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#speedrun lovers to enemies
grezzirossi · 1 month
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Wyllach my beloveds <3 Mini strip under the cut (Tw wounds)
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creativeusermeme · 9 months
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i have but one wish for castlevania nocturne s2
edit: WAS NOBODY GONNA FUCKING TELL ME I SPELLED CASTLEVANIA WRONG
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bbbbbbbbatman · 1 year
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Timkon where their dynamic is just all or nothing, 100% all of the time.
The first time they meet on a mission they get off on the wrong foot and completely hate each other. It is on sight for them. Their respective guardians and teammates have to work tirelessly to make sure they don't get within 100 feet of each other on joint missions.
After more than a year of this, Tim is visiting the titan's tower and he and Kon walk into a room both wearing t-shirts for the same obscure band, they make eye-contact and immediate 180. They are best friends now, they are ride or die. Everybody hates this, both bc of their combined powers for chaos and also what the fuck have we been doing the past year when you get along just fine?!
Tim sees Kon shirtless after training and accepts that he is now in love. Kon watches Tim stab a guy (not in a sleek, sexy way but in a feral gremlin way) during a fight and he's instantly in love. A few weeks later Tim catches Kon staring at his ass. They start making out. Six months later they get married at the courthouse with Cassie and Bart as witnesses, and they all make a pact of secrecy. It is, to this day, the only secret all four of them have managed to successfully keep.
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dlartistanon · 11 months
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Maybe in the future, but for now...
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mysteryanimator · 2 months
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Is it gay to pin your enemy between your thighs?
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watchyourbuck · 10 months
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Eddie: *walking into the firehouse for the first time*
Buck: something LGBT just happened to me.
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animentality · 1 year
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suckmyarschkarte · 2 months
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what is happening here 🤨
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the thing is that dean was ON his cute shit in 3.12 jus in bello like he comes in swinging already having been cast as the focus of victor's career for the past year, likely getting him to invest more time in him than in at least one of his marriages, BUT THEN he comes out swinging even more when he's proven unexpectedly right about everything and immediately makes a silly song reference, then spends the rest of the episode listening to victor's existential crisis, being fiercely against one woman sacrificing herself to save the many, committing to finding a way out of their situation without having to kill anyone, laying out his life philosophy to victor that even if the world is doomed they should still choose to fight and it matters that they do, making this adorable endearing face, fighting side by side with him, and coming up with a plan that actually works and saves people's lives. all the while giving him those green-eyed looks. dean IS victor's manic pixie dream boy in a very real sense. yeah of course henriksen had no other choice but to fall in love with that
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parksrway · 11 months
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Sheik and that one footsoldier should do a lil kissy. Smorch on the forehead.
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sheik still isn't sure how this happened but the honeymoon is going well
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who would have thought the person in the gang that's gonna be doing the adopting and found family shit would be paco laburantes.
bro was like "this guy sucks ass at fighting and is a pussy let's have him join our gang."
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excessive-moisture · 9 months
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Okay dream time.
So I had a dream that you released WEST before SOUTH and I was like "huh" The setting I was in was kind of ambiguous because my dreams are often like that. So I think I went to watch WEST which was of course about Gourmand.
Gourmand saw Enot and immediately started trying to roll over them. Enot got scared and dodged once but Gourm just kept rolling and circled around to try and hit Enot again. They were also in the snow, I guess. I think Enot dodged again.
Then at some point I think I became Enot? Like the perspective was from their eyes. And I was lost in a snowy forest separated from my family and the sun was going down soon. I think I had boots on but my feet were freezing. Then Gourmand found me in the woods and brought me onto this car-tram-thing they were driving and we went up a really steep incline, and at the top was a hotel shelter thing of sorts serving as a refuge in the snow. The rest of the dream kind of devolves into not being Rain World related but at one point later in the dream there's a big wildfire. In the snowy forest.
WEST plot leaked, how could you
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Reading a fic rn where the protagonist is disguised and running around their enemy’s base, fucking things up, while also getting close to their enemy (cause this obvi another enemies to lovers fic), and they’re having this moment rn where they’re sad because they think that their enemy wouldn’t like them if they knew who they were
Not because they’re enemies, this protagonist barely gives a fuck about that, but because the protagonist’s background isn’t as “cool” as their enemy’s
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dadsbongos · 2 years
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he's in a band
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12.8 K words
warnings - female reader, you are specified to have a step-father and step-brother, the dark crystal is referenced especially towards the end, sorry if i tagged you and you didn't like it i'm just that kid that asks their mom for attention just to fail a back flip
summary - You and Eddie are forced to team up and make him into Snowflake King material so that you can beat Jason Carver in a bet (for fifty bucks and the success of Lucas Sinclair’s high school basketball career).
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You’re certain that if Eddie were just a little less forward about his interests, he’d be popular. It’s fucked up, certainly, but it’s also nothing new. Stacey Bennett pretends she doesn’t like science fiction or comics, Chrissy Cunningham acts like she doesn’t go bird-watching every weekend, and Trin Saelim purposefully misidentifies every actor in the Star Wars trilogy.
Eddie has the charisma and the looks and the hair for 1,000 jocks and you just know that with the right nudging, he’d have this school eating out of the palm of his hand. And that’s what you think of as you watch him speak with his freshmen worshippers at a level of respect and kindness you don’t often see between peers of the same age.
“Hey, creeper,” Chrissy bumps her shoulder into yours, “What’re you doing starin’ at him, huh?”
Stacey and Trin snap around to where you stare and you so despise their eagerness.
“Nothing,” you lie, then decide against it, “Munson- Eddie Munson, he could be popular. I think.”
Immediately, there’s the overtly mocking, painfully cynical laughter that peels from Jason. None of you can quite shake him despite the fact Chrissy dumped him eons (months) ago, but also - none of you can quite gather the courage to speak up against him or his friends.
“Right, the freak could be popular,” Jason turns to Patrick McKinney in a histrionic ‘look at this guy’ way, “That fucker couldn’t win Snowflake King, and Fred Benson won Baron sophomore year.”
“Eddie Munson could win Snowflake King and be more popular than you if given the proper push,” you narrow your gaze at him, “And I’ll put money on that,” when Jason doesn’t take the bait, you continue, “He’s in a band, he’s got charisma!”
“You know what?” Jason extends an arm across the table, a hand straight out and brows raised - challenging you, “I’ll take that.”
“Alright,” you catch his hand with yours, squeezing, “but, you, Patrick, and Andy can’t run against him, and if he wins then I get fifty bucks and Lucas Sinclair has to be promoted to actually playing on the court next season.”
Jason takes in the conditions, nodding, “He loses, I get fifty bucks and Lily Pham has to go on a date with me.”
Times really have been rough since Chrissy left if he’s this desperate, you suppose.
Jason squeezes your hand tighter, the sides begin to ache and your fingertips go numb from his force, but you clench his hand right back before storming off to the most avoided lunch table since Billy McFeely puked on the right column’s middle bench.
As you approach the Hellfire table, the freshmen stare and you feel their judgments linger. With scorching gazes and iced tongues, they observe as though you’re a small speck under their microscope. Eddie’s gaze is the hottest of them all, has been since you first met the so-called Satanist from Forest Hills.
“Munson,” you smile saccharine sweet though, leaning onto the sticky, off-white table by your elbows, “I’ve got a proposal for you.”
“Ah, sweet princess,” Eddie tilts back, hooking his hands behind his head, “how I love our talks.”
You two have spoken a mere handful of times, at best. You’re pretty sure that if you weren’t best friends with the cheerleader trifecta then he wouldn’t even know your name. Though, to be fair, if he wasn’t the renowned freak then there was zero shot you would know his. It’s like how two celebrities could speak about one another in an interview without ever having actually met the other.
Eddie would be Vincent Prince only in The Fly and only post-transformation.
“Yeah, I’m sure,” you smack his arm, “Listen. You need to win Snowflake King lest we both be subjected to the humiliation of Jason ‘pigskin hero’ Carver proving us wrong.”
That makes the other boys actually look at you, rather than the ill-wrought attempts to pretend they didn’t care.
“What’s in it for me?”
“Dude,” Dustin pipes up from beside you, leaning over and brushing against your arm in a move that you’re certain he’d never pull under normal circumstances. His eyes are wide and brows high, “take the deal!”
Mike nods eagerly, “If you win, maybe people will stop shoving us into lockers.”
“People actually do that?” you grimace.
Will Byers nods, looking a little more kicked-puppy than human-boy, “Swirlies are real, too.”
“Alright, then,” you click your tongue and look back to Eddie, visibly already working the idea in his head, “You win Snowflake King and nobody will touch your kitten litter,” you point across the table to where a collection of upperclassmen in Hellfire shirts sit, “or your older cats. And I’ll split the fifty Jason’s forking up.”
“Twenty-five, twenty-five?” Eddie tilts his head, tone lilting.
“No shot. Forty, ten.”
“For all the work I’d be putting in to win?” he mocks hurt and leans forward, copying you and settling on his elbows. Your noses are mere inches apart and it feels like the least deadly stand-off is about to commence, “How about thirty, twenty?”
You ‘hmph’. Earnestly about to call the whole thing off if this is how he’s going to be to work with, when you hear sick witch cackles from Jason Carver and his jesters. You don’t have to turn to know that they’re pointing as they laugh, their delight thickens as your patience thins.
“Fine,” you hold out the hand Jason didn’t maim, “but you get the twenty.”
Eddie doesn’t look at you. His gaze flickers straight over the doughy pulls of his dearest sidekicks. Companions more like, he’d say. You don’t know the guy extremely well, but you’ve seen the way he intimidates and shoves people away when it comes to his friends. It’d be sweet if it weren’t, you know, Eddie Munson.
“I’ll take the twenty,” he takes your hand and shakes, firm but not so evil as Jason’s, “And you edit my papers for the rest of the semester.”
“Unfair to add that while we’re already shaking,” he still hasn’t let go of your hand, but you haven’t dropped his either.
“I know, right?” he smiles right at you this time, not entirely genuine but not so twisted into cynicism to be lost, “Come by the theater room at four, my little Satan club should be done by then, ‘kay?”
“Sure,” you rip your hand from his now, swiftly carding between the packed tables and back to yours.
Dustin, Mike, and Will watch you as you go - Will is the first to return, brows furrowed at Eddie, “Hey, doesn’t Hellfire start at four?”
Eddie hums, nods, and tosses up his hands as though he’d forgotten, “I guess it does!”
...
When you walk in, it's as though you’ve entered a meeting in the damn White House.
Eight heads swivel directly toward the heavy door you creak open as soon as you enter - seven pairs of lit, wide eyes aim at you like war machines. Lucas waves shyly and you return it.
“Hi?” you step into the cold, stiff room and jump when the door slams on its stopper behind you.
Eddie, from the head of the table, puts a finger up to his lips - lips that stretch wide with glee as he loudly “shhh!”s you.
The heads turn back to their dreaded Dungeon Master, and you’re suddenly left in the dust of forgotten chip crumbs that crack when you step forward. A boy in red flannel and rosy cheeks glares like you’ve killed his mother and it stops you with the full force Medusa was rumored to have. You haven’t felt so unwelcomed since accidentally walking into the teachers’ lounge.
“And out from that rusty, chipped, half-hung gate crawls a hideous, toothy, bloody-nailed beast,” you would’ve assumed it was typical Dweebs & Dorks talk for a campaign if Eddie hadn’t been staring at you the entire time he said it.
But he’s the literal crux of your plan, so what is there to do except bite the bullet and huff your way to an abandoned table pushed straight into the wall? You plop yourself onto the floral-engraved wood and pull out the statistics homework due tomorrow. Typically, you wait until you’re actually home, but with however many hours to kill left you’ll make an exception.
Eddie, on the other hand, is having the time of his life forcing you to wait on his little “nerd games”.
Eddie hates you. He hates your manicured nails. He hates your 1970s dresses. He hates the rusted silver ring from middle school on your finger. He hates you.
He hates you because you’re popular and rich and don’t have to work the way that he does, and as much as he wants to go against the grain and never judge a person before he meets them - he isn’t that mature. He’s angry that you don’t have to worry about your water going out in the height of July heat. He’s bitter about the fact he had to work three jobs over his freshman year and you haven’t so much as clocked in for a part-time gig.
So, really, irritating you like this is the least he can do.
And besides, it isn’t like you particularly care for Eddie “the freak” Munson. Not his reputation, not his music, not his tattoos, not his obnoxious hair or laugh or way he speaks. None of it.
...
“It’s way too late to stay here, you have to come over so we can discuss the plans.”
Eddie rolls his eyes as you walk in front of him, out the double doors, and into the (mostly) barren student parking lot.
“Alright,” he calls after you, wrangling his keys from the belt loop they hang off, “but I want a meal and to meet your parents.”
“Why in God’s name would you ever wanna meet my parents?” you snicker when he doesn’t use his infamous gunfire wit to respond immediately, “Well, I guess that’s not fair - I know you haven’t heard of the big guy upstairs.”
“The big guy upstairs hates masturbation and people of the same sex fucking, I don’t think he’s quite the role model you want, dolly.”
You swat his arm, “I never said he was my role model, and don’t call me ‘dolly’.”
“But you’re so pretty and sweet,” he pouts, turning to walk back towards his van, “like a little doll.”
You groan and sigh your way into the shredded, puffing leather of Eddie’s passenger seat. You usually save judgments of people’s cars to the jocks that mouth-breathe around you and your friends, but the sheer amount of fast food wrappers and soda cans that orchestra with every shift of your foot seem to justify it.
Eddie picks out the morph of disgust on your face as soon as it appears, “What?” he grins like he’s having fun, “Never been in a guy’s front seat?”
You glare through your peripherals, crossing your arms tightly, “I’ll kill you for that.”
You’d figuratively kill him for less.
“I just don’t like the sound of wrappers- “ you squeeze your hands mid-air as if that portrays anything, “crinkling and making noise.”
“Well, do you happen to like the sound of fucking awesome guitar solos and screaming?”
Your eyes stick to his hand on the stereo's volume dial, “Not particularly.”
“Great,” he turns the dial almost entirely to the right.
You cover your ears, just to really rub it in how you detest his music, “You, Munson, are absolutely insufferable!”
He can barely hear you over the music, but he nods excitedly - curls bouncing, “Yeah! Totally!”
The van bounces and rattles and you think you hear a tire pop every few minutes as Eddie speeds through the streets of Hawkins to your house.
When Eddie steps into the plush beige carpet and yellow floral wallpaper of your cutesy 1970s home, he thinks that bubbling hatred solidifies. At least a little bit. A nicer TV than any that he’s ever seen is settled on a polished, mahogany stand in front of your family’s white couch.
Susan Harris’ Golden Girls is playing and three smiley, sweatered figures lounge about the cushions.
“Take off your shoes at the door,” you very specifically point to a small shelf of sneakers and boots and flats and heels, but Eddie just works off his mud-caked kicks on the carpet and leaves them there. Slightly to the side, so that if somebody tripped over them he could claim he tried to move them.
Your step-brother, a shitheaded eight-year-old you’d live and die for, doesn’t bother hiding the way he sneers while looking Eddie head to toe, “Did you bring home a criminal?”
Your mother swats his shoulder and Eddie can see the resemblance between you two.
If it were any high schooler, then Eddie would be a little more reactive, but this is an actual kid. He can’t bring himself to be mean to a child, so he just laughs and waves off your mother’s concern, “It’s fine, I get that a lot.”
“Well now, that’s a shame,” your stepdad shakes his head in a way you usually see from dads in movies. He sips the beer your biological dad always said he hated and points at the jean jacket adorning Eddie’s torso, “Nice patch, kid.”
Eddie follows the gesture, finding the DIO patch Wayne taught him to embroider for his seventeenth birthday. He’s surprised that your suburban step-dad with the pretty wife and popular step-daughter and snarky son knows what DIO is.
“Didn’t know you knew what DIO is,” Eddie moves into the living room, like a predator encroaching your territory.
You take the time to settle your shoes in their proper slots, and you even move Eddie’s sneakers to an empty spot (one at the very bottom).
“Just ‘cuz I got one foot in the grave doesn’t mean I’m clueless.”
You can hardly stop yourself before you’re snapping, “Stop saying you have a foot in the grave!”
He just chuckles and your mom rolls her eyes. You stroll straight past them and into the ugly mint kitchen your mom insisted on, where a large, water-speckled and soup-drool-stained pot lays on a cooled burner. Like a stray puppy, Eddie follows.
“You know what?” Eddie leans into the counter, head tilting into the white dips and lines of your fridge.
When he fails to continue on his own, you quirk a brow and turn the burner on, “What?”
“I was not expecting your family to be actually decent,” he murmurs, staring into the distance as if revealing a great truth.
“Even my step-brother?”
“Even.”
You shrug off the way his tattoos and veins reflect into your chest - past your ribs and breastplate and through the heart. It’s embarrassing. So you move on.
“My mom was a flower child in the 60s and 70s, so she gets counterculture.”
“And the old man?”
“Been taking care of other people since before he even got a driver’s license, so he’s seen worse shit than a dork that pretends to be intimidating.”
“Oh, am I- “ he points at himself, “am I the dork?”
Before you get the chance to reply, your very dear and precious shithead step-brother runs in. Wondering eyes stare up at you and Eddie, flipping back and forth until they settle on your metalhead guest, “Do you wanna see my room?”
Eddie presses his lips, then grins and nods curtly before pushing himself off the fridge, “Of course, little man.”
Your brother runs faster than Eddie does, but Eddie’s footfalls are nearly millions of times louder when he goes up those rickety stairs yet to be replaced.
You lean out of the coffee bean tinted doorway and shout after Eddie, “Don’t try and convert him to that Satanism shit!”
A quick, simple, “hey!” from your mother follows your outburst and Eddie pops into view long enough to stick his tongue out at you.
Eddie Munson is criminally overconfident and part of you detests that. Another part of you, a growing part perhaps, admires that in him - the ability to be himself even though everyone hates him. He’s a symbol to the geeks and a terror to the general public.
To you, he’s the monster about to gorge himself on homemade soup for the sake of fifty bucks, freshmen safety, and edited English papers.
How stupid.
...
When you go up the stairs and down that creaky floorboard hallway, Eddie is already in the final stretch of a tic-tac-toe game - you hear his win at the doorway when he cackles as your brother whines.
“Wisdom comes with age, big guy.”
Funny way of saying he’s dumb.
But your brother accepts it, weirdly enough - the only reason he got genuinely upset was because you had to drag Eddie away. Funny ways for a funny kid, you suppose.
“Why do you think I have all this untapped potential?”
You don’t hear Eddie’s question, too focused on the sloppy way that he lets soup dribble on his lips. It isn’t until he repeats himself that you take notice, “Hm?”
Eddie tilts his head and winks, “I know I’m hot, baby, but try listening when I talk, yeah?”
“Shut up, you’re a mess,” you snap a napkin from your mom’s pink-stained wooden holder and wave it in front of his face, “Ever used a spoon before, or am I popping your utensil cherry?”
“You think you’re hilarious,” Eddie steals the napkin, wiping down his lips and chin, “I said, ‘why do you think I have potential?’”
Your parents have gone up to bed, the living room lights turned out and long shadows cast along the checkerboard tile by lemon fluorescents. The looping shadows of Eddie’s hair against his rosy face are even worse.
The best course of action is to pretend you haven’t been pondering that exact question just to justify why he’s in your head so often.
“You have this, like, draw. I dunno. You smile like you have something important to say, even if nobody is listening. I think that’s really important. And you’re kinda pretty, but that’s the only time I’ll say it so don’t let it get to your head.”
“Too late, that’s all I’m gonna be thinking about now. You think I’m the hottest guy in Hawkins.”
“I never said that.”
“Well, if I said you’re the hottest girl in Hawkins, would you admit that’s what you meant?”
You freeze. It feels childish to be so caught off guard by someone like Eddie Munson. No, even worse because it was Eddie Munson. Once the shock washes away, though, you abandon your dumbfounded gape and twist up your lips like the cat that ate the canary. You gobble up all tells of naivety and swallow them, talons and teeth that would’ve frightened anybody but Eddie. He was borne of talons and teeth.
You don’t blow the steaming spoonful of your soup before you eat it, though, and that does frighten him.
What else frightens him, is the rolling chalkboard you sit him in front of while he desperately tries not to fall back into your marshmallow bedspread.
“The tenets,” you slap the powdered chalkboard and kick at Eddie’s shoe to make sure he’s paying attention, “of popularity. Also known as - the four-step plan to make you Snowflake King material.”
Eddie follows your manicured finger to a big, circled ‘1’.
“Don’t stand out - this includes your insane personality, your nutty clothes, and your dingbat rings,” your finger drops to a similarly styled ‘2’, “Get good grades. Jason should be enough to say you don’t have to be perfect, but if Coach G would bench you, then you’re out,” Eddie goes to gag, but you silence him with a glare before he gets the chance, “Three: get a hot date.”
Eddie drops his head to one shoulder, squishing his lips to show you an upcoming protest, so you simply cross your arms and wait, “Why don’t you just be my ‘hot date’? Gross phrasing, by the way,” he points right at your eggshell white bookcase, “Maybe open those feminist theory books I see on your shelf.”
“Shut up,” you take a fire engine red copy of Betty Friedan’s The Feminine Mystique and chuck it at his head, easily caught in one of his hands, “It’s too obvious if I do it. We have to find somebody else willing to go out with you. That one’s gonna take work,” you draw an imaginary line beneath point four, “Mystery.”
“Hell does that mean?” he cracks open The Feminine Mystique, seemingly reading from it until you snag the copy from his hands.
“Pay attention. And you’ll see, just listen.”
“Alright,” he throws his arms wide, smiling thin, “so explain. What’s the point of these?”
“To make you popular, like I said, dipshit,” you return the book to its shelf, matching Eddie’s poorly veiled vexation, “If you keep going at the rate you are now with a terminal case of oneirataxia, we won’t get anywhere. So, we’re gonna start employing these.”
“Alright, we’re basically just changing everything about me and hoping it works out?”
“Mhm. Yeah. Just for now,” you step around your wheeled chalkboard to stand directly in front of Eddie, “And the first thing we’re gonna start with is,” you clap your hands and grin-
Don’t Stand Out.
Your mother raised both brows when you told her that Eddie was picking you up for school in the morning, but it was absolutely vital that you ensure he actually put on the clothes you made him take home. Your ex left a plain white T-shirt, burgundy letterman jacket, and simple jeans during an open-door-policy’d sleepover and Eddie dry-heaved at the very sight of such a pile.
You dry-heaved when he was sat beside you in his rustbox on wheels in the letterman jacket, shirt, and black jeans.
“I thought I gave you blue.”
“You did, and I decided it looked weird.”
Your eyes scale him from head to seat, “You look weird anyway.”
“Thank you, delicate princess.”
By the time you and Eddie have parking in the student lot, you’ve pinpointed what it was that made Eddie more unsettling than usual.
“Take off the jacket.”
He nearly chokes on the air between his ribs, “What?”
“The jacket, hair-for-brains,” you pluck at the fitting material, “it makes you look weird.”
“You know,” he unbuckles and shucks forward in his seat to tug off the offending thing, “I was thinking that exact thing.”
Eddie’s tattoos come to life in the sun slivers that beam through his cracked windows. A demon puppeteered by the undead, two dice rolling on the inside of his wrist, and an old faded stick-and-poke heart on the side of his middle finger - to name a few. It’s weird.
Is it weird?
It is, right?
How speechless and dim it seems to render you when his red-sprung, vein-flicked, tender hands bunch up the letterman and throw it into his backseat. It’s all so weird.
You rush out, slamming his scratched door and rushing to the side doors of Hawkins High only to realize when going to tighten the straps, that you’ve forgotten your bag in that scratched van.
Turning, you huff, “Shit!”
“Aw, poor thing,” Eddie, ever the sweet savior, dangles your backpack from two fingers as he waltzes your way, “What would you do without me?”
“Be studying for my bio final,” you take the bag and swat Eddie off when he tries helping your arm through one of the loops, “Okay, remember- don’t bring up your freak stuff so much today. We’re starting off on a new foot, Munson!”
“I know, baby, I know,” he pats your shoulder just a tad too hard, then, suddenly, his lips fly to your cheek, and cherry ripe softness presses a kiss to the skin there, “Thanks for the threads!”
A wolf whistles from behind you as Eddie prances into the building, waggling his fingers at a few staring jocks.
A lithe arm slithers over your shoulders and silky black hair flutters into view, Trin raises a brow at you, “What was that?”
Chrissy and Stacey bounce onto the scene in tandem, the prior speaking first, “Yeah, getting all buddy-buddy with Eddie, huh?”
Stacey leans forward, beaming with perfect pearly teeth, “You two make an adorable pair, ya know?”
“Shush,” you can’t block out their teasings, especially as Trin insists on hanging off your side and smushing lipstick-stained whispers into your ears about how exposed and eye-catching Eddie’s tattoos are. As if you don’t know.
Chrissy and Stacey giggle at your apparent agony as you pass Eddie and his gaggle of goons. All of whom are similarly teasing him for the aesthetic shift.
“Watch your mouths, I’m still in charge of the campaigns,” Eddie snaps, glaring rather lightheartedly at Dustin, Mike, and Will.
Dustin squints, disbelieving, at the outfit his friend had squeezed into, “This isn’t you, Eddie. I’m worried.”
“If this is for the bet, I’m not sure it’ll work,” Mike agrees, leaning slightly into Will’s side, “You still look like you.”
“Just a teeny bit off,” Will smiles slightly, nothing but assiduous.
A girl of yellow cardigan and brown plaid skirt pauses before the group, eyes shameless as they crawl Eddie’s tattooed frame free of its usual baggy attire. She smiles and bunches her shoulders, “Lookin’ good, Munson.”
“You too, sweetness,” Eddie winks.
Mike’s jaw drops flat as the girl scutters off, “Who was that?”
“No clue,” Eddie follows her with his gaze, “I think we have econ together. Maybe.”
“Well, I guess this bet will work perfectly fine, then,” Will muses.
You watch from Chrissy’s locker. A technical success that still burns like the vilest of cough syrup as it goes down.
Eddie, despite the compliment, searches for you as soon as the girl is officially gone. His face sings the sonnet of a boy waiting impatiently for approval, so you eagerly hand it over with a nod and grin.
Good job, you mouth and Trin giggles at your expense.
“And when I finally blend in with the rest of you?”
He folds his arms and twirls a lock of hair around his fingers, sheepish is a new look on him. He’s jabbed in the ribs by Dustin and you’re grabbed away for AP biology by Trin and Stacey.
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“Then, we get to something that actually might benefit you. We have to get you some- “
Good Grades.
Ms. O’Donnell is certified in creating pain-in-the-ass tests. Forty-five multiple choice and two free response questions in fifty-five minutes happen to be one of those pains in said ass. As far as you’re concerned, the only bright side to semester exams like this is the seat changes beforehand - and the only bright side to this seat change is that you now sit next to Eddie Munson.
You finish with ten minutes left of class and find yourself entirely unable to resist how you immediately look over to Eddie. You two have studied for weeks in preparation for this, most of which was you just grilling him over raw flames about both minute and exaggerated details in Hamlet.
Not that William Shakespeare was usually anything other than ham-fisted in his works.
Eddie continues to struggle.
You can’t say you’re extraordinarily surprised, Eddie was a serial fidgeter and - no matter how much effort you both put in - was usually useless in recalling information. Not that he didn’t try, typically it was as simple as forgetting. Any which way you put it, Eddie wasn’t failing his classes on purpose. Not at all.
So to watch him violently scratch at the side of his head with the eraser tip of a pencil is painful. Both from phantom sensation and knowing how much he genuinely struggles with classes.
So you reach into your English folder for a stray piece of loose leaf, tearing off a quarter and numbering to forty-seven.
Eddie feels helpless. He’s reread the same question, number fifteen, for what seems like centuries, and yet he’s nowhere closer to actually getting that higher grade you were pushing him for. With someone else depending on him, there’s a new pressure.
Usually, when he’s only disappointing Wayne, it’s a regular soul-crushing experience that’s smoothed over by the fact that Wayne doesn’t prize academics the way he does a “good man”. Now, though, with you - there’s a lack of familiarity that leaves room for the overwhelming sensation he’ll be stabbing someone in the back.
Or through the heart?
Sharp lead jabs the exposed flesh of his arm. Right under the navy blue polo you’d literally strong-armed him to put on this morning. Eddie flinches back, retching his arm from the faint sting. You hold out the pencil, folding your hand in a way that has to be uncomfortable.
He pulls up his own pencil, glaring like you’re a moron.
When you harshly stick him with the lead again, he rips the wood from your hand and a folded piece of paper flutters to his dick-graffiti’d desk.
This time, as his eyes meet yours, you glare at him like he’s a moron. Good God, does he feel like it now, too.
Unscrambling the tightly wound pot of gold, Eddie checks his first fifteen answers and is - though he’d never admit it - overjoyed at the fact that they all match with the ones you have written down. The detail seems small to most, but progress is progress and Eddie can barely believe he’s actually able to understand the connection between question and answer for the remaining test questions.
After class, you wait on linoleum that shines under sickly tube lights for Eddie to walk out with his jingling keys and skunky black lunchbox and torn, weathered, black backpack.
“I should say, I intentionally put a couple wrong answers on there. So she doesn’t assume you cheated,” you pat his shoulder, preparing to walk away when Eddie takes your hand.
It’s warm.
You don’t know why it matters.
“Any of the first fifteen?”
Your brows knit, palpable confusion, “No.”
“Dope,” Eddie takes your bag and throws it over one of his shoulders despite your huffs, “Where to, sweetness?”
Fighting Eddie is pointless, especially on menial tasks such as carrying your backpack to a class. A class on the opposite side of campus from his, might you add.
“AP stats,” you point loosely, as if the class is actually anywhere within this hall, “You know, for extra credit, Mr. Abrahms - the stats teacher - has a band and if you go to a show, Ms. O’Donnell slaps on some bonus points to quizzes and tests, but not book reports.”
“Right, and why does she do that?”
He holds the door to the math sector of Hawkins High, filled with posters advertising the wonders of division and variables and dividing to find variables. For a laugh, he pretends to drop it when you walk through, only giggling as you lour.
“They’re married.”
“No fucking way.”
“Way.”
“Well,” he follows you down the hall, past lightbulbs that short and flicker and mud-stained tile, “I’ll only go if you come with, princess.”
“I’d love to, as long as you don’t talk shit about how it isn’t metal,” you give a pointed stare when he guffaws, slinging over your bag all while playing innocent.
“No promises,” he sings, slamming the door to AP stats behind you.
“And after we get your grades up, we- “
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“Well, hold on. We should probably do something that’s actually for me, right?” he removes the leather jacket hung over his shoulders, slowly as though this is some twisted rom-com produced by John Hughes, “I think I need a little thanks for going along with this.”
Your eyes roll almost on their own, “We already discussed payments, Munson.”
“Yeah, but how about something on top of that? Something a little more fun.”
“Ew.”
Get a Date Corroded Coffin Concert.
“I’m serious, honey, I see all about these things on the news - local and national, and you need to stay safe. And if I so much as smell a little alcohol on your breath, you’re grounded until,” your mother pauses, mouth opening and closing as she flounders, “Until I’m dead. So. Be safe and smart.”
“Yeah, Mom, I know,” you climb out of her car and shut the door, but before you’re released, the window slides down.
“Keep a good head on your shoulders,” she smiles, eyes moving past you and towards The Hideout. She gasps and pouts, tone immediately drawling up from the scolding it had been the entire drive here, “Is that your Eddie? Oh, he’s waiting,” she waves you aside and calls, “Hi, Eddie!”
“Mom- !” heat rushes your cheeks and you flip Eddie off from the hip, just out of view from your mother when he hyena giggles, “I’ll see you later.”
“Bye, honey,” she waves out the window, “Bye, Eddie!”
“Bye,” he practically sings as you stomp up to the stained metal door, “I didn’t think Mommy would be dropping you off; where’s your sack lunch, Mary-Sue?”
“Well, I didn’t think you’d be waiting so patiently for me,” you stretch to hold a hand up, pinched as though holding a treat, “Good boy!”
Eddie knocks his hip with yours so hard that you almost fold over sideways, “You wouldn’t have been let in without a fake ID otherwise, sweetpea. Sadly your reign on the population’s feeble minds stops here.”
He holds the door for you and you terribly despise the way it makes your chest thump, so you poke with a forked tongue instead, “Must’ve been mega important for you that I’m here, then.”
But Eddie is typical in that he doesn’t bite. Not in the way you want him to anyway, “Well, duh. How could I not foam at the mouth having you, princess of Hawkins High, at my little show?”
And despite your lack of involvement in the metal scene, and despite how much you wanted it to suck more than your neighbor’s hyper-speed and hyper-light vacuum, the show is good. You swear to God he even winks at you during the third song.
Following a call to your mom on the bright red bar phone, you wait outside with Eddie while his friends pack up.
The moon night is in full swing, a pale face among the stars. Thin purple and black clouds ribbon over the spectacle of craters.
“I really like the moon,” Eddie is a loudmouth at best and sporadic at worst, but something about his timber entrances you, “it reminds me of my mom.”
You hate when he tries to be mystic and poetic.
“Is she nice?”
“She’s dead,” Eddie laughs, but it feels like he’s at gunpoint, “She was nice. She told me once that whenever I feel alone, she’s just one look up away,” he sniffles and that’s when you see a spring of fresh tears, desperate to cling at his waterline, “This is nice. I don’t usually get to talk about stuff like that.”
“It’s nothing, Munson,” you huddle just a little closer, and if he asks you’ll say it was the cold Hawkins’ night. Winter is rough these days, you know, “I’m glad you can get it out.”
He digs deep into the pocket of his jeans and plucks free a pack of cigarettes, “Well, I’m sure it’s a downer on your rainbows and sunshine.”
Perhaps it’s just in your ears, or perhaps the world realizes what a terrible thing to say that was, but you swear that there’s a stock sound record scratch directly overhead, “What?”
“Oh, come on, I don’t call you princess for nothing. You’ve got it all,” he places a cigarette between his lips and your budding resentment blinds you to how they plush around the cylinder, “You’re popular. You’re pretty. You’re loved.”
“Are you kidding me, Eddie?” for some peculiar reason, his first name scalds worse than his last name would have, “Did you miss the part where we’re wiping away who you are to make you popular?” you shove him by the shoulder and he stumbles enough to know you’re far past joking, “So what the fuck do you think I’ve been doing for the past four years?!”
“I think you’ve been having the time of your life getting your ass kissed by a loving, comfortable family and everyone at that stupid fucking high school that I’ve been cursed to repeat!”
“You don’t know anything about me,” you laugh, no humor, and grin, no joy, “My dad was an awful drunk that stopped calling because I tried holding him accountable while he wanted to be the big victim!”
“Yeah, and my dear ol’ dad was a criminal that hated me until he needed somebody small and nimble to hotwire or sneak into a place.”
You’re nearly speechless.
“So you should understand!”
He should understand, and on some level he does. On another level, he’s intimidated by what you represent, and that’s why he fights you.
Your world and his might as well be Mercury and Pluto. You have a two-story house with a loving family and he’s got a trailer with his uncle - God bless Wayne’s heart. You can walk by old ladies and children and housewives and businessmen and CEOs and jocks and be adored. He can’t go to Melvald’s General without being scorned and pointed at and avoided. He hates to say it but it burns, like a live fucking roast.
And it burns even more because he’s obsessed with you. Your manicured, polished nails. Your 1970s dresses and ribbons. Your rusted silver ring with the braid pattern you’ve had since middle school.
Worse than John Bender, he fell for the school princess, but at least Eddie managed to have been around you for more than a day.
Two months, in fact, you two have been working together to make him more popular and even if it’s steadily working, your circles are still entirely different.
Not unlike a wild animal, Eddie bites back when he’s scared, and when he saw you on the empty, beer-mudded floorboards of The Hideout just for him - he realized he was downright terrified.
“Like,” you hiccup, no tears have caked your face quite yet but the way your breathing is so choked, he can sense you’re close, “I really just feel like I ruin people’s lives sometimes and you don’t even know me like that- “ you look away and he sees how bloodshot your eyes are, “It’s so unfair of you to judge me like that. My life isn’t perfect just because Jason Carver thinks I’m cool.”
“And what about you and your friends?” he’s quieter than before, “Judging me and mine over what? A dice game and some loud music?” the quiet splits as he remembers why was ever put into this position in the first place, “Fuck you.”
Your head bubbles. Air clicking between where the gears of your brain should be. He doesn’t know anything deep about you, sure, but you know much less about him. That didn’t stop you from listening to your friends bitch about him.
With no defense to that point, you turn away from Eddie and stare forward. Blank and gagged. Eddie copies.
You want to say something. An apology. A comeback. An expletive. Something.
Eddie wants to say something, too. Similar sentiments and entirely new ones. He’d even promise to do everything you say - head in the sand, hands on his ass levels of ignorance if it meant you’d forgive him. Or just look at him again. Let him delight in the sugar of your perfume once more.
Neither of you knows how, though.
Both of you do know, however, that despite different paths of life being paved, this time together is nice. So maybe it’s best to swallow pride and get over yourselves - for the sake of each other and a tasty, crisp fifty bucks (to split).
But Eddie is better at filling silences than you. So he does what he’s best at.
Almost.
Eddie whispers, so low it rattles between his teeth, “I didn’t say anything.”
It takes you a moment to register that the shithead spoke, “Huh?”
“I didn’t say anything,” he looks at you now, smiling big and wide as if he didn’t just almost make you cry.
You glare and he sees the sprinkles of crystalline in your eyes. Maybe the ‘almost’ isn’t so far back that he can actually begin joking again.
“Okay,” you huff and cross your arms, stiff.
“I shouldn’t have judged you,” he admits, “I’m sorry. It was wrong and unfair and I’ll be better to you. Promise.”
That makes your guarded stance drop, melts like dropped blueberry slush under Arizona sun before rolling into leaf-stuffed grouts.
“I shouldn’t have judged you either,” you drop your arms wholly, and Eddie despises the way he finds you so adorable. Your arms come out to your sides, wide and awaiting. When he refuses to immediately get the sign, you jerk your arms in emphasis - eyes shooting impossibly wide, “Stop embarrassing me and get over here.”
Eddie tosses his head back as he laughs, nose scrunching, and you know that if people put their egos and prejudices aside then they’d be in love with him. Not like you.
Sure, you’ve put those aside, but you’re not in love with Eddie Munson or anything. He’s just helping you prove to Jason what an idiotic, pea-brain he truly is.
Eddie gives nice hugs though. The kinds that squeeze and lock you into the comfort. You can feel his arms around you, leather squawking with your movements. His hands are warm and comforting, pressing you as close to him as you can get. He’s back in his ripped jeans and leather and T-shirt logo'd with a band you don’t recognize, it’s like returning to an old dream from childhood. Kindly and tangerine sugar in your head.
Your cheek smushes against Eddie and you can’t help the way your eyes butterfly shut from the fire that sweeps off his body and homes you.
“Sorry for flipping out.”
“It was justified, I’d say.”
“Still. I feel like I can’t complain to people because I know, realistically, I don’t really have a reason to complain unless they see what I do in my life. So I just say everything is great. So I can see why you’d think everything is great.”
“Still,” he copies your tone on that word, even dragging his pitch up to plop a cherry on the sundae, “as someone who says the same shit to my group, I should have known better.”
Maybe the hug is too long at this point, but something about Eddie catering to you like this feels like when your bedsheets are tucked tight for slumber.
“You wanna go out and look at suits tomorrow?”
“I’d rather die, but please, yes.”
There’s a blotch of inky thick silence. Tar and mud, until Eddie does as Eddie does best and wades through it for a question.
“Do you wanna talk about your dad?”
Nobody has asked you that before, and you agree in full.
“He was just. Nutso. Picking fights ‘cuz he could and nobody would fight back. Stupid power moves just to prove himself as man of the house. It was always about him and when it wasn’t, he lost his shit.”
“I’m sorry,” he squeezes you again, kissing the crown of your head, “I’m really glad he’s gone.”
“Me too,” your arms begin to let and Eddie copies, the two of you splitting apart like sweating popsicles on Summer hazy noons, “My stepdad’s sick to death, though. If I get married, he’s walking me down the aisle. I’m not even calling that asshole.”
“Yeah, well, be careful or else your beloved is just gonna hang out with him instead.”
“You saying he’s cooler than me?”
“Way.”
“He’s cooler than you, too.”
“As if I was gonna say otherwise.”
“Speaking of…” you face forward again, but this time your shoe kicks into the dirt, toeing up daisy roots and grass blades, “my brother wants you to go to his class play, but he was never gonna ask,” you look at Eddie again, grinning, “It’d mean a lot.”
Eddie thinks this is it. Under the pale moonlight his mother always told him was angel’s kisses, his stupid rage and dislike dissipate and that’s the moment he also realizes that maybe he never hated you as much as he proclaimed he did. He was bitter over an idea and he was foolish.
“Fuck yeah, I’ll go. I’ll even wear my fancy ‘I fuck on the first date’ shirt.”
“Shut up,” you toss your head back and smack his arm in a giggle, “It’s tomorrow night at nine. Hawkins elementary. And my parents aren’t going. Grandma’s cousin is sick or something.”
“Sounds incredible.”
Tomorrow night at nine, at Hawkins Elementary School, Eddie shows up in a white shirt with black, bold letters that spell “I fuck on the first date”. You’ll jaw drop, caught in the middle of disgust and humor, but when your brother is up on stage and spots you both in those uncomfortable metal folding chairs with the rest of the audience, he waves. All smiles and excitement and sunshine. And when Eddie is dropping you both off at home, he tells your brother to leave a watermelon on the porch of the boy he hates - for free, legal confusion. And your brother will beg to see him again as soon as his whistling, rusted van is out of sight.
Tonight, though, before suits are found and plays are attended, your mom’s car pulls up to a dingy little bar called The Hideout.
Eddie stops you before you can step forward, though, “Is there anything you’d say to your dad if you saw him again?”
There are so many things you could say. You could weep and cry and yell and scream and break things, if you wanted to. You could be shrill and pathetic, you could be evil and vindictive, you could be devastated, you could be lots of things.
“No.”
Because what in God’s name would actually make him change?
You smile shortly and bounce as you head for the passenger side door of your mother’s car. You stop halfway, putting up a single finger in wait, and running back over on shoes that sort of squeeze your toes when you run. Snagging his leather jacket by the lapel, you pull Eddie down so that the rosy apple of his cheek is exposed.
Pressing a cherry chapstick kiss to his cheek, your plans of leaving him daydreaming for more are dashed like meaningless soot under Eddie’s battered sneaker in a snap second. Before you can return to that car with the broken heater, Eddie grabs you by the elbow and tugs you to his side.
He slings you back enough for it to count as a dip, and pauses, rearing back with a giggle long enough for you to stop him and command that you be let up. But you don’t, and you don’t want to, so Eddie leans forward as you do.
It’s more of a peck than anything - certainly more tame than what John Bender and Claire Standish pulled at the end of The Breakfast Club, but most especially tamer than what you might expect from Eddie Munson.
But may your soul be forfeited if that mere peck doesn’t snatch the air straight from under you. He tastes like strawberries and cigarettes and even though his lips are chapped, they’re loving.
Eddie lifts you slowly, shooting a wink, “See ya tomorrow, sweetheart.”
You hate feeling shy and coy, it’s embarrassing, but something inside you just sings at his voice. So, sure, there is a shot that you’re shy when he whispers so low it rattles.
There’s a titter in your voice as you murmur back, “See you tomorrow.”
Eddie gnaws his bottom lip when you scamper off into the car. You slide onto the leather of the passenger seat and your mom is comically wide-eyed, “I’m gonna forget that for now, and ask if that young man needs a ride.”
“What?” your mom leans over despite the sudden thumping in your chest, “Mom, no!” She sucks in a breath to shout but you work faster, rolling up the window as you repeatedly mutter, “Just drive, just drive, just drive!”
Eddie laughs, open-mouthed and thick, his curls bounce when he tosses his head, waving you off before he slinks back into the loud, musty bar.
You’re damn near stuck frozen as your mother settles back into the driver’s seat. She raises her brows and points right at you, “I want answers out of you when we get home, young lady,” she wags a finger in your face before reaching for the knob of her stereo, “But right now, we’re listening to Billie Holiday. So I don’t wanna hear it yet.”
You nod curtly, face igniting like Satan's very inferno, “That is not a problem.”
“After I go to your concert, will you finally follow my actual plan?”
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“Yeah, sure, let’s go, baby. What’s next?”
“Next, you finally- “
Get a Date.
Eddie makes his walk of shame back towards you after an absolutely brutal rejection from the only girl in Hawkins with more than her ears pierced (not that the eyebrow bar looked anything other than infected).
Wait, he thinks.
Did he mention that he’s in a band?
Shit.
Should he have mentioned that he’s in a band?
Maybe that’s the way to a punk’s heart.
He thinks of asking you - you would’ve said no (that’s only for you).
Either way, he ends up at your side, right in front of a trashcan by the straw station of Hawkins’ Theater. You don’t know what it is, but a deep thing inside you actually feels relieved that Eddie got rejected. Similarly, a deep thing inside Eddie just wishes you’d choke back the caveat to this step and let him take you on the damn date.
“No luck, wonder boy?” you pout.
“No,” he copies your expression, twisting his hands into his pockets, “I’m hopeless and in desperate need of guidance, dear princess.”
“Hm,” you flip around the theater lobby for a potential date, ignoring the rolling muck that clunks your lungs and throat, “Not a whole lot of options for the local metalhead and Dungeon Master, I fear.”
“What about…” Eddie purses his lips, eyes narrowed in search, “her.”
A woman with a toddler on her hips is watching with exasperated, wide eyes as a young man struggles to tear her ticket stub. You shake your head, posture straightening, “No way. She’s looking for something serious if she’s looking for anything at all.”
“You don’t think moms want flings? Shame on you.”
You’d actually feel ashamed if he meant it, instead, you roll your eyes, “I guess, but how would you even get with a mom? They’ve gotta be harder to impress.”
“Easy. I’d go over in a wife beater and offer to mow the lawn, and then halfway through I take off my shirt.”
Good God, he’s so stupid. You love it, though. It, surely.
Boots thud on the colorful, confetti-styled theater carpet, jewelry jingles and clings as a couple looking straight from the posh, wine-dry era of Victorian London passes by. Arms looped and loving, they reek of haughty money.
You jerk your chin towards the couple, “What about them? How would you seduce them?”
Eddie clears his throat, brows furrowing, “Let’s see… I’d book a table at a really nice restaurant under the name Ricky Schroder because nobody else is named Ricky fuckin’ Schroder.”
You can’t help but laugh, “And what if the staff ask where Ricky Schroder is?”
“‘He’s gonna join us later,’” he shrugs, “You know what? Anybody here would be lucky to have me. I’m the ideal woman with no high school degree at 19-years-old and children as my best friends,” he cringes suddenly, shucking out his tongue like something vile died there, “Gross when I say it like that.”
“Always was,” you punch his shoulder.
Eddie suddenly perks up, and that typically would be no stress, if only you hadn’t trailed his line of sight. He gestures loosely, doing an excellent job of pretending he was disinterested in the development, “What about Chris?”
Chrissy Cunningham. Utter queen. Warmhearted. Peachy beautiful.
“Chris?”
Nobody but Jason called her that, and she and Jason dated. What the fuck is Eddie doing?
“Yeah, Chris. Sorry, that’s what I call her. She’s a friend, she’d get the situation.”
“Oh,” you hate the way you seethe, “Yeah.”
“See you in a bit,” Eddie waves gingerly, “Snowflake King is in the bag, baby.”
Peachy beautiful. Peachy fucking keen.
Eddie and Chrissy are a little too giggly familiar for your tastes. It’s like moldy cheese between your cheeks, watching Eddie try (and horrendously succeed) to ask out your very own friend, Chrissy. You should’ve thought this through, maybe, just how much you now hate the idea of Eddie going out with a different girl.
But to be fair to you, he never asked you out on a date following that Hideout kiss, and to be equally fair to him, you never asked him out following that same Hideout kiss.
Part of you rears back at the idea of taking that first step, though. It’s easier when other people come to you, and unfortunately - Eddie either knows what you’re attempting to goad him into, or he’s simply that dense.
You made the rule his date couldn’t be you before you two even really knew each other anyway.
“Alright,” Eddie pinches your arm and you cuff his hand sharply, “it’s a done deal for Thursday. Enzo’s. On me.”
You bare your teeth in what is a desperate attempt to smile, “Awesome!”
It is decidedly not awesome.
“Well,” he fidgets with the twisted, folded material of the letterman jacket you made him give another whirl - you notice it suits him more than it did last time, still weird though, “I can take you home now, dearest.”
“Oh- uh,” flashes of Chrissy in her sweetheart neckline dresses and pleated skirts across a table alone with Eddie make you suddenly ill. Violent heat flashes that blot sweat along your brow and twist your gut into something wretched, “No worries, Eddie, I’ll get one from my mom.”
Before he gets the shot to check again, you’re darting out the push doors and to a pay phone, coins slick in your palm when you tug some from your pocket. Holding the potentially spit and gum decorated receiver decently far from your actual ear as the tone sings.
Later on, when you’ve actually been taken home, your instinct is to call Chrissy. Bizarre. Your step-father and brother are watching reports on the Saturday news that follows the cartoons - a young man injured by a drunk driver, and you immediately rush to the kitchen phone. No wonder John Hughes and neurologists are so obsessed with the teenage mind.
“You don’t actually like Eddie Munson, right?”
Chrissy giggles in that classic way she does when you’ve been foolish, and you can imagine that she tosses her head back - part exasperation and part humor, “Jesus- you two!” an overly long sigh follows, “Good God, no. I love Eddie, but I don’t love Eddie. He’s great, but definitely not for me. You, though. You know. You two would be great.”
“Okay, okay,” you sigh something guttural, “Enough teasing. I was just asking a damn question.”
“Yeah, right. You’re so jealous and nothing’s even gonna happen.”
“I’m not- “ she hangs up before you can even get the words out.
You groan and let the receiver tumble back into place, moving into the doorway between kitchen and living room to finally get an eyeful of the news.
“Holy shit, Keith got hit by a drunk driver?”
Your step-father raises a brow, sipping his beer - entirely unimpressed.
“Then,” you tap Eddie’s forehead when you notice his attention drifting to a string of polaroids around your vanity mirror, “we get to add a little bit of- “
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Mystery.
Before you are two suits - both purchased in kind by your step-father. One blush pink to compliment Eddie’s complexion, and the other a pale arctic blue to pair with the actual winter wonderland dance theme. A white undershirt for either. It’s a truly difficult choice when Eddie Munson could pull off either color and still be your top choice for Snowflake King. And not just because you want to win that damn bet.
Your savior from the truly world-bearing decision comes in the form of your bubblegum phone prattling. Your hand flings for it loosely, making contact after two tries and yanking it to your ear.
“What?”
“Wow, aren’t you a bowl of candy?” it’s Eddie, undeniably, but he’s hissing in pain after the question.
That makes your brows screw closer, “What’s your problem, Munson? I’m trying to pick your tux.”
You hear him swallow thick and noisily exhale, “Yes, that sounds very hard, babe,” a gruff and he finally spills the beans, “I’m getting a rib tattoo, we took a break,” he blows thinly between pursed lips, “Can you come down here? I’m about to puke.”
“You’re getting a rib tattoo?” you press the phone closer and stand up from your comforters, “Are you insane?”
In your head, Eddie’s eyes shoot up to the water-browned ceiling as he speaks, “I dunno. Maybe. They’re mysterious, right? And cool, yeah?” he sighs, “Come down here. Please.”
You grumble, naturally, but there was never a chance you could turn Eddie down when he needs help, “I’ll be over in ten.”
There’s one parlor in Hawkins, and you assume that’s where Eddie got a majority of his tattoos. If not all. It’s twelve minutes from your house, closer to the outskirts of town than even most of the rundown bars, but you make an effort in rushing there. Probably more effort than what somebody keeping this sort of bet strictly transactional would, but still.
Eddie sighed in relief when he saw you and if he hadn’t been in the midst of a raw tattoo then perhaps he would’ve hugged you in all his shirtless glory. He now lays on his side, squeezing your hand like a nutcracker to shell, “This really fucking hurts.”
You brush tangled curls from Eddie’s forehead carefully, “What’re you getting, big guy?”
“Surprise,” he snickers until he hisses, “Fuck.”
You scratch your brain for anything he might enjoy. Anything that may distract.
“You ever seen The Dark Crystal?”
Eddie would show his utter shock in a gasp if there wasn’t a needle in his ribs, “You’ve seen The Dark Crystal? No way.”
“Yeah,” you squeeze Eddie’s hand as he presses yours, “my brother owns it. Wanna watch it after this?”
“God yes,” he sounds breathless and you hate how your heart seems to twist at the sound, “who’s your favorite character?”
“Kira. I also liked Chamberlain.”
“No shit, I love Kira and Chamberlain,” Eddie beams up at you, “I know that it isn’t very good, but I fuckin’ love that movie.”
“Even the Poddling slave scene?”
“Hm. That one might be terrifying, actually. Still a good movie.”
“Well, my brother never watches it, so you can come over and we’ll have a viewing party whenever you want.”
He releases your hand and motions as if to brush his fingertips gently over your cheek, “Sweet, sweet angel, how I adore you.”
“Shut up,” you hate when he flusters you. It’s embarrassing.
When Eddie stands straight before the parlor’s mirror, he looks at you with big, bright eyes. Once again, like a puppy for praise.
A full moon in front of a starry sky and clouds paint his pale ribs, raw at the outlines.
“Aw,” you twine your fingers and let the excuse of his tattoo explain why your eyes linger by Eddie’s chest, “for your mom?”
“For my mom,” he confirms, quieter. Baby cow eyes flip to his raw flesh, “Do you think she’d like it?”
Realistically, you never knew her, and you have no idea - Eddie knows that, most definitely. But you know Eddie (somewhat) and if she was someone worthy of his time, then she would’ve adored him now - and his tattoos.
You take one of his fidgeting hands in yours, “Absolutely.”
“And what after that?”
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“After that,” you settle your hands on your hips and nod assuredly, “you win Snowflake King.”
Snowflake Ball.
It’s been a solid handful of months, Eddie is far more popular than he was before and you genuinely think he has a chance. And not just because of your desperate need to win this bet.
Before you, on the floor by your feet, are your step-brother and his date, Carrie Kith, to their own winter dance at Hawkins Elementary. Carrie turns to you, wide crystalline eyes and freshly braided hair, her cherry button nose turned up as if to say that one wrong answer may set her off.
“Is he your boyfriend?”
“Who?”
She points at the staircase, “Him.”
Your eyes flit to the clock your mother has hanging above the TV, "No."
"Why not?" she tilts her head, golden braid falling to her shoulder.
You shrug flippantly, "Boys are a waste of time.”
Carrie visibly considers the wisdom, nods, turns to your brother, and says, "You're a waste of time."
"What did you teach these poor kids while I was away?" Eddie stands at the final step of your stairs, holding his arms out wide and giving a twirl, "What do you think?"
You pick up your jaw and cross the carpet to where he stands. Pale arctic blue suit to match your dress and you can see the faintest touch of the tattoos that terrify locals through the low-cut chest.
"Incredible, you're- " you stop yourself, "Incredible," Eddie looks ready to tease so you speak before he gets the spotlight, "If you lose in this, then maybe I'm not the fashion genius I think I am."
“Don’t put that much weight on it, sweets,” he digs into his pocket and pulls out a closed fist, "You should wear these."
The first uncurls and in his palm - bitten red raw from the cold - is a pair of glittering rubies.
"They're fake," he lampshades, moving the earrings slowly closer, "but… here."
You take the jewels and find yourself biting your bottom lip to contain the bubbling affection in your chest.
"I wanted to get you something nice," from his voice, you can hear shame and nervousness. It's nice to know you aren't alone, then. Eddie cards his fingers through his hair and brushes a lock behind his ear. A ruby gem sparkles through stray tresses, "I wanted people to know who I was with. Don’t need them mistaking me as Chris’ new boyfriend.”
"Thanks," you press your thumb into one of the pointed edges of your gifted earrings, "you didn't have to. Really."
When you look back to Eddie, he mouths shut up and holds out his hand, "I'll put 'em in. And yes, I did have to get them. I saw them and thought of you and then couldn't stop thinking about it until I bought them."
"So you think of me?"
You don't think you're teasing when you ask that.
It stills.
Eddie pauses.
Your brother gags and Carrie joins.
"Yeah, yeah," Eddie rushes to click the earrings in place, pecking your cheek before running to the door. He puts his hand on his hip and you're frozen in the living room as he speaks, "Alright, rugrats, you wanna go to your dance or no? Train's leaving the station."
You're so stupidly muddled that you don't even comment on the way Eddie's van has been cleaned out. No cans or wrappers or empty bags to crinkle or shriek when you shift your legs.
By the time you're actually inside the gymnasium's snowed-in forest set, voting has begun. You put on the theatrics of disappointment, but you can't pretend to not be grateful you missed the Jason Carver power hour. And you can't pretend to not be shocked when you see your name under the title of Snowflake Queen, right between Stacey and Chrissy.
"You know, I think you deserve a win tonight. In case I don't," Eddie ticks the box next to your name.
"Chrissy is gonna win," you x the box by Eddie Munson for Snowflake King, "We both know that."
"I guess," he checks himself for King as well, "but what kind of king would I make if I didn't support the woman that got me here? Hm?"
Not one at all.
You roll your eyes at his jest and Eddie checks the box by your name on your ballot. Snatching the paper from your hand, he practically skips to the locked box for votes and slips both ballots between the top slot. On his way back, Eddie hops and clicks his heels like a showtunes all-star.
"You're ridiculous," you simply watch as he takes your hand.
"And you're stunning," he kisses your knuckles.
You look away as he peers at you through his lashes. Heat fans your face and there's the sudden, unwelcomed concern that he may think you look sweaty,
"I've gotta powder my nose."
"Coke?" he gasps sharply, all for show, all so you laugh, "I can't believe you."
You grant his desires as you shake your head, "You know what that phrase means."
"I just like teasing," so you've gathered.
By the time you return to the cornstarch-stenched gym floor, principal Higgins is on stage with the band forced behind curtains. How cruel.
Chrissy flutters to your side in a lavender ball gown and wraps her arm around yours, "You're gonna miss it, we're getting called up!"
"Huh?"
Trin picks up the train of her periwinkle mermaid dress, "Nominees for royalty are being called to the stage. Duh!"
Stacey nods and presses a curl back into place as you all walk, "Honestly, what would you do without us?"
"Not be on stage," you climb the carpeted, moldy steps to where Higgins stands, "Which is actually looking pretty good right now."
Snowflake King nominees line up on the other side of Higgins. Eddie at the very edge, closest to you - at the head of your own line. You do your best to not squint under the harsh stage lights that beat on you.
Eddie, meanwhile, can't help but watch how your ruby earrings move as you do. He likes that you went with them. That you matched a dress to his suit. He likes that people can tell you two came together. Because he really didn't want people thinking he was Chrissy's boyfriend, but he wouldn't mind them assuming he might be yours. The stage lights cast a shine like heaven and the brief idea of you being an angel doesn't feel so lost when you two make eye contact. Painted lips stretch and you wave, he's utterly helpless to return it.
On his other side is the student council vice president, Thomas Heron. Somebody has to hear the good news, and Eddie decides it's him.
He turns and Thomas doesn't flinch away like he would have before you popularized him. Eddie jerks his head towards you, "God, isn't she beautiful?"
It echoes around the otherwise silent gym and that's how he realizes the microphone in front of him is still on and incredibly sensitive.
“Dude,” you tilt your head, chuckling.
He’s embarrassed. It’s nice to see things come full circle.
“Sorry,” he tries speaking into the mic, but now it’s suddenly dead.
Principal Higgins leans into the head microphone, and reads the letter handed to him by counselor Kelley, “And for the moment I know everyone has been waiting for… our Snowflake Royalty.”
Your heart echoes thickly in your ears, skin chills and bumps and you feel the telling of ants in your stomach. Butterflies in your dress.
“Snowflake Queen,” Higgins turns to your line and smiles, “winning by a landslide is…” students stomp in a makeshift drumroll and you already know who the winner may be, will be, “our very own - Chrissy Cunningham!”
No shit.
You, Trin, and Stacey lavish her in applause and hugs and lipstick-printed kisses to her cheeks as a bouquet and crown are slung to her sides. She’s nothing if not modest, and there are tears of joy springing in her eyes while the plastic crown of snowy clouds and crystal is laid on her honeyed head.
“And our Snowflake King…” he trails as the students drumroll stomp again.
Chrissy leans back, nudging you with her tulip bundle, “Nice earrings,” her eyes move to Eddie and she whispers, “Matching with your boyfriend.”
“He’s not my- “ you stop, glaring, “Hush.”
“A surprising usurp of our Homecoming King!” Higgins gestures to the line of nominees.
Eddie’s fingers knot together and this is the first time you get to see how much this bet actually means. Originally, you assumed he was in it for the twenty and your brains on his essays (figurative), and maybe - just maybe - he grew to love your company the way you did his. But you never quite thought he really cared.
Now, though, he watches with wide and petrified eyes as Higgins moves to stand between him and Thomas Heron, “It’s a close call, folks,” he claps both boys on the back, “With only a two-vote difference! Our winner and Hawkins High Snowflake King is…!”
The student body freezes as one. Your breath tightens and chest sticks together by the ribs.
The moment feels like eons.
You hear Chrissy crinkle the wrapper of her bouquet and you wrinkle your nose at the sound.
“Thomas Bradley Heron - our senior class vice president!”
Confetti in whites and blues of varying shades rains down upon the winners and the royalty rejects.
You deflate, the confetti shredding through your bravado like glass to a balloon. Even Chrissy’s disappointment is palpable until she remembers she’s illuminated by a spotlight. Eddie hisses a “fuck” and tosses his head back, though he does clap for the sweet puppy incarnate that resides in Thomas Heron.
“Congrats, man,” Eddie mutters to Thomas - and nobody flinches when he speaks or raises his hand.
The bizarreness is not lost on Eddie. That everyone hated him and now waves when he walks by in the corridors.
You meander to Eddie’s side as a bedazzled crown is laid on Thomas’ head. He holds out a hand and assists you down the stage stairs, “Well, that was a major bust.”
“Yeah,” he reaches out and delicately picks a confetti sprinkle from your shoulder, “but we had fun, right?”
“Hm,” you rustle a few confetti slips from his hair, “we did.”
When Eddie was younger, he used to think that the vows said during weddings were “in sickness and in hell” - it was only when he was sixteen and ring-bore for Wayne’s best friend that he learned otherwise. He likes his childhood version better though, “in sickness and in health” implies that there is only a desire to stay if better times are promised. But since being corrected, he’s known it as health. However, with you, Eddie now wonders if the difference even matters. He also wonders if maybe in a dream world there’s the chance you’ll let him swear to you that he’d crawl through hell for just a second of your time.
God, he’s changed.
Jason, in all his usual assholery, slow claps as he approaches you and Eddie at the landing of the short stack stairs.
“Not now, Carver,” you groan.
“Yeah, you’ll get your money, just back off,” Eddie shoves Jason back by the shoulder.
But the dimwit remains unperturbed, Jason steps closer and purses his lips, “You’re not so tough when your Satan disguise isn't on, are you, Munson?”
Eddie grabs him by the collar and throttles him a little, grinning “Don’t be too excited, Josie, tomorrow is business as usual,” his grip tightens, choking Jason a little, “So just be patient, okay?”
The venom with which Eddie spits his words proves too heavy on his shoulders, and Jason scutters off to where Patrick and Andy stand in plain, vomit-inducingly boring black suits.
You watch as the trio high-five and circle jerk over their victory.
This is technically the end.
You and Eddie don’t need each other.
Tomorrow, he returns to Hellfire and you’re back with the jocks and preps. It isn’t like you two are dating. Just a couple of good months. A handful of memories to giggle at until you two eventually grow so distant that you won’t even wave at each other in the hallways.
Your eyes drift to Eddie, cluelessly picking confetti out of his twisted hair under golden and cornflower lights, and you can’t help but shrink at what a miserable existence that will be. So you prolong your delight now.
“Wanna watch The Dark Crystal again?”
He sighs deep and plucks another confetti slice from you, “Absolutely nothing sounds better.”
You can’t believe that you didn’t notice how clean the van floor bed was until now, “Holy shit. Was this already done when you drove us here?”
“Yeah,” Eddie laughs, glancing at you through his peripherals, “Damn, what had you so distracted?”
“I don’t even know,” a terrible lie, but you don’t bother to rectify it. Something weary rests on your bones. Dies there and rots. You lean back into the passenger seat and stare at the full moon, its beams hit Eddie’s face lovingly, “You know, we may have lost, but at least you don’t have to clean out the van post misery. Still impressed, by the way.”
“Just didn’t feel like hearing you complain the whole way home.”
You pointedly ignore the way he refers to your house as home, “Aw, you remembered I hate wrapper crinkles.”
“Of course, I did, I’m in love with you,” he says it like he’s talking to a friend. So casual and at ease until he realizes exactly what it was that he really said.
You rock forward and bang your chest, breath hitching, “You’re what?!”
“Nothing,” he blanches, “A dick. I’m a dick, that’s what I said.”
“No way, I totally heard you, Eddie! Just say it again!”
“Why?”
He looks at you and you smile, head tilting with all that charm he so desperately fell for, “Just say it again.”
Eddie matches your expression and shrugs, tense, “I’m in love with you.”
You suddenly feel the urge to make him pull over. Just to be closer than what the center console allows.
But you were never the best at speaking so plainly, “Of course, you are.”
“Okay. you know what?”
He glares thinly.
You giggle and he joins.
“I’m in love with you, too.”
You're quiet, but he hears it. Most definitely, he did - he was searching for it, in fact.
Eddie tries to smother the lopsided grin that surfaces, but you most assuredly see it, “Of course, you are.”
The beloved rustbucket van sputters as Eddie pulls along the curb of your house, and you two hurry inside. In the doorway, you peel off ache-rucking heels and leave them in one of many cubbies, Eddie copies.
“So, what should we- “
He takes your cheeks in both hands, pausing long enough for you to stop him if you so desired. Then he commits to the possibility of rejection, “Can I kiss you?” he breathes in shaky, nervous, “Please?”
You cup his face in your hands, giddy and heart thrumming at the warmth there, “Yes. Please.”
Eddie lets his eyes flutter shut, whispering against your lips, “Thank God.”
He kisses you there, sweet and adoring and all things you never would’ve assumed from Eddie upon first meeting him. He tastes like strawberries and cigarettes and he smells like weed and cheap cologne and, faintly, gentle wafts of your own perfume.
When you two part, it’s like the confetti is raining again - but this time, you are the winner. Maybe not Snowflake Queen and King, but something sweeter. Ambrosia and nectar.
Eddie simpers, then rears his head further, brows rising as he “Hmmmmmm”s in an imitation of Barry Dennen’s Chamberlain.
“Ew, don’t- “
He bounces off towards your living room, clinging to one of your hands, “Come on, you promised The Dark Crystal,” when you refuse to immediately jump to his side, he inhales and calls out just as Kira does to beckon her animal friends, “Kame-le-ahhhhh!”
“Alright, jeez,” you yank Eddie back to yourself and kiss his cheek, “You, Eddie Munson, are despicable - just using me for my possession of The Dark Crystal.”
“And you, sweet angel, are evil for making me wear letterman jackets,” you both gag at the very memory.
“Rest assured, that’s never happening again,” you kiss his lips again, another peck that he seems desperate to elongate, “You look hotter in your clothes.”
“Really?”
“Hell yeah.”
“Then let’s get me outta this itchy suit, yeah?” he winks.
You roll your eyes but already begin pulling him towards the staircase for your room, “Yeah. Okay.”
Even if you have to put up with Eddie reciting half of The Dark Crystal in a holey black shirt and checkered boxers on your couch by the end of the night, you’d still gladly consider yourself a winner. And that is worth more than any fifty bucks or a Snowflake royalty title. Fewer crowns, though :(
~~
rbs appreciated (slay)
tagging people i think would maybe enjoy this
@kitmon @chainsaw-man-inserts @punk-in-docs @ramona-thorns @indouloureux @bbylogs
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mysteryanimator · 9 days
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i think thats how the convo went
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curiouskaden · 2 years
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