Such a great little story đđ„șđ„°
the hurt is good
part i part ii part iii part iv part v part vi
billy hargrove x fem!reader
word count: 5,163
warnings: swearing, cops, talk of jail/billy's abuse, neil, fluff and love
a/n: well, here it is. this is the very last part of my very first series. i am very proud of the ending i've created for these two. i like to think i've given billy what he deserved. i'm so grateful for all of the feedback and support you've given me on the previous parts. also, a part of this relies heavily on hopperâs letter from season 3, so thatâs that, and then some of his other dialogue. iâve found that it fit billy effortlessly. i really hope you enjoy this and maybe find some solace in it. i love you all <333
before you read, listen to: time after time by cyndi lauper and/or the promise by when in rome
ââââ
The first night without Neil, Hopper sits in his car outside the house. He promised no one would hurt them. He means it.
Nicky went to high school with both Hopper and Joyce. In fact, she was suspended for dealing them weed under the bleachers at one point. She regrets nothing to this day.
Because of that, it really wasnât too difficult to have a heart-to-heart with the man, to get him to sit down with Billy. And Max and you. Susan.
Hopper had shown up at the house to speak with Neil. When he arrived, he told you to keep Billy in his room, though that hadnât mattered. The second Billy realized he might actually get out of this, that he might live without fear of his own father, he buried his face in your chest, tears wetting your collarbones, your t-shirt.
Youâd let him get it all out, stroking his loose and frizzy curls, occasionally laying your hands over his ears to muffle any shouting. Billy squeezed you each time you did so.
Even if he was a little hopeful this might work, Billy couldnât help but think about that night when he was a kid. When his mama left him with Neil.
Heâd sat on his bedroom floor, trying to be quiet while his dad showered, pleading with her.
âPlease mom, donât do this. Please come home.â
âHow long? How long?â
âI miss you.â
She was the last person he felt safe with, before you. And sheâd gone, leaving her boy with him. Trapped. Part of him wasnât sure this would work out. Heâd hoped for so long that his mother would return, and she hadnât. Neil had dictated everything in Billyâs life so far, so how was it possible for anything to change?
Hopper had given Neil Hargrove one option.
âYouâre gonna sign these papers,â heâd said, gesturing at the divorce packet lying on the table, âand Iâm going to quietly take you down to the station and expose you for the piece of shit you are. Lock you up for abusing your child.â
Neil had started screaming about how Hopper had no right to do any of this, to barge into his home claiming all of this.
âSure, yeah, pitch a fit. Like thatâs gonna change anything,â Hopper said, entertained by the fact that Neil was acting like the victim.
During one of the intervals where your hands were pressed to Billyâs ears, the hoop in the left one biting into your palm, youâd caught something Hopper said.
âI suggest you shut your mouth before you give me something else to report.â By the tone in his voice, you could imagine that he was inches from Neilâs face.
âYouâre a coward,â Hopper had said. âBeating on your kid because your life didnât turn out right. Well let me tell you something, thatâs not his fault. Itâs yours.â
Thereâd been a knock on Billyâs bedroom door followed by Hopâs gruff voice.Â
âY/N, kiddo can I have a minute with you?â
Billy had looked up at you, eyes puffy. âIâll be right back baby, Iâm not leaving, I promise.â
Youâd pressed a kiss to his forehead, and heâd held onto your hand until it was too far out of his reach.
Shutting the door carefully behind you, youâd looked at him. âWeâre taking him away,â he said.
You blinked. âReally?â
âReally. He signed, so Susan is good to go.â
Hopper considered letting Neil run away, making him just disappear, but he didnât want to chance him doing this to someone else. Heâd already done that once though, hadnât he?
âIâm really proud of you for helping him through this, kid. You remind me of your mom.â
His hand had been warm on your shoulder.
âIf you want me to be honest, heâs lucky this prison isnât very big. But that doesnât mean nothing will happen if others figure out what heâs in for.â
You nodded, knowingly.
âPowell and Callahan just got here. Weâre gonna be quiet. No lights, nothing. I donât want to make this worse for Billy. But if he wants to see, weâre going soon.â
âThank you, Hopper,â youâd said, hugging him. Heâd let you. Heâd had his fair share of a shitty father as a kid. Helping someone like Billy is something heâd always wanted to do.
Back in Billyâs room, youâd taken his face in your hands.
âBaby, theyâre taking him now. Do you want to watch or stay inside?â
His back had straightened. He knew what he wanted, and he told you as much, so you led him through to the back steps, holding his hand the whole time, Max behind you, resting her chin on her brother's arm.
Billy got to watch them shove his father in the back of a police car, hands behind his back.
He was finally free.
ââââ
Susan pawned most of Neil's more expensive things, that way she'd have money to cover bills for a while and have something to put towards the house payment. She hadn't really been trusted with the financials when Neil was around, aside from basic spending. Now that she had two children to look after, she really didn't want to be in a bad spot.
She had a feeling most newly divorced women would use the money to buy themselves something nice, but she didn't see any point in that. This wasn't about her. This was about making a life where Billy and Max could feel safe.
Even if Billy had whined about it to you at first, having dinner with Max and Susan at least three times a week to start was helping. And he would never admit this, but Susan was actually a pretty damn good cook. Whenever she'd prepared food pre-inmate Neil, they'd been kind of shitty. Billy supposed this had been her tiny form of protest.
It's pretty late now, but Billy is sprawled on the couch watching reruns of whatever. He's really not even entirely sure what's happening on tv. He thinks this might be Cheers. It's the fact that he can be on the couch that he's doing it. He doesn't have any particular reason to hide in his room unless he wants to.
He's missed this couch. It's the same one he's sat on since he was a kid. Since his mother was still around. It was one of the few items that made it to Hawkins when they moved.
Susan has the day off tomorrow. She said so at dinner. Hence why she's still up.
Billy hears her footsteps and looks up when she walks into the room. She gives him a gentle smile.
"I'm making Max some hot chocolate. You feel like some? I have marshmallows too, if you want those."
"Uh, yeah, sure. Thanks."
She smiles again and then disappears for a while before returning with a mug that has a six-year-old Max's hand print on it.
Billy sits up and takes a sip. He can't remember the last time someone made him someone other than you or Nicky made him something like this.
Susan sits down a little ways away from Billy in an oversized chair that Max usually claims as her own. The only time anyone else gets to sit in it are in times like these when she's being forced to do science homework with Dustin yapping in her ear. She'd asked for help, not an entirely new lesson. Dustin did not care.
Susan starts to read a book, and Billy almost forgets she's in the room when she speaks.
"Billy?"
His eyes rove across from the television to her over the top of his mug. She sets the book down.
"I just wanted to apologize. For not doing anything to protect you from your dad. I don't really have a reason other than selfish ones, like I was afraid he'd start on me, or Max. I guess I just thought if he got it out things would be okay." She buries her face in her hands.
"God, I'm so sorry, Billy. This is your home, and I came into your life and took you away from where you'd grown up, and I never stopped to think about what it was doing to you. I was only thinking about myself."
âI shouldâve helped take care of you. You were just a kid. Youâre still just a kid. And Iâve done nothing but let you down. I want to be better. Iâm not saying I want to replace your mom or anything, but I donât want you to feel unsafe or unwelcome here anymore.â
Billy keeps drinking his hot chocolate but he has to hold it with both hands because theyâre shaking now.
âI feel like I donât even know you. And maybe thatâs because you didnât want to know me, or maybe because I just avoided you.â
âIâm just so sorry, Billy. I want to try. I am trying. The both of you deserve so much better and you donât have to accept this. I just wanted you to know that and that I care about you.â
Billy is quiet and for a moment it scares Susan, but she understands he might not have anything to say. He might not want to say anything. He might be waiting until he can afford to move out of this fucking house.
But Billy finally sets his mug down. Itâs empty. He looks at Susan and he nods.
âItâs okay,â he tells her. âI understand. I donât blame you and I appreciate that you want to try. I want to try, too.â
Susan nods back, a sweet smile on her face. Itâs gentle, the look sheâs giving him.
Billy does understand though. His being the target of Neilâs abuse prevented both Max and Susan from it. He understands that Susan was afraid of her husband and the man that she might not have known heâd unveil to be. She was scared. He understands.
Heâs willing to try. To let her in.
She stands and picks up Billyâs empty cup. âWas it okay?â she asks, âItâs just the store bought kind.â
âYeah. Yeah it was great.â
When she grins at him she looks young. She looks tired and upset, but maybe thatâs a good thing. Maybe it means change. Maybe it means sheâs learning. Sheâs trying.
ââââ
âWear mine.â
Billy looks at you through the mirror in front of which heâs been primping. He claims he doesnât like it when you say heâs âgetting pretty.â His blush says otherwise.
âYours?â
He rolls his eyes and puts down the hairspray he was holding. âYeah. Itâs fuckinâ cold tonight. Just put mine on. I donât want you to walk all the way back to your house just to get something I have.â
You snort, making for his closet door. âAll the way back?â
He bumps your hip with his, a common you-little-shit gesture.
âBecause I live so far away.â You greet the pornstar taped to the thin wood before sliding it open.
âShould be on the right,â Billy says, ignoring your comment and shoving cologne down the front of his pants while you arenât looking. Itâs a habit at this point. Shit, he doesnât even think about it, and he knows he doesnât have to impress you.
You push around the clothing hanging in his closet, a couple button-ups, leather, a sweater youâve never seen him in. Itâs this cream color, thick and cable knit. You pull it out.Â
âHow come you donât wear this?â you ask, holding it up to him. He unsnaps another button from his shirt and your eyes follow the movement even though you donât mean to ogle.Â
Billy looks the sweater up and down like itâs grossing him out. âI wore it once,â he tells you.
âOnce,â you mock playfully, putting the shirt back into his closet.
Billyâs hands are on your hips in an instant, spinning you around. âI thought you were getting a jacket, not raiding my belongings.â
You stick your tongue out at him. Itâs childish and you know it, but you do it anyway. He smacks your ass in retaliation, and you go to squeeze his but he grabs your wrist, pulling it to his mouth so that he can kiss your pulse point.
âBarf.â The voice makes you turn your head, and Max has pushed the door open fully where it had been cracked.Â
âHi, Max,â you say, pulling your hand from Billyâs grasp, even if he pouts, and moving to actually retrieve the denim jacket youâd been instructed to wear.Â
You can feel Billy and Max staring at each other. âWhat do you need?â he asks her.Â
âJust came to see if we were planning on leaving today or if I should maybe hitch a ride elsewhere.â She enters the room and sits down on the edge of her brotherâs bed.Â
Billy glances at his watch. âYou said to have you at Elâs by seven-thirty. Weâve got time.âÂ
She crosses her arms and Billy faces the mirror again. He thinks heâs finished. âDid you even finish packing your bag, shithead?â
You shove your arms through the jacket sleeves, looking at Max. She raises her eyebrows. No, she definitely did not. Thereâs a flash of red hair as she hops up, and then sheâs gone, the sound of dresser drawers being yanked open and shut echoing down the hall.Â
You start rolling up the cuffs, and Billy reaches for the collar, adjusting it for you. Youâre focused on getting your hands free when you feel Billyâs finger lifting your chin up. He brings his lips to yours, kissing you once. He pulls away and you move back in, wanting one more. He obliges, albeit grinning at your eagerness. When youâve gotten your fill, you kiss his cheek, and thatâs the one that makes him blush.Â
He moves away from you, pulling on his own jacket. âIâm gonna go start the car, okay?â
âMâkay.â
Max let it slip once that Billy always went out to warm up the car before taking them to school. She wouldnât have assumed it was for her right off the bat, but when she realized he didnât do that when it was just him in the car, she figured out it was him being nice. Now he just does it for the both of you. You wonât ever say anything about it.Â
You look at yourself in Billyâs mirror, listening to his footsteps down the hall and out into the living room. You put your hands in the pockets of his jacket, and to your surprise you feel something. Itâs not spare change, or a lighterâanything you wouldâve expected to find.Â
Itâs a sheet of paper. You pull it out, thinking it might be homework he tucked away or a receipt or something. Itâs not, though. Itâs notebook paper, and itâs been neatly folded like it was done with purpose.Â
You sit on the edge of Billyâs bed, and unfold it. To your surprise, itâs a page covered in his handwriting, that pretty, sometimes faintly cursive scrawl. There are some lines scratched out because he used a pen and couldnât erase. But the thing that catches your eye is the very first line. Itâs just your name. Itâs a letter. A letter for you.Â
Your heart starts to race and you find yourself beginning to read, sinking further into his mattress.Â
Thereâs something Iâve been wanting to talk to you about, it reads.Â
Feelings. Jesus. The truth is, for so long Iâd forgotten what those were. Iâve been stuck in one place. In a cave, you might say. A deep, dark cave. And then I sat with you at lunch, and bought you a book, and suddenly you were part of my life. For the first time in a long time, I started to feel things again. I started to feel happy.Â
But, tonight Iâve been feeling distant from you. Like Iâm pulling away from you or something. Iâm sitting here and Iâm thinking about the way you looked at me that first night at the record store. The way you held on to me when I slept over for the first time. Iâm not even sure if you remember it, but every time I tried to move throughout the night you whined like you were afraid I was going to leave you. Like you needed me.Â
But you didnât know about my dad or that I was falling in love with you then. And I canât stop thinking about how I raised my voice at you when I came over today.
You pause, realizing when it was that he wrote this. The day he fought back.Â
And Iâve been afraid for so long that I might turn out like him. That I might be just the same. And Iâve been scared that you might realize that too and leave me behind. But I didnât feel that way today when you spoke to me like a human being and you wanted to work things out. Iâm changing. Youâre changing me. Weâre changing. And I guess, if Iâm being really honest, thatâs what scares me. I donât want things to change. Because thereâs a part of me that worries you might still change your mind. The rest of me knows you wonât.Â
So I think maybe what Iâm saying is that when you didnât know about how I felt or who I really am on the inside that it didnât feel like Iâd lose you. But now Iâve let you in and you can see all of me. And now that youâve said you love me I really donât want things to change. I donât want to lose you or want you to go.Â
But I know thatâs naive. To think youâll leave. Thatâs not who you are. I know youâd look at me and say thatâs not how this is going to work.Â
My whole life everyone has picked someone else over me. Left me behind. Left me on my own. And I know thatâs how life works. Itâs moving. Always moving and people change whether you like it or not. But youâve taught me that change can be good. That it doesnât always mean people changing their mind about me. About caring about me or that Iâm good enough to keep around.Â
And sometimes change is painful. Sometimes itâs sad and sometimes itâs surprising.Â
Happy.Â
So you know what? I donât think change is bad anymore. I think Iâm supposed to learn from it. I think that when life hurts, because I know parts of it are going to hurt and there will be things that always hurt, I should remember it. Because the hurt is good. It means Iâm out of that cave.Â
I just want you to hold my hand while I figure it all out.Â
You finish reading and fold the letter back up, putting it back where you found it. You hadnât realized you were crying, but you were, and you spend the next few minutes fixing yourself in Billyâs mirror.Â
When he returns he thinks youâre the one primping.Â
âReady, baby?â he asks. âMax is in the car.â
You turn to him, and he smiles at you. That pretty, pretty smile. You kiss him on both cheeks and then shut off his bedroom light.Â
âIâm ready.â
ââââ
Billy pulls away from Hopâs cabin after dropping Max off, but heâs quick to stop the car again.Â
You were quiet the whole way there. Sweet as always, no doubt, but it was clear something was bothering you. He doesnât like it when things upset his girl.Â
âWhat are you doing, Hargrove? Weâre gonna miss the movie if you keep this up.â
He raises his eyebrows at you. âWell excuse the hell outta me, honâ.â
You slap your hands against your face, peeking through your fingers at him in hopes that heâll go ahead and scold you.
âI want you to tell me whatâs wrong, baby.â Billy doesnât have to elaborate. You never seem to have to explain your feelings to him much anymore. Itâs like heâs figuring you out, like he understands and knows when somethingâs bugging you or if youâre hurting.Â
âItâs nothing bad, I promise,â you say.
âThat doesnât mean I donât want to know.â
You nod, and reach into the pocket of the jacket, pulling free the paper. Itâs seconds before Billy sees the striped sheet that he remembers what it is, what heâd left in there.Â
It all comes back to him, his wrist hurting from pouring his heart out, the relief he felt at putting his feelings somewhere.Â
You hand it to him. He unfolds it and scans it over. âYou read it?â He knows you did.
âYeah.â You smile shyly at him, and itâs the same smile you gave him that very first night that you came to check on him. Billy wants to kiss you, so he leans over the center console and does; he presses his mouth to your forehead, warm and sweet. His presence is all-encompassing: heady cologne, minty gum. So very Billy. So much like home.Â
He hands the paper back to you. âFeelings, huh?â he says, his mouth pulling up at the corners.Â
âFeelings.â
You sandwich your hands between your thighs, taking a deep breath. Your eyes start to water and you canât help it.
âBilly, I would never leave you, okay?â You were hoping the tears wouldnât spill over, but it doesnât matter because your voice fails you. It wavers and you sound fragile, young. And then heâs taking your face in his hands, wiping under your eyes even though there isnât anything to wipe yet, just soothing motions over the apples of your cheeks, calloused thumbs and warm skin.
He stares at you, his eye contact unbreaking. When he looks at you like that, blue eyes boring into yours, you canât help but feel a little full. Because heâs looking at you like that. You.Â
âI know that. I know.â
You nod, and he nods with you, so much that it looks silly, the both of you nodding, and you start to laugh.Â
âI made you feel that way? Really?â
âOf course you did,â Billy says. âMy whole life Iâve felt like Iâm like a black hole or somethinâ. You donât make me feel that way.â
Your heart aches for him. For this boy whoâs had no one tell him how good he is. Whoâs finally let you in. Whoâs finally realized he can have better, and that he deserves to.Â
âI love you, Billy.â
He kisses you on each cheek, your face warm against his lips. He grins and you can feel it on your face.Â
âI love you too.â
When you get to the movie theater, you do pay for popcorn, and you do hand him the snacks you kept in your bag after you take your seats. Your mother said movie candy was getting much too expensive.Â
You pop a handful of Sno Caps in your mouth, and Billy opens his mouth. You sprinkle some in his, and then reach for his hand.Â
He looks down at your clasped fingers while a kid almost faceplants with a bucket of popcorn on the way up the stairs. Thankfully their father caught them first.Â
âYou did say you wanted me to hold your hand.â
âI did,â Billy says.
âââââ
âSit still, Iâll be right back, I swear.â
Billy crosses his arms, but itâs hard for him to look entirely brooding when heâs got plum shadow on his eyelids. You stand. âHere, Max, supervise.â You hand her the brush between your fingers, and she snorts at her brother from where she lays across your bed.Â
You make for the living room, suppressing a grin at the sounds of laughter emanating from the area. Susan and Nicky sit on opposite sides of the couch, watching The Golden Girls and talking about whatever it is that mothers-of-dating-children talk about.Â
âMom,â you say, coming to a stop in front of her.Â
âHi, honeybee. Whatâs the matter?âÂ
âCan I use some of your makeup? Thereâs some things youâve got that I havenât andââ
She smiles at you, adjusting the well-loved pillow squished behind her back. âYou know you can. Whatever you need.â
Her grin is contagious, and you find yourself smiling back just the same. âThank you.â
She nods. âPlaying dress up?â Your mother gives you a knowing look, thinking about the idea youâd had in mind ever since you watched Rocky Horror with Billy that first time.Â
âYou could say so,â you tell her, and then youâre off to raid her bathroom cabinet, pulling free the large and full bag of goodies.Â
You start to rifle through the corduroy pouch, but decide itâd be easier to take the whole thing with you to your room, so thatâs what you do.
When you return, you settle on your knees in front of your boyfriend, still finding it odd that you get to call him that now, even if that is exactly what he is to you. Your pretty, pretty boyfriend. Your boyfriend whoâs letting you do his makeup.Â
Max hands you your brush back, raising herself up on her elbows so that she can watch the show better.
âHi,â you say to him, pressing a kiss on the tip of his nose.Â
âHi,â he responds, his voice showing all signs that heâs both enjoying this, yet also grumping about the fact that he let you do it in the first place. He settles back on his hands, legs spread so that you can sit in between them and reach him. You pull free both the pencil of thick liner youâd been looking for, and a pot of blush you know to be much pinker than the one youâve got. Yours has also been broken on multiple occasions so that now itâs just little bits of pink powder sliding around in the pan.Â
You uncap the liner first, a warm brown shade, clearly freshly sharpened by your mother. âClose your eyes, pretty please,â you tell him. He obliges, lids fluttering shut.Â
You reach out, and starting to drag the tip of the pencil across his skin, you realize your hand isnât as steady as youâd like, considering the fact that youâre also half-focused on not kneeing Billy in a place youâre quite sure heâd prefer to not be kneed.Â
You let out a frustrated sigh, and Billy blinks up at you. âWhatâs wrong?â
âThis isnât working. Justââ You shove the eyeliner pencil into his hands, and then move from between his legs. You grip his calves and move his legs together, then crawl forwards a little and straddle his lap.
He grins up at you, a cocky and mischievous look. âComfy?â
âShut up and close your eyes again.â
âWell you donât want much.âÂ
You pinch the squish of his side and he swats blindly at your arm. You take Billyâs face in your hand, resting the pinky of your dominant one against his cheekbone. This go around youâre able to drag the liner effectively across his eyelid. A tap at his face signals he needs to look up, and when he does, you do the same to his lower hip. Afterwards, you take a super small brush that Max found and use it to smudge the eyeliner out some, that way the lines arenât so harsh.
You finish and take Billyâs face in your hands again, turning it to face Max. âThoughts?â
She taps her chin, though smiling all the same. âVery nice.â
With a little more manhandling, you get some mascara on those lashes of his, though not without a little pleased squeaking in the process. Itâs at the blush that you get excited enough to make him laugh. You swipe your brush heavily across his cheeks, and then the tip of his nose, where youâre probably much too generous. You donât care. He looks so, so pretty, all blushy like this.Â
âPart your lips.â You say, thumb tugging at his bottom one. You put a gloss on Billyâs lips and almost lose it for good. Heâs so gorgeous.Â
When you finish, you wipe your hands clean on a towel and back up a little ways from him to survey your work.Â
You clap your hands. âMax, help me. Would you look at this?â
She does, laughing gleefully. âOh my god, this is so good.â
You look Billy in the eyes, and Max hops up off of your bed to get a better look. âYou look so gorgeous, my love.â
Heâs thankful for the blush in that moment, because without it youâd see the effect your using that name had on him.Â
âThank you,â he says.
âWanna see?â God, you look so happy.
âDo I have to?â
You bite your lip and Billy pulls it free, taking the little handheld mirror from you.Â
And, honestly, he thinks he looks kinda hot. You picked a good eyeshadow color, one that makes his blue eyes stand out even more, and he just looks pretty. Just as youâd said.Â
âDo you like it?â
âYes. You did a very good job.â
He goes to kiss you, but you stop him. âNope. Youâll mess up my work!â
Billy rolls his eyes and flips Max a bird when he sees her giggling at your enthusiasm and his compliance.Â
âCan I take a picture?â you ask.Â
Billy holds up his hands. âOh hell no.â
âBilly, she needs to document her masterpiece,â Max says, though really she knows itâd make great blackmail. That and she loves how happy the both of you seem. Sheâd like to remember this too.Â
âPlease?â You give him your very best puppy dog eyes, making sure theyâre watery and everything. You know heâll give in.Â
âFine. But you show this to anyone, and youâre both dead.â
You laugh, grabbing for your Polaroid camera. âWho the fuck do you think Iâm gonna show? Everyone I know is in this room.â
Billyâs smiles then, and youâre just quick enough to catch it. You get another after you kiss his sparkly forehead. And when youâve finished, you stick them in the frame of your mirror so theyâll always be there.Â
That night, after Max and Susan have gone home, you sit in the bathroom to help Billy wash the makeup off, but only when youâd let Nicky see, and she thought he looked stunning. Showstopping, sheâd said.Â
And itâs then, as you wipe the rosy tinge from his cheeks, revealing his freckles once again, that you realize months before this youâd been so alone. Youâd ached for a moment like this.Â
And here you were. So even if the journey to get here had hurt, even if itâd been hard and pushed you to your limits, itâs okay. Because thatâs how life works. It hurts sometimes. And thatâs okay.Â
Because the hurt? The hurt is good.
ââââ
please let me know if you liked this! feedback is always appreciated!! comments and reblogs mean more than you know. <33
no words. just this. imagine papa munson. *heart eyes*
could I request modern!steve surprising reader at college? maybe she has been super homesick and itâs all fluffy?
Steve frowned at the maps on his phone, âcause the estimated time told him the journey would take three hours, but he was certain he could do it in less. Two and a half, maybe, if he didnât stop. He grinned as the group chat pinged with notifications, Robin asking you if you were still planning on staying in tonight.
He breathed a sigh of relief when you replied with a âyeah, too tired to leave the dorm.â How was he supposed to surprise you if you werenât there to open the door for him? So the rest of your friends sent messages back, saying how they missed you as much as you missed them, how they hoped exams werenât stressing you too much and would you be home soon?
Steve knew your exams were taking a toll on you, he could hear it in your voice when you called each night, cheek pressed to the pillow and voice soft with sleep and longing. When it got particularly bad, he could hear you get a little watery, words splintering in the middle when you told him you really just wished he was there to give you a hug.
So Steve was gonna do just that. Drive two and a half (three) hours to your college to wrap you up in his arms in the hug he so desperately wanted to give you. Robin was the one who convinced him to surprise you, who told him the sneaking around and white lies would be worth it.
âCause Steve had already had to reject your call by the time he reached the outskirts of Hawkins and it pained him. You knew he was off, why wouldnât he take your call? His phone pinged through with a message from you.
âMissing you â„ïžâ
Steve stepped on the accelerator a little harder.
He did in fact make it sooner than his sat nav told him, a smug feeling of pride mixing with anticipation and nerves in his stomach. It wasnât like he rarely got to see you, no, you came home all the time, the train ride back to Hawkins even faster than the drive but exams had you holed up in either your dorm room or the library most weekends this month. Steve parked his car in the lot, felt his stomach flip when he saw your bedroom window from the sidewalk, cracked open for some autumn air, curtains tangling in the breeze. If he squinted enough, he could just make out the photo frame on the sill, the one he knew held a photo of you and him last vacation, you on his lap in front of a campfire at the cabin at Sugar Creek, taken by Jonathan.
He counted the doors to yours, each footstep echoing almost too loudly in the narrow corridor, blurred with the sounds of too many different spotify playlists, chatter and someone yelling about a grade they got. Steve sucked in a breath before he knocked on your door, your name along with your two roommates written in red pen on the whiteboard pinned to the wood. He hoped theyâd gotten Nancyâs Instagram message, that they knew the plan and would let you open the door.
Sure enough, you were the one behind it when it swung open, the movement making the hair falling over his eyes lift and he grinned at the sight of you, rucksack over one shoulder, a bunch of peonies in one hand.
âSurprise,â Steve managed, the last syllable knocked out of him in a soft oomph, as you launched yourself at him, pink petals crushed between you both, your arms around his neck and he laughed as he held you to him, your toes barely on the ground at the exuberance of it all.
You were crying, he could feel them on his neck, where youâd buried your face and sniffed. âHappy tears, I hope,â Steve murmured, letting his bag and the flowers drop to the hallway carpet so he could hug you a little better.
You nodded, making a small sound, a watery pleased noise that made Steve laugh even more.
âYouâre such a dick,â you choked out on a sob, pulling back to smile at him to show you didnât mean it. You usually werenât one for surprises, and your boyfriend knew this, but god, youâd never been so grateful to open the door to the person you least expected. âYou didnât answer my call. Thought you were sick of my whining.â
âMissed you too, babe,â Steve quipped but pushed a thumb to your cheek, pouting at the tear he caught there, your flushed cheeks and wet lashes. âNah, me? Sick of you? Unheard of. Illegal, actually, to even think of such a thing.â
You sniffed again, lip wobbling and Steve couldnât stop his grin. âChrist, woman, câmere.âHe pulled you back to him, hand cupping the back of your head so you could cling to his shirt and pretend that you were definitely not crying.
âI missed you,â you told him, words pressed to the skin of his throat, along with a kiss, tear soaked and soft. âA stupid amount.â
You got a proper kiss in response, sticky with fondness, a little salt from you but it was still Steve. It still tasted like home.
âŠ
I'm just gonna go crawl under my covers and cry like the baby I am after reading this đ„șđđ„č
Pairing: Eddie x F!Reader
Summary: Eddie wants to introduce you to his mom, so you go to the graveyard with him.
Warnings: angst, fluff, death of a parent
It was late evening and the sky was starting to darken when you sat down on the ground, in front of the stone with Mrs. Munson's name engraved on it.
"Hi mom, this is Y/N," Eddie said as he crossed his legs and stared at the faded photo of the smiling woman on the tombstone "my girlfriend."
He had been wanting to take you there for some time, he said that since he knew your family he wanted you to get to "know" his too, only if you wanted too, of course.
"I've talked about her so many times before, I do it every time I come here actually, but I've never brought her here before." He added pulling his hands out of his jacket pockets and playing nervously with the rings on his fingers.
He kept talking without ever meeting your gaze as if he was afraid of what he might read in your eyes.
"She's here because she's really important to me and I wanted to introduce her to you too. Uncle Wayne has already said that she likes her a lot, they're basically best friends, sometimes I think she loves him more than me." He said the last part with a slight laugh but from his expression he didn't look amused.
"You two have a lot in common, you know?" He asked before pausing as if he was really waiting for an answer.
In return you only heard the rustling of the leaves of the trees caused by the wind.
"She's as kind as you were. She always lets me copy her homework even though I should probably start doing it myself if I wanna graduate. Sometimes she brings home-cooked food for me and Wayne, she and her mom make really good chocolate cakes, you would have liked them a lot." He explained, his voice low.
"Sometimes we cook together like I used to do with you. But Y/N and I always end up making a mess or fighting with flour. But it's fun, so we keep doing it even if we have to clean the trailer from top to bottom afterwards." A sad smile appeared on Eddie's face, probably remembering his days spent with his mother when she was still alive.
"And she's as funny as you, she can make me smile with a simple joke even though my day has been shit and I just want to sleep for three days straight." He added and your heart squeezed in your chest.
"She's caring. That's another thing you both have in common. Once I didn't go to school because I had a fever and she missed an important test to come and check if I was okay. Actually I wasn't very okay, she had to keep my hair back as I threw up. I told her she could go anyway but she stayed with me until Wayne was back, at night. She stayed there all those hours, making me rest my head on her legs and running her hands through my hair just like you did." At this point you just wanted to cry. You never thought that all those simple gestures that were part of your relationship with Eddie could mean so much to him.
You reached out to him and grabbed his hand which had started to shake slightly and definitely not from the temperature. He fliched at first, then hold it as if his life depended on it.
"She's also a good listener, she never judges when I talk about my problems and always listens when I talk about things I'm interested in . She says she likes to hear me talk about what I like, Dungeons & Dragons, the band and music in general, books. Once I even started reading the Hobbit aloud to her, but she fell asleep after half an hour with her head on my chest. I didn't get mad, she was too pretty. And I could never be mad at her, she makes me happy." If he was talking about being happy, then why did his voice sound so broken?
"When I'm with her I feel good, mom. It doesn't matter if I'm at school, in the trailer or on a bench in the woods, when I'm with her I feel at home. And it feels good. It feels great." He added as a tear rolled down his cheek.
"She's one of the best people I know." He breathed as you reached up to him and wiped it away with your thumb, slowly caressing his cheek.
"You would have loved her, mom." He said finally, before wrapping an arm around your waist and pushing you against him, resting his head on your shoulder and sniffling.
"It's okay." You said caressing the fabric of the denim jacket covering his back.
"I love you." He whispered.
"I love you too. And I'm so sorry I didn't get to know your mom. If she was even half as amazing as you are, then she really must have been great." You said leaving a kiss on his forehead.
"She was." He murmured as his arms still held you.
Your lips brushed his temple leaving a light kiss there too, then you turned towards the tombstone.
"Mrs. Munson, I promise I will take good care of your boy."
Eddieâs zoned out as he prattles off care instructions and wraps up the manâs (very strong) bicep, careful to tug it tight enough as to not hurt him.Â
Heâs distracted. Has been for the better part of the past hour.Â
Steveâs been the ideal client. Perfect, he might even say.Â
Hardly nervous at all as he climbed into the chair and made himself comfortable. No flinching at the needle, and heâs been as easy-going as anything.Â
His eyes were heavy lidded and fluttery as the needle pressed into his skin, a soft smile gracing his face as he watched his spitfire little girl flip through Eddieâs books for a design she liked.Â
âYou find anything you like, baby?â He asked.
Eddie took a pause to peek up at the little redhead across the room. Her hair in two little braids, eyebrows furrowed, and tongue poked out in concentration.
âNo, I wanted a dinosaur but these are all flowers and stuff,â She pouted.
Eddie huffed a quiet laugh.Â
âTell you what kiddo,â He stole a glance at Steve, blissed out in the chair. âSince your dad has been such a good sport and youâve been so good, Iâll draw you up a dinosaur when weâre finished okay?â
Maxâs eyes lit up and she giggled behind her hands and nodded.
Now that Steveâs tattoo is done, a pumpkin on the inside of his bicep, he sits up and calls her over.
âCome see, pumpkin.â
And Eddie hadnât asked, but now, as he watches her bounce across the room and gasp at her dadâs tattoo he feels his face split into a smile.
âDaddy it's me!â
Steve laughs and it's so so lovely. He drops a kiss to the top of her head before he stands.Â
âIt is you, bug.â
Eddie peels off his gloves and puts his hands on his hips.
âAlright miss lady. Letâs draw you a dinosaur. What kind are you thinking? Stegosaurus, pterodactyl?â
She jumps up with her arms bent to her body and roars.Â
âIâm a T-Rex!â
Eddie laughs and gets settled at his table.Â
âAlright firecracker, letâs draw you a T-Rex.â
*****
After heâs sketched the outline, a little cartoon dinosaur, he runs it through on his temporary tattoo sheet and sets to âpreppingâ his station.
He sprays down the chair and tugs on more gloves.
He sits on his stool and pats the chair.Â
âCome on up Red.â
She squeals and runs over and Steve hoists her up onto the chair.
In the meantime, Eddie rolls over to his mini-fridge in the corner and grabs the cold rag heâs had in the freezer.
He can hear Steve whisper as he tucks a loose hair behind her ear.Â
âYou excited, huh? My brave girl.âÂ
And Eddieâs heart melts.Â
He rolls back over and puts on his serious face.Â
âOkay Max. Youâre gonna feel a sting but youâre a tough girl, arenât ya?â
She furrows her brows and nods. She rolls up her own sleeve.Â
âIâm strong!â
He canât help but smile.Â
âYou sure are. Look at those muscles!â
He peels off the plastic covering the ink.Â
âWhere do you want to put it?â He asks.
She pats her upper arm.
âHere. Just like daddy!â
Eddie grins again and Steve is biting back a smile from his spot behind the chair. Eddie sends him a wink and watches the flush bloom across his cheeks.
âYou ready, Red?â
Her focus face is back and she nods resolutely.
Eddie lines up the sheet and sticks it to her arm. She turns her head back towards Steve.
âDaddy? Will you hold my hand?â
As if Eddieâs heart wasnât already a puddle on the floor.
âHere we go, sweetheart,â Eddie says as he presses the cold rag to her skin.
He hisses through his teeth and grimaces like heâs in pain. He holds back a laugh as she puffs out her cheeks and visibly squeezes her dadâs hand.
âYouâre doing so good, baby,â Steve tells her.Â
She lets out a sharp little breath as Eddie shifts and presses the rag back against her skin.Â
She looks up towards him and giggles.Â
âItâs not that bad. Iâm tough like daddy.â
He flops the rag back down on his tray and goes to peel the paper away from her skin.
âYes you are!â He says as he smiles down at her cute little dinosaur, âDo you like it?â
She looks down at it and squeals.Â
âLook daddy! Look!â
Steve hoists her up onto his hip and swings her around, giggles filling the space and Eddieâs heart.Â
âI love it, pumpkin! Youâre the coolest little girl in the whole world!â
He puts her down and she runs around the chair to where Eddie is peeling off his second set of gloves and bumps right up next to him. He furrows his eyebrows and goes to ask whatâs wrong when heâs interrupted.
âLook dad! Just like Eddie!â
And now that he looks at it he sees it. Maxâs dinosaur is in the same place as her dadâs tattoo. But itâs in the same place as Eddieâs dragon too.
Pairing: Steve Rogers x Reader
Warnings: mentions of injury
Words: 392
a/n: Hey y'all this is my first time publishing my writing here so be sure to leave some feedback. This is being written at midnight because my body decided to be mean, so I'm sure I'll need it. This is for @omgrachwrites' 1k follower celebration, congratulations girlie!
You dug through Steve's dresser, trying not to make too much noise, though there was no reason to worry. You were the only one left in the tower; everyone else had gone on a mission and weren't expected back until the next evening. Your leg had been burned badly in an explosion during the last mission, keeping you benched.
It had taken you three hours to convince Steve that you would be fine on your own. The man was a mother hen. Eventually, with some gentle threatening from Natasha, he had agreed.
You now regretted encouraging him to go. Nightmares filled your sleep, waking you up drenched in a cold sweat. You missed Steve; he was a teddy bear and security blanket wrapped in one.
This led you to your current mission, stealing one of Steve's ridiculously comfortable shirts. Tight on Steve, they dwarfed you, making them perfect for sleeping in.
Finally, you found the shirt you were looking for. It was one of Steve's favorites, the one you had custom-made for him. The shirt was navy blue and read, "Just a kid from Brooklyn". Steve had grinned when he read it and now wore it constantly around the compound.
Smiling fondly at the memory, you slipped off your pajamas and replaced it with the shirt. You felt the tension in your body drip away as you realized it still smelled like him too. Contently, you crawled into the bed and fell asleep.
7 hours later, Steve hummed happily as he made his way to his room after the debriefing. The mission had taken much less time than anticipated, allowing him to spend the day with you. He reached his room and opened the door softly, expecting you to still be sleeping.
There you were, lying sprawled across the bed, hair a mess and mouth open. Steve quickly removed his clothing and got into bed, pulling you into him gently. You woke up immediately and promptly rolled over and kissed his cheek happily.
"You're back early," you remarked.
"Yeah intel overestimated the amount of agents they'd have and..." he answered before pausing and taking a look at you, "Is that my shirt?"
"You mean our shirt?"
"Oh now it's shared?" he asked, a smile on his lips.
"Yep, I'll draw up a custody agreement in the morning. Now, we're going to sleep."
This is my first time writing for Steddie, so sorry if it's shit! Based on this post.
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No one had ever seen Steve cry, and at this point they werenât sure it was even something he was capable of. So, as he stood over Eddieâs open casket with the only dry eyes in the room, no one really batted an eye.
It had been 3 weeks since Steve had carried the metalheadâs body out of the Upside Down, with Dustin leaning heavily into a misty eyed Robin and Nancy as he limped alongside them, tears still streaming from his eyes. Steve hadnât shed a tear then, and he didnât shed one now. It wasnât because he didnât care for Eddie, in fact he probably cared for him far more than heâd admit to even himself, but something just didnât feel right. It was hard to grieve for someone when it didnât truly feel like they were gone.
Eddieâs uncle had arranged the funeral to be a quiet affair, hoping to minimize the chances of any angry hicksâ gate crashing. So it was held in a small room at the morgue, with only close friends and family in attendance.
After a short speech from Wayne, everyone filtered through to say their own goodbyes. Mike and Lucas both stood by the casket momentarily, gripping the sides and saying their own quiet goodbyes. Erica didnât say much, just placed a small black dice beside one of his hands before nodding down at him. Nancy went up with Johnathan and whispered a quiet thank you, letting her hands brush a stray lock of hair from his face. Dustin stood there in silence just staring down at Eddieâs still form before choking out a promise to look after Eddieâs âlittle sheepâ. And then it was just Steve and Robin left in the room. Robin tugged on his sleeve, looking up at him with big pleading eyes until he nodded and walked up with her, he stood beside her as she whispered a soft goodbye, eyes then looking to him to do the same.
âCould I⊠I just need a moment with him, if thatâs okay?â he said quietly, smiling gratefully as Robin just squeezed his hand and nodded before also exiting the room.
Eyes doing a quick check around the room to make sure there was nobody left to witness what he was about to say, Steve let his hands rest against the wood of the casket and leant down towards the long-haired man.
âOkay, you listen here you little shit, I know youâre not dead.â Steve whispered; eyes firmly trained now on Eddieâs face. His grip against the wood only getting tighter as the silence stretched on.
âFuck.â he breathed, hanging his head at the lack of response, before turning to start walking away.
âYeah, no shit Harrington.â Came the gravelly response from behind him, stopping him in his tracks.
As he slowly turned on his heel, he watched as Eddie pushed himself up into a sitting position, an almost familiar grin on his face had it not been for what looks like two fangs pushing down over his lower lip.
âWhat the hell, man?â Steve exclaimed, almost storming back over to the casket and taking Eddieâs face in his hands and tilting him from left to right to get a better look.
âNice to see you too, Stevie.â Eddie murmured; cheeks being squished slightly by Steveâs grip on him.
âHow long have you been, well not dead?â Steve huffed; brows furrowed as he let his gaze roam over the other manâs body.
âHonestly man, I have no clue. I woke up a couple of times, but this has been the first time I was actually able to move. Fuck, it really hurts dying yâknow.â Eddie groaned, stretching all his limbs out and rolling his shoulders as he let his hands pick at the tight material of the black jacket he was dressed in, âOf course Wayne would take this opportunity to get me in a suit, I love the old man, but shit.â
âReally? I donât think our biggest problem right now is your style choices, youâve literally come back from the dead man.â Steve grumbled with a hand nervously running through his hair.
âOoo, now thatâs where youâre wrong Stevie boy, itâs always about the style choices.â Eddie grinned, loosening the tie that was around his neck with a grimace, "Anyway, what's the plan for breaking me out of here? Cus I don't know about you man, but I don't exactly love the thought of being buried alive."
âLook, youâre not meant to be being buried until tomorrow, can you just hang tight for a few hours? I can come by later tonight and sneak you out when there's nobody aroundâ Steve said, hands landing like a disappointed parent on his hips.
âHarrington. You cannot be asking me to, what? Play dead?â Eddie scoffed, the realization slowly showing on his face as he realised that Steve was deadly serious. âNah man, come on, thereâs gotta be a better way than that?â
âWell, unfortunately for you, I don't think there is. Youâll get recognized the second you step out those doors, and I donât know about you man, but Iâm not exactly in the mood for a lynch mob right about now.â Steve said, raising an eyebrow as Eddie visibly deflated.
âFine. Fine, but you better come back for me Harrington!â Eddie sighed, pointing an accusatory finger at the other man as he lay back down with a huff.
âAlways, Munson.â Steve replied, knocking his knuckles against the side of the casket with a soft smile, missing the slight pink that rose in Eddieâs cheeks as he slipped out the room.
joe please
[While decorating the Christmas tree]
Steve: Why is everybody using these tiny little lights nowadays? I remember when people used to use big lights.
Natasha: That's a good story, Grandpa.
every time someone calls Steve dumb I lose one HP