouting. “I’m not gonna show up at your apartment door one day, y’know–”
“You might. With your pen and fuckin’ paper.”
“You’re right, I might,” Steve sing-songs, “I was able to bully your phone number out of the Byers’.”
“Hah!” Billy says, leaning forward. His beer’s almost gone so it doesn’t slosh when he jabs an accusatory finger at Steve from two thousand miles away, “I knew Will was the one who gave you my phone number. Little shit.”
“It’s not his fault, I wasn’t eating or sleeping, after you left, so. Joyce took pity on me.”
Billy almost cracks with the weight of his heart battering against his ribs. “Joyce?”
“She. Gave it to me.”
Billy swallows, throat clicking with emotion. “She had it the whole time?”
“They all did. Do, I guess,” Steve tells him. Then, after a beat, “You’re not mad, are you?”
“I don’t know.”
“Please don’t change your fuckin’ number because of this.”
“Dunno. Might,” Billy lifts the can to his lips, sad to find it empty. “Should probably move, too, before Maxine tells everyone where my apartment is and you’re all pissed to find that the beach here sucks and we can’t even climb a fuckin’ mountain.”
Steve laughs. “But the other stuff?”
“Totally,” Billy says. He stands, pulling the phone as far as it will go until he gets his hand around the refrigerator door.
Steve lights a cigarette, inhaling sweetly into the phone. “Why didn’t you move to the mountains, anyway?”
“Room and board is expensive up there.”
“Didn’t the government shell out some money for your trouble?”
“Yeah,” Billy says, “Not enough.”
“We could combine our shit,” Steve says suddenly, “Y’know. Merge our assets and get someplace real nice.”
Billy drops his beer can. It gushes over kitchen linoleum like an unleashed tidal wave and he swears, stooping to mop it up with a dish rag. “Shit—”
“--Did I say something–”
“--No it’s. Nothing more stupid than the shit you usually say,” Billy tells him. Because. Combine our shit and merge our assets feels like something else. Grows teeth to chew and lips to say remember what tore you apart?
“Billy? You there?”
“I’m here,” Billy says. He dumps the dishrag into the sink, throat drier than it’s ever been in his life. 
He clears it. 
Says, “You want me to be your roommate,” and the words taste like lead. Burn like poison. 
“I want you to be my roommate,” Steve admits. 
It’s dark, through the kitchen window. Arcata sleeps and dreams outward, in every direction, and it makes Billy brave. Stupid. 
“Alright,” He says, playing along.
“Done deal,” Steve says, grinning, “Pack your bag, baby. I’m coming to get you.”
Billy’s heart swells, ignorant to the pain that will come in the morning when he comes to. “You work at Family Video, now?” Can’t. Stand the pressure of the moment.
“Yeah,” Steve says, “The mall burned down, so. Not a ton of other options unless I want to work at the General Store.”
“And you’re gonna come get me on a Disk Jockey’s salary?” Billy leans forward, fingers scrambling for his pack of smokes. “You could open your own ice cream parlor.”
“I don’t have–that’s not what I want to do with my life.”
“Really? Being a lifeguard is what I want to do with mine.” Billy quips. Steve laughs suddenly, smooth as marmalade on fresh toast. Warm. Billy wants to make him do it again. “Rescuing screaming brats from themselves as they run around the edge of the pool and stub their toes and crack chins on wet cement–”
“--Jesus Christ–”
“--Sunburns,” Billy admits. “The lis goes on.”
“That’s bullshit,” Steve says, ruffling the couch face as he sits straighter. “The chicks never shut up about you, that summer. You tanned.”
“Yeah, over my burns.”
“Is that even possible?”
Billy exhales a cloud of pale purple smoke, basking in the light from the television. “Sure, if you know the right elixir of sunscreen, tanning oil, and bomb-pops. Anything’s possible.”
“Another load of bullshit,” Steve tsks lightly, “Y’know, I was held prisoner in that fuckin’ sailor uniform all summer and I never saw you come through. Not once.” He says. Regretful, like it’s a goddamn shame Steve never got to see him in his slutty little shorts.
“Yeah,” Billy grumbles, “Never saw me once and now I’m damaged goods.”
“You’re Clark Kent,” Steve tells him, “You’ve got, like. Superhero good looks.”
Billy chuckles, “Thought I was a CIA Government Plant, Spy–”
“You’re beautiful,” Steve says suddenly. 
Billy stalls. The air escapes from his tires and he’s, fuckin’. Trapped. Stranded in this endless, horrible moment where all the shit he never thinks about lathers like soap suds, tasting bitter on the back of his tongue.
“Needa get your eyes checked, Bambi Boy.”
“Eyes are fine,” Steve grumbles. “How’d you get a bomb pop if you never–”
“--Max would get them for me.”
“Oh! Makes sense, I guess. She was always pink-cheeked and pissed off. Buying two of whatever she wanted that day. Guess I always assumed it was for Sinclair and not–”
“--Her bull-dog brother?”
“Her lifeguard,” Silence yawns again but doesn’t get to settle as Steve lights his cigarette. “Why’d you never come in yourself? Why send the kid?”
“You really gotta ask that?” Billy demands, grinning, “C’mon. Wouldn’t be caught dead in an ice cream parlor before work, pretty boy.”
“Not even for a bomb pop?”
“Not a chance,” Billy says easily, not. Wanting to tell the truth. 
Steve seems to understand, anyway. “I lied.”
“--Yeah?”
“I saw you around. That summer, before. Everything,” Steve says. He’s out there alone, making these swooping declarations, and he always has been, if Billy thinks back on it. If he’s honest with himself, so. 
“I was carryin’ a torch for you, before that summer,” Billy says. Figures. He probably owes Steve the truth after. Everything. 
Harrington sucks in a breath, “Billy–”
“I was scared. Always was.” Steve doesn’t say anything so Billy exhales everything, “Look, you don’t. It’s not–”
“--I didn’t know,” Steve says thickly. “I had a feeling, maybe, sometimes, but. Billy, if I had known–”
“--Then, what, you would’ve dumped your girlfriend sooner? Sucked me off after basketball practice?”
“Maybe.”
Billy’s vision blacks out for a second. Like a hard reset to make room for this new information. Whole machine’s fucked so they’ve gotta restructure, figure something else out. 
It’s whiplash. 
“I wound't have let you,” Billy’s skin is pink and tender, at his core. Not for monsters, for once. “My dad, and. Everything. I wasn’t a good guy, Steve.”
“Neither was I.”
“No, you don’t get it. I deserved what I got, Steve. Everything I did to my sister, and. To all those people–”
“--That wasn’t you.”
“Maybe,” Billy spits, “The shit in the summertime was fueled by a monster, but. Before? Steve, I–”
“--You’ve only ever been around monsters,” Harrington tells him. It sits for a moment, on Billy’s sternum. Weight. Eventually, Steve clears his throat, “I know more than I probably should, but. Max and I have talked.”
“Yeah, she fuckin’. She told me, right before I left Hawkins. Said that you ask about me. All the time.”
“You’re interesting,” Steve says, like, “Even before Starcourt I was interested in you. Understanding you.”
“There was nothing to understand. You didn’t know me, before–”
“Yeah, but I know you now,” Steve tells him. Because it’s enough. In his world, good’s always going to win out in the end, “And, like. I’m just thinking if there are monsters and Russians under the mall and little girls who can throw shit with their minds, it just. Doesn’t matter. I’m thinking it shouldn’t fuckin’ matter that I didn’t know you before you almost died because I was there for the bad shit. I saw you, Billy. I know you taught yourself to walk again, and I know you make me laugh, and I know that I can’t sleep unless I hear your voice, and I know that they night I pushed you down I ruined something. Good.”
Billy scrubs at his cheek. I comes away wet. 
“I’m serious about combining our shit,” Steve tells him, “Merging our assets, or whatever.”
“No you’re not. You haven’t really thought about it–”
“Fuck you, baby, all I do is sit here and fuckin. Think.” 
About you. All I fuckin’ do is sit here and think about you, Billy fills in the blanks for him. Figures, they shouldn’t have to spell everything out after everything they’ve barely lived through–
Billy clears his throat. It scrapes and burns. “What about Hawkins?”
“What about it.”
“I dunno, wouldn’t. Everyone miss you? Max and that curly haired, freaky little boy genius, and–”
“--I can’t sleep without you, Billy,” Steve says. Sounds like he’s drowning, like that first night, when he said– “Everything that’s happened, and it’s like. We’re just animals, you know? Caught up in trying to stand on two feet and we get so fuckin’ consumed by the specifics of everything. What you had to do to survive, the shit I don’t know about, the kids, the mosnters, just. Everything.” 
Speeches. Billy had to sit through so many speeches, when he wouldn’t fuckin’ die already, and. 
Never thought he’d want to listen. 
Never thought Steve–
“All I know is I want to be with you, Billy.”
Outside the window, the sky is turning silver. 
“Let me be with you. Any way I can.”
It’s nice to be around people who don’t know where Billy came from. To the boys at the Surf Ship, he is a ghost, born in some long ego era. 
Whoever he was before doesn’t matter.
Argyle and Eddie bring him back to life.
Neil Hargrove tries to kill him.
Just after Valentine’s Day, just after we’re animals, let me be with you, all i know is I want to be with you–
Maxine calls to tell Billy that Neil shot himself. 
Yeah. Calls, like. The telephone. Billy can’t find it in himself to be angry about that, because he’s missed her and then she says, something happened.
She says, Dad ate a bullet for his first meal of 1988. And then she says, Your dad. Neil did, like Billy would ever forget. Would ever need reminding. Then she says, he didn’t survive.  
Billy. 
He’s got all sorts of fucked up feelings about it, right away. He folds in half three times until he’s on the floor, marking the way his legs throw shadows on the carpet, large enough to cast doubt over everything Billy thought was true.
He cries. 
Neil is dead and Billy cries, already forgetting the sound of his voice.
At two o’clock in the morning the phone rings, again.
His neck hurts from laying on the carpet. The frayed edges of Maxine’s notebook paper plant like tiny, insignificant seeds. They catch and take hold and Billy thinks, distantly, that he should do something before grief roots itself in the apartment, where it was never really allowed to before.
The phone stops ringing. Starts. Stops. 
Another letter has taken control of his life, and that makes him angry. He cries about it, and the phone starts to ring again.
Billy holds the receiver to his face, watching the note flutter when he says, “My dad died.”
“I know,” Steve tells him. “I meant to call sooner. I’m sorry I didn’t call sooner.”
“You don’t have to apologize.”
“I wanted Max to be the one to tell you. And she doesn’t have your landline–”
“--I know you gave it to her,” Billy says. Thinks, if Maxine had sent him a goddamn letter through the fuckin’ mail to tell him the last monster is dead, he would’ve lost what’s left of his marbles, he would’ve–
“--Neil ate a bullet,” Billy says. He sounds like himself, but. He doesn’t. Steve holds his breath on the other end of the line, so Billy says, “I’ve never seen someone get shot, before. I’ve seen them get ripped apart.”
“Billy–”
“I shouldn’t have left,” He tells the ceiling. 
Steve goes quiet. It’s terrible, not hearing the cigarette smoke leave his lungs, not sensing his laugh where it blooms and grows like springtime flowers. They don’t deserve this. They’ve never deserved any of this, but. Who fuckin’ cares.
“You had to get out of here,” Steve tells him. The real Steve, alive and unwell in Hawkins, Indiana. “Billy, this place is–”
“Neil’s dead.”
“Maybe he deserved it.”
“And maybe I should be there for Maxine, for once,” Billy says. Aches to see her. Burns to hold her close. 
Steve snorts, “What the fuck are you talking about?”
“I just. I think that if anyone here was supposed to die–”
“--Stop–”
“--There’s a hole in my chest,” Billy admits. He can feel it, sometimes, rising like tree bark to scrape and tear at the air around him. A monster aiming to carve a place on him.
It’s so late. It’s so goddamn early–
“I’ll patch it up,” Steve says valiantly. The hero. The prince. 
Everything’s so easy for him. Simple.
“Maybe you’re right,” Billy says after a minute. After catching his breath.
“Maybe I’m right about what?”
“None of it matters,” Billy tells him. “Nothing matters so much that I can’t just. Tell you–”
But that’s a half-truth, funny in retrospect. Because almost three years ago, Billy died. Nearly. And he never expected that anything would matter to him ever again, but things happen all the time that have nothing to do with anything. That’s the beauty. They help him live. Will and Joyce and Freak Byers and Maxine and–
“Steve. I,” Billy swallows, throat clicking, “I lo–”
“--I want to see you,” Steve says in a rush, “Just. Tell me where you are. I can be there in a few days.”
“That’s crazy.”
“Maybe but that’s what I want. You. I want you–”
“You’re insane,” Billy scrambles, trying to grasp whatever excuses keep eluding him. “Like you don’t already know my address. Like Max didn’t fuckin’ tell you.”
“You’re right. I still need you to say the word, though,” Steve sounds like he’s moving, on the other end of the line. Bouncing on the balls of his feet in anticipation. “I’m serious. Tell me you want me and I’ll leave right now. If I drive through the night I can be there in a day.”
Billy’s heart soars, emotion flapping like wings in his chest. 
But.
“You can’t leave Maxine. Not with all this shit happening in Hawkins with Neil, and–”
“I’ll bring her with me,” Steve says, “We can take turns driving.”
Tears slide down Billy’s cheeks, full of hope. “She’s a bitch in the car."
"So am I, I only want to listen to Wham."
"She's only got a permit. What if a cop–”
“--We’ll go on a high-speed chase. I’ll get to you sooner.” Harrington says. 
Billy exhales a laugh. 
Thinks about the years spent wondering what he deserves. What he wants. Never imagining the line between them would whittle away and disappear until their weight could kiss like reunited lovers. 
Thinks of death and life. Of Max.
"Y'know, I usually sit on the beach, first thing. Watch the sunrise."
Steve hums. "Yeah?"
"Yeah," Billy scrubs away the tears on his face, shuddering as more slide to take up their mantle. “Got something to write with?”
The answering machine gets him. 
"Argyle," Billy says, standing over his kitchen sink. "You're not in. Uh. I just wanted to let you know that Steve's coming to town. Steve Harrington. He's on his way and I don't know what this means, I sorta feel like I'm drowning a little bit, but. In a good way. A really good way."
Billy rinses his stomach bile, watching as it swirls and disappears. 
"I don't think I'm going back to Hawkins, but. I also don't know if I'm staying here. My dad died, and Steve's brining my sister to see me, 'cause. I have a sister, I think I told you about her, and. I have a Steve. You know about him, so."
Billy swallows, wondering how many fuckin' goodbyes he will have to live through. 
What he will have to live through, now until forever. 
"Just," Billy says, voice cracking, "Thank you. For talking to me on the beach that day, and asking me to come work for you, and just. You brought me back to life. That's it. Maybe I'll see you tomorrow. Maybe I won't, but. Give Eddie a punch goodbye, for me. See ya around." Billy sucks a mouthful of air, scrubbing at his eyes, "This is Billy, by the way."
--
Billy's grateful Arcata has a shoreline. The ocean has been good to him, his first true sanctuary. Makes him think of the trees back home, in Hawkins. Has him wondering if it's okay, now that home is a person. People.
It's warm, for February. 
He watches the sunrise with a lump in his throat, knowing that any minute a car will pull into the lot behind him and love will walk back into his life. Maybe it never left. Maybe it's not something he's ever had to work for. 
He counts the minutes. He adjusts his blanket, the very same one Joyce draped over his hospital bed all those months ago, and then a car approaches. Two doors open and shut, one right after the other, and then.
Dawn breaks, driving a knife through the dark.
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matttheratkingart · 11 months
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Part 2 of the Epilogue
Text under the more:
Laying close to him on folded towels and an old blanket, wearing his borrowed jumper, on a backroad of his town under his stars, I am acutely aware I have been surrounded on all sides. Were this a match, I would be losing.He has home advantage.
(The bitch of it is he always has home advantage. Everywhere he goes is home.)
(And I will be honest.I stopped fighting the play a long time ago)
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pareidoliaonthemove · 2 months
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Unexpected Delivery
There had been many changes when their father returned home. Some were new, some were the old status quo reasserting itself.
As Jeff had taken over the daily running of Tracy Industries and the paperwork associated with International Rescue, Scott had managed to take back some of his old duties on the Island.
One of those was unpacking the supplies Virgil regularly brought back from the mainland.
First was the perishables: foods, some of Brains’ more exotic experimental materials, whatever-the-hell it was that Gordon was ordering in to assist in rehabilitating their surrounding sea-scape. Personal deliveries came second, portioning out the mail orders; of which a not-insignificant portion was personal food stocks – Grandma still couldn’t be dissuaded from cooking, even though everyone now had more time to contribute to kitchen duties. Third was domestic consumables: toilet paper, light bulbs, cleaning supplies, and personal grooming and hygiene products – including so much deodorant. And then maintenance supplies; raw materials for production of the custom parts necessary for the maintenance of the Thunderbirds, parts for maintenance for the Villa and auxiliary buildings.
It was a comfortable routine, and one that Scott enjoyed, especially dealing with the maintenance supplies. Checking the packing slip against their internal register of projected deliveries, using the pallet-bot to deposit the large crates and bins at the appropriate areas, before unpacking the individual crates, confirming the itemised stock within, and storing them in the appropriate locations, as he updated the warehousing inventory.
It was a simple – and satisfying – job.
Today there was an extra crate. A large roughly square crate, one and one half to two metres in every dimension and solidly built. Scott frowned at it. There was no sender’s ident, and the anonymous holographic label implanted in the rough-hewn, tightly-spaced wooden slats simply read ‘International Rescue’.
Nothing was unaccounted for on the projected deliveries. There was nothing left over from previous runs, nothing on back order.
Scott checked Virgil’s collection register. This package had been collected from their mail facility at Tracy Industries Headquarters, the security assessment on this crate was attached. Nothing untoward. No radiation, no explosive compounds, no biological matter …
Thunderbird Two’s pod sensors hadn’t detected a threat, either.
“What is it?”
Scott started, jumping as the Mechanic materialised beside him, looking between Scott and the crate curiously.
A slight hesitation – he still hadn’t fully overcome his distrust of the other man, nor had the Mechanic suddenly taken a liking to him – and he explained the situation.
“Only one way to find out. If all the scans are clear.”
Scott waved his tablet at the man, who, after a second, took it, and considered the record trail. He handed the tablet back, and summoned two of his ‘scorpion’ mechas to the crate.
“Better blow them up, than us, if your scans are wrong,” was the response to Scott’s raised eyebrow.
Scott agreed without hesitation. The crate was in a secure section of the hangars, there was no danger to any of their equipment – they had learnt that the hard way, soon after Jeff had … gone on sabbatical. The two men backed off a respectful distance, and watched as the two machines surged forward, powerful pinchers forcing themselves under the lid and prising it up, before skittering around the crate to settle either side of it, like guardians.
The back of the lid was hinged, and a holographic sign projected against the rough and splintery wood. ‘A gift. From a friend.’
The two men approached cautiously. And stared in shock at what lay on the straw at the bottom of the crate.
The Hood, bound hand and foot – hands behind his back – lay half curled with in the space. His naked body bruised and bloody, the slight rise and fall of his chest the only sign the man was alive.
Scott Tracy – Commander of International Rescue, First Responder, Qualified Paramedic, and Survivor of a POW Camp – swallowed his bile as he took in the sight of the bloody and weeping bandage around the man’s head that ineffectively protected what he knew would be the bloody and empty socket where the cybernetic eye had been.
Mutely Scott and the Mechanic stared at each other, both searching for answers the other didn’t have.
How were they ever going to explain this?
Notes:
Febuwhump Day 21 “Unresponsive”.
Whoops. I totally missed posting this one on the date. Other important dates I have missed include my mothers, and my niece's birthdays. Oh well, off to the dog house!
The standard disclaimers, I do not own Thunderbirds, either the Original Series, the Movies (both Supermarionation and Live Action), or the Thunderbirds Are Go Series. (Although I do own copies on DVD.)
I do not do this for money, but for my own (in)sanity and entertainment.
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angie-words · 2 months
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Some Kind of Magic Inside: Good Omens fanfic
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Crowley is more than a little intrigued by Aziraphale's suggestion of further sexy roleplay, this time set in the magic show dressing room from 1941. Perhaps, if he were being honest, Crowley has been thinking for decades about that enticingly authoritative tone Aziraphale used when he'd corrected Furfur...
Thank you so much to azeutreciatheicked, the-literal-kj and springofviolets for being fantastic beta readers <3
CWs: non-graphic smut, explicit sex, dom/sub, soft/gentle dom Aziraphale, sub Crowley, restraints, power play, sexual roleplay - please check the rest of the tags on AO3!
Extract:
“Did you think I didn’t notice all those years ago?” Aziraphale asked, slipping the white cotton gloves onto his fingers. “Did you think I didn’t see how your gaze lingered as I pulled these on with my teeth?”
If Crowley had an answer, it was lost to him as Aziraphale lifted his hands, one at a time, to his mouth, taking the hem of each glove between his teeth and tugging hard to secure them. A mewl broke free from the demon as he watched Aziraphale watching him with a look of pure rapturous approval.
Moving to stand in front of him once more, Aziraphale stroked a gloved thumb over Crowley’s lip, dragging tenderly as the demon’s ragged breath danced along the fabric. Relishing the wet, desperate heat that reflected back onto his own skin, Crowley was reminded just how much the angel’s touch affected him. It was almost enough, so close, and he helplessly panted as the angel’s fingers massaged across his jaw.
“My dear boy,” Aziraphale murmured, gazing down at his love’s transfixed, pleading stare. “You’re practically coming apart at the seams, aren’t you?”
Continue on AO3
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iamsherlocked-1998 · 7 months
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When the storm passes.
Warning: Description of post-traumatic stress, childhood trauma, anxiety attack.
A sleepless night in Nevarro's small cabin.
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Grogu woke up with a start, slowly opening his eyes as he groaned. Something was wrong, the atmosphere was charged, strong and mixed feelings were perceived, the force was twisted with fear, sadness... and something anxious. It was like being in that temple again before everything fell apart, but this time he wasn't dreaming.
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The boy didn't understand, he was at home, the comfort of his dark room enveloped him, hadn't heard any noise besides the rain and the occasional thunder, not that Grogu really liked storms but there didn't seem to be any imminent danger. It had actually been a good day, he played for hours, The Mandalorian was starting to teach him to talk and was very proud of attempts at Mando'a, even finished his first drawing with some meaning.
Then realized, the wave of panic was coming from the back of the cabin, where his father was. He must have known, his protector always had a very strong presence, he hadn't realized how until they were separated and received a visit from him in training with Master Luke. That had increased now he wasn't wearing his helmet around the child.
Grogu slowly climbed down from the structure that served as bed. He walked towards the hallway with difficulty, what could scare his father? He is a strong guy, would usually more than capable of defending himself... from experience, situations that the man couldn't solve by himself turned out to be quite complicated.
-------------------------------------------- "Everything was dark and dirty, he huddled in that small space of the shed fearing the worst, the deafening screams and explosions filled his senses, a few seconds later he noticed how the door opened, being greeted by a helmet with a T-shaped visor. Hope unraveled like strands of wet paper. The stranger reached for his hip and pointed the gun at him. He wanted to beg for mercy but his voice didn't come out and then everything went black..."
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He put his face closer to the pillow, wanting to hide in its surface, he bit his lower lip so hard that it bled. He thought he was getting better with the nightmares, they hadn't recurred in months, now they were calm, with a stable place to return to, he even changed his armor for soft clothes, but there he was, sobbing from a bad dream like a fucking child. . He brought his hand to his face to roughly wipe away a traitorous tear. He wondered if it ever stop or his brain would keep coming back to haunt him, repeating the same scenes over and over again but with a different and much grimmer ending each time.
Thunder rumbled nearby and he shivered, sighing deeply as sat up against the headboard of the bed, buried his face between the knees. He was a grown man, a warrior accustomed to the worst kinds of violence and, wanted to believe, more than capable of facing whatever dangers lay ahead of him, but trembled as if he were nothing more than a leaf in autumn because a storm frightened him. He tried to even out his breathing and prayed to whatever that this would end soon. The former hunter noticed that the room seemed as messy as his mind, all of the Beskar pieces were scattered on the floor.
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A small vowel sound alerted him and directed the attention towards the door. It was his son's, little one was standing at the entrance staring at him with wide eyes. He cleared his throat with difficulty as he reached for the light switch, wanting to appear as recompose as possible.
-Hey, are you okay, kid?
The boy continued to look at him, but he tilted his head in concern, his big ears were all the way down.
He felt that something was burning his soul, nothing was wrong with Grogu, the boy noticed that things were chaotic and wanted to protect him. That was supposed to be his job and not the other way around. His features softened, had to fix this.
-Kid, I'm fine, it was just a nightmare, goes back to sleep.
The boy walked towards him, when was next to the foot of the bed he raised his arms with the intention of being picked up. The Mandalorian accepted it, cradling he gently. By then toddler had proceeded to caress his unshaven jaw, closing his eyes.
The bounty hunter leaned into the touch, a sense of calm immediately washing over him, his racing heartbeat slowing down almost miraculously. He reached up for the small fingers brushing against his skin.
-Thank you Grogu.
The boy gave a happy squeal and stood next to him, clinging to the pillow and creating a small nest with the forgotten sheet, ready to spend the night. Djarin chuckled as he turned off the light.
-I guess everything is already decided... (the boy could no longer hear him, since he quickly succumbed to sleep).
The man lay down on his side slowly, leaving a safe space so as not to disturb him. The moonlight was coming in through the window. Suddenly it seemed like the rain was dissipating.
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steddieunderdogfics · 3 months
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I'd like to rec the Between Worlds series by Paryton, it's absolutely breathtaking and deserves to be celebrated.
Third Degree Burns (and the blisters that follow) by Paryton
Rating: Teens and Up
7,713 words, 1/1 chapters
Archive Warning: Major Character Death
Tags: Hurt No Comfort, Grief/Mourning, Angst, Implied/Referenced Homophobia, Alternate Universe - Canon Divergence, Lesbian Robin Buckley, post-season 3, the opposite of a fix it fic
Summary:
Robin Buckley makes it out of the Starcourt mall. Steve Harrington does not. This is the part that comes after.
Thanks for the rec!
Know a fic that deserves extra love? Submit through our asks or the submission box!
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howlingbabbles · 5 months
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Head canon that Kai was homeless at some point post-season 3 pre-season 4 and has a back pack full of clothes, extra cash he squirreled away, a fake identity, and other necessities in case he became homeless again.
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maltedmilkks · 1 year
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billy has nothing after surviving the mind flayer.
nothing but his life that he somehow manages to cling onto.
his car is totaled. his baby, the only thing that could let him escape from neil. so expensive to fix that it would take him years to earn enough money for it.
the hospital ruins his body. months of laying in a hospital bed, barely able to move. physical therapy that seems to hurt worse than the attacks themselves. his once muscled, tan body is pale. fragile. covered in pink scar tissue. he can’t stand to look in the mirror anymore.
he’s shaky when he moves. coming into the hospital with his guts out and a stomach full of chemicals must have been a whirlwind for the doctors to figure out.
his mind is broken. when the kids finally explain to him what was going on, he can’t even bring himself to be mad that they didn’t tell him sooner.
neil berates him for racking up such a high hospital cost and for letting himself get hurt. the HNL and a bunch of men in black suits offer to pay for everything if neil keeps his mouth shut. somehow it works.
everyone looks at him like a kicked puppy. the once intimidated, respected glares he used to get are replaced by sopping wet pity and disgust at his broken form. who knew someone so strong could get shattered so easily?
billy is tired.
billy is so tired that sometimes he wishes he had died.
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k-s-morgan · 9 months
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Do you think Will stops Hannibal from murdering people after they run away?
No, definitely not. That would defeat the whole purpose of Will's Becoming and the reason why he and Hannibal were so drawn to each other. They are the only people who can see and love each other for who they really are. Slipping back into a cage and denial wouldn't do them any good.
I love this quote from the book:
Hannibal: Tell me, Clarice, would you ever say to me, "Stop. If you loved me, you'd stop"? 
Clarice: Not in a thousand years.
I think Bryan would want to adapt it if there was S4 because it fits Hannigram perfectly. Will never complained about Hannibal’s choice of victims. He called him destructive, but he never held his murders against him with the exception of Abigail, who was an accomplice herself. Will’s major conflict has always been with himself and his own darkness - Hannibal simply represented what he wanted but was scared of having. Other Will’s problems with Hannibal stemmed from their personal conflicts and misunderstandings. 
Meanwhile, Will set up innocent people for death every time he chose to save Hannibal, knowing perfectly well that he’s going to keep killing. He dismissed justice for Nicholas Boyle when he realized he’s innocent because it protected Abigail. He toyed with Chiyoh and her prisoner, getting one of them to kill the other, even though Chiyoh has never murdered anyone and Will doubted whether the prisoner is actually a bad guy. This makes it even worse - Will considered the option that this tortured man could be innocent yet he still messed with him carelessly. Will set Chilton up, admitting he did it on purpose; he got all those TWOTL officers killed and didn’t even bother to spend a minute on mourning them; he easily endangered Molly, Walter, and Alana with her family by conspiring with two dangerous killers. Finally, he claimed Bedelia deserved to be killed and participated (or likely organized) the attack on her, even though she’s practically innocent when we compare their body count. 
WIll is a dark and cold person, no matter how much he hates himself. He simply doesn’t care about human lives as much he would like, so I can’t imagine him worrying about who Hannibal kills as long as it doesn’t interfere with their safety. 
He could and probably would set limits, establish some ground rules, but he has his design and he acknowledges that Hannibal has his own. In many ways, he admires it.  I don't think he'd want him to discard it.
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lightly-lumiere · 1 year
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Daydream with me for a second. Post-season 3 were Billy and Heather both survived.
They’re in hospital recovering. Heather woke up from her coma before Billy and then insists on moving her bed to his room. She doesn’t want him to wake up alone.
When Billy does wake up from his coma, some 3 weeks after Heather, it’s a long road to recovery from there.
He is consumed by guilt. Once he gets the tube out of his throat, the first thing he tries to do is apologise and beg for Heather’s forgiveness. She’s like “no”.
“It wasn’t your fault Bill.” “But-“ “No.”
They recover together, supporting each other since they don’t get many visitors, if any.
Heather’s parents are goo, and she doesn’t actually want to see her friends yet. Billy’s dad… well he requested to get updates over the phone. Max can’t come without a ride.
The party feels weird about visiting them so they don’t. The unspoken guilt of what happened to them and unwillingness to acknowledge it makes it hard for them to face Billy and Heather.
They’re also both much thinner, gaunt and pale. Generally a bit fragile. They’re not moving much or eating solid foods.
Despite all that, Billy and Heather get very close. They do their physical therapy together, they share a bed when nightmares get really bad, they both deal with being tube fed since their stomachs recover very slowly from the chemicals. Heather holds Billy’s hand when his bandages need to be changed. Billy paints Heather’s nails to get his motor functions back. They do each others hair.
It’s a bleak existence but they have each other and they’re healing.
Maybe Will takes the first step to go and talk to them after being there for his own upside down related check up.
He finally feels seen and understood when discussing the possession. They understand the terror, the darkness and the violation in a way that no one in the party or any of the adults could understand.
Next time he visits he brings El. And the visit after that Max comes too.
Billy and Max talk. They start the journey of forgiveness and becoming real siblings.
On Christmas Eve, they’re both still in hospital, but almost ready to leave. They have their own clothes and some of their stuff is in the room, including Billy’s Metallica poster and Heather’s Blondie poster. The room feels more homey and less bleak.
Billy can finally walk around without help from another person for the most part. He’s not constantly on oxygen anymore and neither is Heather.
On his nightly rounds, Dr. Owens passes their rooms and has to stop for a moment.
Heaven by Bryan Adams is blasting on the cassette player one of them had brought and his two patients are dancing around their shared room. Heather leads Billy, both smiling the biggest smiles, giggling and laughing together without a care in the world.
They’re singing along loudly and Owens notices all the nurses watching along fondly too.
They still have a long road of recovery ahead of them, but this is better than Owens could have hoped for.
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samstree · 10 months
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“I never…” Geralt’s voice is deep with the promise of sleep. “I never tell you enough.”
“Hmm?”
The forest is shimmering with moonlight when Jaskier cracks open his eyes. Geralt is watching him closely, something soft in his expression. They press together on the small bedroll, knees touching, face to face, breaths settled in the quietness of the night.
“How lucky I am,” Geralt adds. “With you. To have you. I don’t tell you enough.”
“Oh,” Jaskier breathes, catching the hint of guilt in Geralt’s voice. “It’s alright.”
“It’s not.”
“Hey.” Jaskier finds Geralt’s hand, squeezes in reassurance. He never wants Geralt’s guilt, not when he carries too much of it already. “None of that. Not with me.”
Geralt sighs softly. “See? Too lucky, perhaps. More than I deserve. I just hope…” he pauses, tentative, “that I’m not too late.”
Moonlight threads between the leaves, catching on Geralt’s hair. Hope shines in his eyes when he looks at Jaskier.
He leans forward, tugging Jaskier’s hand to his lips, and kisses his fingers. One kiss leads to another, on the back of his hand, on his wrist, and then…
“Geralt?”
Jaskier’s breath hitches when Geralt presses a kiss on his forehead, affection clear in the way he hides a tiny smile there.
“I’m not too late, am I?”
Their lips brush against each other’s, breaths mixing. Geralt stops there, lingering, waiting, sweet and kind.
Oh, but he is.
He is too late.
Jaskier pulls away, just a little bit, but it took the strength to move between worlds. Their eyes meet, and for once in a poet’s long life, no words are needed.
This should hurt, Jaskier thinks, when Geralt realizes his answer and that smile fades. It does hurt, deep in his chest, an ache that wouldn’t let up for twenty years.
It still won’t let up, the unfairness of it all.
“Oh.” Geralt retreats, letting go of Jaskier’s hand. “I am.”
Something within Jaskier shudders. “Yeah.”
“I see.”
Coldness surrounds him when Geralt pulls away, turning his back. Jaskier sleeps under the silvery moonlight, fingers still touching his lips.
He dreams of the hope in Geralt’s eyes.
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