Red Right Hand. Orange Crush. Mellow Yellow. Green Light. Blue Ain't Your Color. The Indigo Streak. Violet Chemistry.
ROY G. BIV
The theme for this event is: Somewhere Over the Rainbow:
So, for this challenge, pick any song that features a color of the rainbow either in the title or lyrics and make something that is inspired by that song. Here's a playlist to help get you started.
Now, I'm not gonna get all up in your color wheel. You want to use Purple Pills instead of Violet Hill? Want to go with Taylor Swift's Maroon instead of her Red? Go for it!
This event runs between June 8th-14th, 2025.
You can interpret the prompt any way you'd like, as long as you've focused on one or more members of Corroded Coffin and a song that features a color of the rainbow.
Please tag us here at @corrodedcoffinfest when you post your entries so we can reblog them!
The word count guidelines for this challenge are for fics between 500-2500 words. Your entries must be posted on the correct color day of the event. (And let us know what song you used!)
You'll get a comment from this blog with a "đ" when it's been checked and added to the queue.
Submissions can be connected to other prompts from the pop-up, but they should still be able to stand alone.
Feel free to use the ao3 collection after you've been reblogged here!
All submissions should include any pairings featured, a rating and any content warnings (CW) or tags that you think are appropriate. All explicit material needs be under a cut. Headers make my life easier, and a sample of one could look something like this:
Prompt: Blue | Song: Blue Bayou | Word Count: 1250 | Rating: T | POV: Eddie | Relationships: None | CW: None | Tags: Corroded Coffin, On Tour, Thinking of the Past
For the artists! Art is definitely welcome! Any entries for the prompts must be focused on at least one Corroded Coffin pairing, a fit the prompt and guidelines.
Please submit your entries between 12:00 AM EST and 11:59 PM EST on the day of the prompt in order to not be missed for reblogging.
Taste the rainbow. đ
For the Mini Pride Bingo hosted by @genderthings.
[AO3]
Prompt: Tattoo | Rating: Gen | WC: 1230 | Relationships : Steve Harrington/Eddie Munson
Summary:
Steve wants to marry Eddie and wear a wedding ring to show the whole world they belong to each other, homophobic laws be damned. But Steve is a nurse, and hospital rules are hospital rules.
Itâs not that Steve dislikes jewelry. Honestly, itâs kind of the opposite.
Take Eddieâs rings, for example.
His boyfriend has a few of them, all bulky and impossible to ignore, and he barely takes them off to shower. They are always on his hands, even when he plays guitar, even when he sleeps. And he is so full of life, his man, always waving his hands around, rings catching the light with each movement, gleaming.Â
The way he touches him is no better, warm hands and soft metal sliding across his skin, gripping, grabbing. Loving.
Steve likes rings. Especially Eddie's.
Heâs just not allowed to wear jewelry at the hospital.
Becoming a nurse had not been easy, but after the whole mess that happened with the Upside-Down, after breaking Eddieâs ribs, each snap resonating like thunder in his arms when he was trying to breathe life back to Eddieâs lungs, after everything the nurses at Hawkins Memorial had down for them, strong and caring when the whole town had wanted to crucify Eddie⌠Steve had known.Â
He loves his job. He has finally found his place in the world, one where he can help people in need. No day is really easy, but the rewards are worth the long shifts and the random hours. Being a nurse makes him feel useful in a way he had been craving for years.
He just wishes he could wear a ring.
Some of his coworkers are married, and they either keep their wedding band on a chain around their neck or take it off before their shift and store it in their locker.
He could do the locker thing, realistically.Â
But he canât get out of his head the absolute panic in his coworker Maryâs eyes, the high pitch of her voice, her harsh breathing and her shaking hands when they had ended their shift at the same time and her ring wasnât in her locker.
She had found it, eventually, because, of course, she had left it at home and had forgotten all about it in the frenzy of hospital life, but the fear had lingered. She had stopped wearing her ring, keeping it in a jewelry box on her bedside table. Just in case.
And the thing is. Steve and Eddie canât get married. Not legally at last. They have been talks of backyard wedding, one day, maybe, but the ring⌠The ring is a problem.
It eats at Steve. Days and nights.
He canât imagine getting married and only having a ring to prove his devotion to his husband. Not when he canât wear it all the time and could lose it at any given moment. All his wedding dreams end with his ring disappearing and Eddie looking at him through tears, asking if he doesnât love him anymore.Â
When he finally opens up to Robin, sheâs kind about his fears. Understanding in a way that speaks about years and years of feeling out of the norm. Different. Kept from enjoying so many things that other people take from granted.
âItâs okay to feel like that, Steve. Itâs scary to realize your love is not something people are going to accept, especially when another typical married couple thing is out of your reach.â She squeezes his arm. âYou have coworkers who wear their wedding ring around their neck, right? Maybe you should do that when you finally take that step with Eddie.â
Steve swallows, his throat tight, fighting through the burn in his eyes.
âNorthwestern Memorial has a very strict policy about jewelry. The only pieces nurses are allowed to wear are wedding bands on necklaces. And you have to provide a wedding certificate for that.â
âSo, they wouldnâtâŚâ
Steve loses the fight against tears.
âNo, they would never let me wear any ring given by Eddie.â
âOh, babeâŚâ Robin arms wrap around him as he sobs.Â
âSay, StevieâŚâ Her voice is wavering. She seems so unsure of herself, in a way that differs from her usual anxiety-fueled ramblings. âI could maybe marry you? Legally, I mean. Then you would marry Eddie, and youâll be able to wear your wedding band around your neck.â
Steveâs burrow deeper into Robinâs embrace. He canât deal with not being held right now.
âThank you, Rob. But it wouldnât be the same.â
They hug for a while, before Robin manages to make him laugh with a crazy anecdote about her least favorite coworker. They end up playing a drinking game in front of Star Wars, and Eddie is woken up at 2Â a.m. by his very drunk boyfriend sliding in his bed.
âHey, Eddie, Eddie?â
âWot?â
âYou know I love you, right?â
âMmmrrr.â
âI love you a lot, Eddie, like⌠like an insane amount. Scientists cannot quantify how much I love you, andâŚâ
He is stopped by a kiss.
âLove you too, sweetheart,â Eddie tiredly wraps himself all around his boyfriend, octopus-style. âBut please, go to sleep.â
_______________________
Theyâre celebrating Nancyâs promotion in a gay bar when Steve has a revelation.
The girls want more drinks, and Steve grumbles but leave the warmth of Eddieâs arms to bring them cocktails.
âAnd a beer for your humble servant, please, my liege!â
And a beer for Eddie, apparently.
The bartender is only vaguely familiar, and he is pretty sure the guy wasnât there two months ago. Steve flags the man down, and watches with a smile as he shakes Nancyâs elaborate cocktail. He is putting on a show, but Steve can tell itâs not really meant for him, not with the wedding band glistening on his left hand and the wink he throws at the new waiter.Â
The wave of jealousy hits him unexpectedly. It must be nice to wear proof of your marriage in front of everyone like that, and to be able to flirt with your husband at your own place of work without having to watch your back. Maybe he should hang up his scrubs and go into bartending.
Steve shakes his head. He loves his job. He is being ridiculâŚ
He frowns.Â
Whatâs that just underneath the guyâs wedding band?
The bartender winks at him this time, playing with the ring.
âHad this one for almost two years now.â He points at the waiter. âIt goes with that one.â
âWhatâs that?â
âHum?â The bartender blink, then smiles again. âOh! Look.â
He leans over the bar and shows Steve his hand, palm up. He pushes the ring out of the way, and just underneath, the initials S.W. are written in black ink.Â
âScott Williams. Thatâs my man.â
âItâs a tattoo.â Steve says numbly.Â
âIt sure is, darling.â
âI can get a tattoo.â Steve cannot breathe. He can have that. He can etch Eddieâs name into his skin, keep him there forever.
âHey, donât forget your drinks!â
Steve turns back to the bar, disoriented, and grab the tray the bartender is nice enough to give him.
âYou okay, man?â He asks, visibly worried.
âNever been better.â
He walks past the crowd without seeing it and reach their group. Robinâs head shot up at his arrival.
âYouâre alright, Dingus?â She frowns. âYou look a bit shell shocked over there.â
She yelps when Steve put down the tray heavily on the table, drinks splashing.
âHey, what are youâŚâ
Steve climbs on his boyfriendâs lap.
âEddie,â he cradles his face with both hands, reverent. âWill you marry me?â
hosted by @thedrabblecollective
Stranger Things - 100 words - Steddie
AO3 link
The doctors had recommended exercising in water, and now Steve was there, swimming around in his pool, supervising Eddie. He didnât want to leave him alone in the water, his heart heavy with the reminder of Barbâs demise.
It turned out the real menace was not the Upside-Down, but rather Eddie himself, who immediately decided to splash him.
Steve jumped back to escape, before retaliating, making the boy splutter and shake his head like a drenched dog.
Steve wasnât sure it was what the doctors had in mind, but he hadnât enjoyed playing in his pool like that in years.
You're about to close on your very own, suspiciously affordable and comfortable house. Just before you sign the contract, the realtor shows you the required legal disclosure: your new house is haunted by the type of presence you'll get from this spinner wheel.
Of course it is.
hosted by @thedrabblecollective
Stranger Things - 100 words - Steddie
AO3 link
âYou should really take your vest off, Eddie,â Robin said. âYouâre going to cook in it.â
âIâm allergic to tanning, Birdie.â
A few feet away, Dustin jumped into the pool, splashing everyone.
âHENDERSON! Come back here! You need sunscreen!â
Lucas tried to follow Dustin, but Steve was faster.
âNot you too!â he started to rub lotion on the squirmy teen. âNo one gets sunburn on my watch.â
Eddie froze.
Then his shirt and vest were off.
âStevie, can you help me put lotion on my back?â
âYeah, of course.â
âYouâre blushing,â Robin whispered.
âShut up. Itâs the sun. I'm burning.â
(Part 1)
For the Mini Pride Bingo hosted by @genderthings.
[AO3]
Prompt: Lipstick | Rating: T | WC: 3999 | Relationships : Steve Harrington & Eleven | Jane Hopper & Maxine "Max" Mayfield , implied future Steve Harrington/Eddie Munson
Summary:
Max and El have fun with makeup at the Harrington's.
Steve is not jealous.
Steve took the cookies out of the oven and put them on a tray to cool down a bit while he cleaned up. He had prepared caramel pecan cookies, just because Max had thrown him the sweetest look she could muster while asking him. He had immediately folded when she had told him she wanted to share her favorite cookies with El. She was an absolute terror most of the time, but she was even worse when she went out of her way to look sweet. Her little tactics were rubbing on El, too, and her big eyes were even more effective than Maxâs fake innocent smile.
Of course, Steve had caved. He had never really been able to refuse anything the kids asked before, but now, after everything that had happened, he had turned into a total carpet. The kids were walking all over him and he was letting them, too glad to see them walk around, happy, unhurt, alive. Max, especially, had spent way too much time in the hospital for Steve to refuse her anything. Especially when it was something as easy to make as cookies.Â
Once the kitchen was in order, everything cleaned and put in its place, he prepared a tray for the girls. He opened the fridge, hesitated a moment, then grabbed a few different cans of soda. That way, they could directly choose whatever they wanted without having to walk to the kitchen. He put the cans on the tray with the cookies and brought it to the living room.
At some point, his house had become the headquarters of the Party. He hosted Hellfire once a week, and a movie night at the same frequency, and was regularly invaded by whoever wanted a bit of space that day. Steve always complained about them coming without telling him beforehand and making a mess half of the time, but it was mostly for show. He had to keep a semblance of authority on the kids, even if seeing his house so full of life was one of the best things to happen to him.
Today his house had only been invaded by two gremlins and not the whole pack of teenage demons. Max and El were sitting on the ground against the couch, and Steve could barely see them, finding their location by following the sound giggles permeating the air. Seeing the kids mess around was one thing but hearing them laugh so freely was special.Â
He walked into the living room, announcing loudly:
âCookies for the ladies!â
His arrival, or more exactly, the cookiesâ arrival was met with even more glee.
âAre they caramel pecan cookies? Steve, did you make the caramel pecan ones?â Of course Max was checking if the merchandise had been baked according to her request. She was not Erica, but she was not playing around either when it came to cookies.
âYes, Steve, Max said they were the best type of cookies, and you are the best at making snacks.â El said softly, aiming a big smile at him.
Steve was absolutely done for.Â
Were they constantly manipulating him into baking for them? ⌠Perhaps. Were they the best kids in all of Indiana? The jury was out, and Steve had accepted a long time ago that he was biased as hell when it came to them.
âOf course I made your favorites, Max. Be careful, theyâre still a bit hot.â
His warning fell into deaf ears. In two minutes maximum, all the cookies had been snarfed down, except for two they had generously put away for him.
âThere are so good, Steve,â Max said, while still eating her last mouthful of cookies. She swallowed. âYou brought them at the right time too, we were almost done with our makeup, and the lipstick would have smeared if we had eaten with it. Here, look,â She delicately grabbed Elâs face and turned it toward Steve. âIsnât she so pretty like that?â
Max had applied a really pretty purple eyeshadow on El, and she had definitely put other things on her face, but Steve couldnât really tell what everything apart from the mascara and the blush. It was colorful without being too much, and she looked bright, happier than ever. Max, on the other hand, was sporting a heavy dose of black eyeliner, and for a moment all Steve could think was Eddie putting eyeliner on in his van just before a Corroded Coffinâs show.Â
Steve swallowed with difficulty. He felt strangely agitated, as much by the reminder of Eddieâs pre-show ritual than by the multitude of makeup products spread on his living room table.
âYouâre both really pretty.â His smile was still reaching his eyes, but it was a close call.
âWeâre not done yet!â Max grabbed a pink lipstick and applied it on Elâs lips.Â
Steveâs heart fell into his stomach.Â
El frowned a bit, looking inside the bag open on the ground between them, and finally selected a dark red lipstick.
Steveâs missed a heartbeat, then felt as if his body was making up for it by beating fucking war drums in his chest. He took a slow, deep breathe, then another, trying to stay as calm as possible, or at least look the part for the girls. He didnât want them to see him distressed, and he certainly wasnât planning to tell them why he felt that way.
âI think this one would look bitchinâ.â El put it on her best friend very carefully, visibly less familiar with the technique. She dabbed a cotton on the corner of Maxâs lips to remove an excess of makeup and took a step back, clearly satisfied with herself. Then she turned toward him.
âSteve, can you take a picture of us?â
God. He wanted to throw up.
âYes, of course.â The polaroid camera was in his hand before he had even realized it.
Snap. Snap. Snap.
âHere. One for each of you, and one for me. Iâll put it on the wall.â They looked so happy, he could not pass up the opportunity to have such a sweet picture to his collection of the Party's best moments. Even if his smile was tight and his eyes were burning.
âIâll leave you to your girly things, alright?âÂ
He fled the room, barely hearing the two teens screaming about the movie they were about to watch.
The house was empty, and Steve couldnât sleep.
It wasnât because of the Upside-Down. The ache in his chest was different, both old and new, and turning in his bed again and again ended up being prodigiously ineffective.
Steve stared at the clock, the red numbers gleaming like a beacon in a tempest.
3:45Â a.m.
3:46Â a.m.
3:47Â a.m.
Steve threw the covers down and stood up. He was not going to sleep tonight. He walked around the house without thinking, until he found himself staring at the mirror in his parentsâ bathroom. The curtains were open, and the night was just clear enough to illuminate his tired face in the moonlight. Steve blinked, half-surprised to see where his feet had brought him. He started drumming his fingers against the tile behind him, keeping a bit of distance between the basin and himself.
His mother was not often here, but she liked to keep what she deemed as âessentialsâ in the Hawkins house, just in case. Her bedroom was full of clothes she liked enough to keep but didnât care to bring on her travels, and her bathroom was fully stocked, from her favorite shampoo to all her necessary makeup.
And Steve was standing here, in this mausoleum of his momâs life, staring at that damn bathroom drawer. The handle had been changed when Elizabeth Harrington had gone through her latest home renovation frenzy three years ago, but the furniture was still the same, if a different color. In the dim light, it looked eerily like the bathroom he had known in his childhood.
Shit.
With trembling hands, Steve opened the second drawer. A bunch of cosmetics had been left there, waiting in vain for the return of their owners. Most had never been used, and the others were still barely used. Steve reached in the drawer and picked up a red lipstick. Slowly, he took the cap off and stared at the vibrant color, muted by the relative obscurity of the room. The lipstick was new; Steve had the intrusive thought that if he tried it on, he would leave a mark, and his mother would know.
It was stupid. She wasnât at home enough to remember which lipstick she had used or not.
Minutes passed.
He stared.
 Finally, he put the cap back on, then threw the lipstick back in the drawer and left the room, flying both his pale reflection and the tube of makeup.
He didnât go back to his bedroom. At this point sleep was clearly out of his reach for the night, and turning for hours in his bed for nothing was not very appealing at the moment. Instead, he took a turn, walked down the stairs, and set his course for the living room.
But between here and his goal, there wasâŚ
His dad liquor cabinet.
Steve froze in front of it, his brain working in slow motion. He had done his best to cut down on his drinking when he had started to date Nancy, but he had stopped trying when she had stomped over his heart like a herd of wild buffaloes. And he felt better now, with Robin, the kids and Eddie, but he could still remember vividly a time when he had beer for breakfast on weekdays to chase his hangover. Alcohol was⌠a difficult subject these days.
He opened the cabinet and picked up the first bottle he saw. Scotch. A good one at that, way older than him and probably worth more than the price of his battered liver on the black market. He swore. If his mom would not even realize it if he decided to ransack her whole bathroom, His dad would definitely notice his missing bottle. He had, before, and Steve never wanted to put himself in that kind of situation again. But even if the cabinet was off limits, there was still the wine cellar in the basementâŚ
Steve shook his head and put the bottle back in its place, glass clinking. He took a deep breathe, his eyes closed. He wasnât going to drink himself into a stupor just because he felt stupidly jealous of a couple of teen girls. He was better than that.Â
He fled toward the living room, stopping in the kitchen just long enough to grab a can of coke, then threw himself on the couch. Maybe a movie would be enough to lull him to sleep.Â
Back when he was eight years old, his parents had started going on longer and longer trips, and Steve had been left with a nanny. Linda had pretty blue eyes, pretty brown hair, a pretty smile, and was generally the prettiest person ever, according to little Steve. She had succeeded to Janice, who had only babysat him when his mother was busy, but had been mean enough that the idea of getting a nanny like her full time for weeks had been really scary. But after her, Linda was an angel, and Steve was in love.
She was so kind to him, Linda, always reading him a story before bed and telling him how strong and brave he was when she cleaned up his raw knees after a fall, just because he didnât cry. She was the best, period. Steve wanted her to stay forever. She was way nicer than his dad, and Steve had decided quickly that he was not going to follow in his dad step and be a boring lawyer like everyone wanted him to be one day. No. Instead, he was going to be just like Linda, with her kind voice, her beautiful puffy hair and her pretty red lipstick.
One day, when Linda had been busy cooking dinner and he was supposed to do his boring homework in the living room, he had tiptoed up the stairs all the way to his parentâs bathroom, and picked up the lovely red lipstick his mom had left behind. He had tried to put it on just like he had seen her do it, making an âoâ with his mouth and smearing the product on his lips.
Linda had found him there, with red all around his mouth, and had screamed at him for the first time. She had rubbed a hard cloth against his face to wash it off.
âLipstick is for girls, Steve. Girls. Never do that again, do you understand?â Her voice had been hard, sterner than it had ever been, and her grasp on his arm had hurt.
He had promised her he would never play with his mom makeup again, and had been sent to his room without dinner. He had swallowed down his tears, and accepted her reprimand, because it was Linda, and Linda was always right.
She had been a bit more strict for a few days, but Steve was pretty sure she had forgiven him after that.Â
But then his parents had come home, and the first thing his dad had done had been to slap him, hard, and give him the verbal lashing of the century while shaking him. It had been worse than that time he had helped Tommy egg his neighborâs house. Between his dad harsh words and his momâs disappointed face, he had understood.
Linda had snitched.
He had been punished, again, and had spent two months without any sleepover at Tommyâs. After two weeks, his fury against Linda the Snitch had abated, turning into a deep hurt. He didnât love her anymore, and he certainly didnât want to wear pretty red lipstick like her, because she was a traitor, and he never wanted to be mean like her.Â
Lipstick was for girls anyway.
The kids were always squatting his house like a bunch of invasive little rodents, so, of course, Max and El came back two weeks later for a girlsâ afternoon, just the two of them. They had asked for baking goods, again, but this time their alleged means of survival were brownies.
Steve, whipped as he was, made brownies.
When he brought the cakes to the girls, his nose was assaulted by a sharp smell.
âSteve!â Max raised her head, abandoning for a second the nail polish she was putting on Elâs hand. âCome here, El needs someone else to practice using nail polish.â
Steve froze.
âWhat?â
âShe already did my nails. Itâs not exactly perfect, but sheâs doing better each time!â Max wiggled her hand in his direction, showing off her bright green nails. âLook, she barely put any on my skin.â
Steve stood there, staring at the two teenage girls seated on his living roomâs floor, dumbfounded. They wanted to⌠do his nails?
Max must have read his trouble on his face, because she immediately started to argue.
âYou know, El needs more experience in normal peopleâs activity. So you would be helping her.â El nodded vigorously. âAnd you know, plenty of guys wear nail polish.â Now, that was a lie. Steve was a guy, and he had plenty of male friends back in high school when he was on top of the food chain. None of them had ever used nail polish, because it was a girl thing, and would have ended with the dude stuck in his own locker. Max was so full of shit right now.Â
âLike Eddie!â El added.Â
Wait what?
âWhat? Eddie doesnâtâŚâ
âYes, he does! He painted his nail black with us once before going to Indianapolis!â
There was an implication there that Steve was not ready to think about. All he knew was that Eddie definitely didnât wear nail polish in Hawkins. People would have made even more comments against him if he had, and he really didnât need more hatred from every asshole in town right now.
Still. Even if Eddie didnât really paint his nail on the regular, it didnât mean Steve could not do it once, discreetly, for the girls. He would just have to remove it before going to bed.
âYou know what? Okay. Iâll do it.â
Max and El cheered as he set the brownies on the coffee table and sat down with them. The girls rummaged in a bag for a minute, before El brandished a little blue bottle.Â
Oh shit. That was⌠a rather bright color. He winced.
âAre you sure about this one?â He asked them.
They both nodded. âItâs blue. Blue is a boy color, youâll be fine.â Max added, rolling her eyes.
Steve tried to ignore the blue eyeshadow El was sporting and gave her his hands.Â
El took her time, carefully painting each of his nail blue, sticking her tongue out in concentration. It was always very sweet to see her do mundane activities with her friends instead of fighting for her life. Steve did his best to focus on the satisfaction he felt at seeing her this happy, and ignored the pit that was trying to grow in his stomach.
He was fine. It was just nail polish.
âAaaand done!â El threw him her best smile. âWhat do you think?â
It wasâŚ
It wasâŚ
Well, it wasnât so bad. A bit unusual, of course, but the color created a good contrast with his skin. It was eye-catching, and Steve found at his great surprise that he rather liked it.
âItâs lovely,â He said, a bit breathless.Â
âItâs my turn, now!â Max said, grabbing the makeup bag. Steve frowned. Everyoneâs hands were already painted, what did she want to do? Steve wiggled a bit to hide his feet under himself. He was not letting her paint his toenails.Â
She brandished a pink tube.
Oh.
âMax, Iâm not letting you put lipstick on me,â he started, voice stern. âThatâs for girls. You know Iâm not a girl, right?â
âOh, come on!â Max said with a big smile. âJust for a few minutes. Itâs not even a very colorful one. Itâll be very discreet.â
âAnd weâll match.â El continued.
Steve felt the pit in his stomach grew.Â
âI⌠Itâs for girls, Max.â
He watched, breathless, as they exchanged a pointed look. Had his reaction been that visible last time? Did they talk about it in his back?
They turned back toward him. Unexpectedly, El was the one to start.
âYou know, Iâve seen lots of people acting like other people doing things differently than them is wrong. And at first it hurt, because I wasnât like anyone else. Like at all. I still donât understand everything people say, because I didnât learn about a ton of things as a kid. But now, I donât care anymore.â She took a deep breath, then smiled. âThe most important thing I learned was to be myself, whatever âmyselfâ meant, and to try to be happy with that. Rules about what you should like or not are stupid. So donât listen to the dumb mouth breathers who say only girls can wear lipstick.â El shuffled closer to him. âTheyâre wrong.â She whisper-shouted in his ear.
Steve swallowed around the lump in his throat. She⌠She wasnât wrong. These rules were stupid.
âOkay,â he mumbled.
âOkay?â Maxâs smile was soft. âSo I can put lipstick on you?â
âGo ahead.â Steve closed his eyes tightly. âBut if I donât like the color Iâll take it off.â
He sensed more than he heard Max coming closer to him, but the weight of her hand on his shoulder made him jump anyway.
âYou need to stop biting your lips, Steve.â Maxâs voice was soft, and for a moment he felt like she was talking to a spooked horse. The wild staccato of his heart wasnât breaking the comparison either.
Steve was acting like a total idiot. It was just some damn lipstick.
He let go of his bottom lip and took a deep breath, trying his best to relax.
âHere we goâŚâ
The lipstick wasnât cold. Steve wasnât sure why he had expected it to be, but it wasnât. The texture was dryer than lipbalm but it tasted vaguely fruity, and Steve had to refrain from licking his lips. The whole process was sort of underwhelming.
âOkay, it's almost over. âMax slipped a piece of paper between his lips. âNow, press your lips together.â
He followed her instructions, bemused.
âAnd weâre done! You can open your eyes.â
Steve blinked, disorientated. He didnât feel anything. It was weird. He was wearing lipstick. Surely he should have felt different. Changed. Maybe less of a man, or something. But no.
Maybe it was just because he couldnât see himself.Â
El picked up a hand mirror and waves it in his direction.Â
âHere, look at yourself! Youâre so pretty!â
Steve caught the mirror and angled it toward his face.
Oh.
It was. Nice.
Very nice. El was right, he did look really pretty like that. Max had chosen a lovely strawberry color, and it matched well with his reddened cheeks. He ran his hand though his hair and tilted his head, admiring his reflection.
âYeah, I think that color is really working for me.â He smiled at the mirror. âDamn. I look fine.â
El and Max started giggling madly.
âYou do!â El said. âItâs very nice.â
âI think you should show it to Eddie,â Max continued with a plotting look on her face.
Steve blinked owlishly. Why? How? Did she really expect him to drive like that all the way to Forest Hill just to show to Eddie how the soft red of his lips complimented his face?
âWhy would I do that?â
The giggling resumed.
âHe likes makeup.â El said.
âYeah, sometimes he put some eyeliner on.â Max added.
â I know, but I donât think I ever saw him with eyeliner unless heâs playing with his band? Thatâs part of his rock star persona. Like ABBAâs crazy concert clothing.â Then again Steve wasnât spending all his time with Eddie. Maybe the guy had hobbies he shared with other friends. Like the ones he met in Indianapolis.
âNo, I saw him with eyeliner on weekends too. I think heâs a bit shy about it.â
âEddie? Shy? Have you met him?â
âHe probably thinks you would react badly if you saw him with makeup in a sort of normal setting? You did just imply makeup was only for girlsâŚâ
Steve sputtered. âI wouldnât have said anything mean to him if he had shown up to a movie night with eyeliner!â
âYeah, but he doesnât know that. And you have a huge jock vibe, so that doesnât help.â
El nodded. Traitor.Â
âSo if you showed him youâre not against wearing a bit of lipstick, he should appreciate another guy who does nonconforming things, like him.â
Steve took a second to really think about it. Eddie was always very vocal about non-conformity. They were probably right. He should show him how he looked right now. Show him how he wasnât just a former jock. Eddie didnât need to go all the way to Indianapolis to find interesting friends. Steve had dept. He could be unconventional if he wanted.Â
âYou know what?â He stood up. âIâm going to Eddieâs.â
âWait, what? Right now?â In Maxâs defense, he had decided to never leave the kids unsupervised in his house after the carpet incident. But it was El and Max, they were not like Mike and Dustin. He could trust them with the furniture.
âYeah, why not?â He briefly turned back toward the girls, one shoe in his hand. âAre you going to destroy the house if I leave you alone?â
âOf course not!â
Okay, Iâll be right back,â Steve said, walking out.
He closed the door, nearly missing Maxâs last comment.
âYou wonât!â
She/her | 25 | French, queer and anxious | translator | fanfiction writer | I have one(1) white hair on my head so it means I'm wise
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