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summary: A twelve year old Steve Harrington doesn't know what hit him harder. That stupid football, or that smile of yours.
contents: mentions of neglect, YEARNING, mild cursing, steve crashing out internally, childhood friends to strangers to lovers⦠steve being an idiot, FLUFF!!!
word count: 4.9k
a/n: IM SO SORRY THIS IS KINDA LONG, first fic i cant help but yapš„² might make this a multi-chapter thing! just so it won't be toooo long ;) need enough space just for the summer letters between these two <3
Steve Harrington would never consider himself to be a loser.
He considers himself far from it actually, for most things in his life he likes to think that he holds an effortless charming approach to everything that people tend to admire.
Though, the one thing that knocks him off his wave isnāt sports, and it isnāt even his grades (though he must admit he isnāt doing the best there either). The one thing that he can never seem to get a hang of⦠is you.
He isnāt quite sure when it started, but if someone asked him, heād probably say the day you left your mark on every fiber of his being would be April 2, 1978.
SPRING BREAK 1978 (APRIL 2ND)
āSteven! Time for lunch! Donāt make me call you in again!ā a shrill voice yells out into the backyard
With a roll of his eyes, Steve pulls himself up the pool ladder to head inside, not because he wanted to eat, but more-so because he really gets tired of Maggie the Naggie. Thatās his third nanny of the year, his least favorite from the bunch. He gets she means well, but boy can she really go at it.
Wet footprints follow him into the sizeable dining room, a squelch can be heard from his wet swim shorts as he sits at the end of the lengthy table. Sometimes he wonders why his parents got such a big table when theyāre hardly ever home to eat dinner here anyway. Twelve perfectly varnished oakwood chairs, but only one seems to be more worn than the rest.
āMaggie, Iām gonna head out in a bitā he manages with a mouthful of eggs
āWhere are you going? You know youāre not supposed to go places alone, what if something happens to youā the older lady says as she eyes him, hands steadying their motions as they wipe down dishes
āDid my parents tell you that?ā he scoffs as he pours himself a glass of apple juice, āWe both know they donāt give a damn where I go, plus itās Hawkins, nothing happens hereā he says between sips.
āYour parents care about you, Stevenā she says sternly, carrying the clean dishes to the cupboard, turning her back to him.
āYeah, they can tell me that themselves when they find the timeā he tries to laugh, but it feels empty. Composing himself he tries to argue, āIāll be back before 4:30, just in time to wash up before dinnerā
The older woman sighs, turning back to face him. ā4:30 sharp? Not a minute more?ā with a raised eyebrow.
Steve pulls out his secret weapon, he smiles in a certain way that makes his cheeks look fuller, he thinks the ladies dig it. Well, older ladies doā¦
Maggie coos, āAlright then, you got me. Not a minute less, Stevenā she warns as she takes away his empty plate and glass. āHurry and wash up then, you smell like poolā she nags with the clinking of dishes.
ā
Steve runs down the stairs grabs a baseball cap off of the rack before making his way out, āBye Maggie, be back soon!ā he yells out into the house before shutting the door. Not bothering to take the time to listen to what the older woman yelled out after him. He gets on his bike and makes his way to the park.
Popularity has always followed Steve around, well so far it has. Nearing 7th grade, he finds himself being admired already. It feels nice to be paid attention to. He recently became friends with Tommy Hagan, who he can admit is kind of an asshole, but the other kids seem to think heās cool. So as the people pleaser he is, Steve spared no time in accepting Tommyās invitation to hang out today in the hopes of trying to climb the rather short social ladder that exists in the 6th grade.
The park has more kids than usual, they probably wanted to hang out after church, considering it is the last day before school starts again tomorrow.
Ditching his bike at the racks, he makes his way to Tommy Hagan whoās been waving him over.
āAbout time, Harrington!ā Tommy snarks as he playfully shoves Steve. Three other boys surround Tommy, Steve canāt be bothered to try to remember their names.
āDave brought his new footballā adds Tommy, āHow boutā a game of catch, first one to drop it owes the rest some milkshakesā he smirks as the other three boys jeer in agreement. āYouāre onā challenges Steve as they jog over to one of the clear areas of the park.
While the ball gets thrown around, Steve notices a white moving van pull up to one of the houses facing the park. A navy blue Ford country following closely behind it. He snaps back into focus as he sees the football nearing his peripheral, he manages to catch it with a little fumble.
āCāmon, Harrington! Better pay attention or you owe us smoothies!ā one of the boys taunt as they get ready for the next throw. Steve laughs as he fakes a throw towards Tommy, which causes him to stumble back a little.
His eyes drifted back to the household, he sees that a woman and two kids got out of the blue Ford, and a man was unloading the moving van. One of the kids catch his eye, a girl, most probably same age as him, holding what seems to be her little brother in her arms with great care. A radiant smile on her face as she talks with her mother. That smile could take out an army, Steve canāt help but be infected by the laugh that comes out of her mouth, a small smile making its way onto his face as well.
āHarrington! Think fast!ā he hears before the football hits him square in the jaw, knocking him backwards into a wooden bench where he bumps his head.
āOh shit! Dude, are you okay?ā Tommy says trying to stifle a laugh, āCouldāve dodged that if you kept your head in the gameā one of the other boys laughed as he grabbed the football as Steve still laid on the ground.
Ignoring the aching pain in his jaw and the back of his head, he tries to push himself using his elbows, annoyed that none of his āfriendsā bothered to help him up.
āYeah, shouldāve paid more attention, I got the milkshakesā he says as he rubs the back of his head trying to ease the ache.
āYouāre the shit, Harrington!ā Tommy H. says as he claps a hand on his shoulder before running back to position to continue the game without him.
He sits in pain for a while, he doesnāt know how long but at some point Tommy and the other boys decided to forget about him and run off to play baseball at one of their backyards.
He scoffs and thinks about how he couldāve stayed at home instead. Still rubbing the back of his head and jaw at the same time, his mind wanders off to the girl he saw earlier, he wonders if heāll see her at school tomorrow.
It was if the heavens heard his wish when he heard a gentle voice cut through his thoughts, āHey, are you alright? I brought you some cold water and a towel, our ice isnāt fully hardened yet since my dad just plugged in the refrigerator.ā
Steve squints up, the sun casting a glare in his vision, but once his eyes focus he realized that he was being spoken to by his cause of injury. His heart does a little backflip when he finally sees your smile up close, he canāt tell if he feels lightheaded because of hitting his head or if it was your eyes looking at him with such care, though it was most definitely the former, he likes the say it was the latter.
No one would expect to feel such big emotions at twelve years old.
āI think you hit your head pretty hard there, did it make you lose your hearing?ā you joke lightly as you slowly crouch down to sit with him on the ground. Long pale pink skirt getting stained with dirt, though you didnāt seem to mind at all.
Steve struggles to get a sentence out, embarrassed that a cute girl watched him eat dirt. You laugh as you listen to him stammer, dipping the towel into the cold water and handing it to him.
āMaybe start with giving me your name, donāt think you can mess that upā you smile, that smile again, even though he was already sitting on the ground he could still feel his knees go weak.
Bringing the cold towel to the back of his head, he lets out a sigh of relief from the sensation. āIām Harrington, Steve Harrington.ā he manages not quite meeting your gaze.
āHarrington?ā you scrunches your nose. Steve raises his eyebrow, heās never had such a reaction to his last name before.
āWhatās wrong with my name?ā he says dubiously, still holding the cold towel to the back of his head.
āWell, you just donāt look like a Harrington. But, you definitely seem like a Steveā you say playfully, holding up the cold glass of water up to him.
Steve furrows his eyebrows at you, glancing at the glass, dipping the towel back in to cool it off. āWhatās your name then, since youāre such an expertā he says with a smile.
Something in him lights up as he hears your laugh up close, he hears your name roll of your tongue, now he understands why youāre such an expert. Your name matches you perfectly.
He repeats your name back to you with a smile, āYour friends are kind of assholes for leaving you hereā you add as you look around the emptying playground.
āYeah, I know they areā he tries to laugh but winces at the pain reverberating through the back of his head. He feels a killer headache awaiting him tomorrow.
āDo you go to Hawkins Middle School?ā you ask him, eyeing his furrowed brows, you fumble with your pockets looking for something and grab his hand to put it in his palm.
Confused, Steve raises an eyebrow at you, ignoring the way he feels his skin heat up at your touch. He looks at his palm to see two tablets.
āThatās ibuprofen⦠I kinda figured you might need it soon, but I totally recommend you go see a doctor, you might have a concussion or somethingā you ramble looking away from his gaze.
āConcussion?ā he repeats, trying to figure out what that meant. He didnāt want to seem like a total dunce in front of you so he just agreed, āYeah, totally probably definitely have a concussion, maybeā¦ā he adds.
āAnd I do go to Hawkins Middle, are you going there too?ā he answers your previous question, stuffing the tablets in his jacket pocket.
āYeah, Iām starting tomorrow!ā you look back at him excitedly, āI was kind of nervous since it is technically almost the end of the school year, I figured it would be harder to make real friends this lateā you sighed. āBut good thing you got hit on the head!ā you joke as you playfully bump his shoulder, apologizing when he squints his eyes and winces at the movement.
āWell, since you saved my ass today, Iāll save yours tomorrow thenā he says with a smile, āI can show you around, show you the ropesā he tries cooly. Immediately regretting how cringey that sounded coming out of his mouth.
You probably thought the same with the way you laugh at his statement, something in him buzzes at the sound of your laugh. He canāt help but smile when you smile.
āIāll take you up on that offer, Steveā you say with a grin, a voice yells out your name behind you. āSweetie! Time to help your mom with dinner!ā your dad calls out into the park.
Looking at Steve apologetically, āI didnāt realize it was 4:00 alreadyā you say standing up from the dirt. You hold out your hand to him, he looks up at you confused, āWell are you gonna spend the night on the ground?ā you raise an eyebrow at him.
Now understanding your gesture he quickly takes your hand to pull himself up. There it is again, that warm buzz of your skin on his.
āYou better head home too, Steve.ā you say to him as you look around the ground around you, bending down to pick up his Cubs hat covered in red dirt. Dusting it off before meeting his curious gaze. He slowly puts out his hand expecting you to hand it to him, but is surprised to find his heart stuttering when you carefully place it back on his head yourself.
The smile you give him after that is fully ingrained into his brain, he thinks that in this moment, he could look directly into the sun but it still would not compare with how bright your smile is.
All he can manage to say during his inner turmoil is a small, āThanksā his pre-pubescent voice cracking around the edges. He watches you pick up the towel and glass of now lukewarm water, āNext time, Iāll invite you over for dinner, just gotta finish unpackingā you sigh.
āBye, Steve! See you tomorrow!ā you say as you turn to head back to your house. Your father already calling your name a second time.
Wanting to get the last word, āThanks for helping with my- uh- percussion!ā he says hurriedly. Fuck, was that the right word?
āConcussion!ā you yell back, not looking back behind you as you wave him off with the back of your hand.
He feels he will never recover. From the football? No thatās long forgotten. From you? You just gave him a concussion for the rest of his life.
Looking down at his dirtied watch, he realizes itās 4:18, it takes ten minutes to get home. Ignoring the pounding in his head, he gets there in eight minutes, just enough time to dodge another nag session from Maggie.
Also, enough time for him to reflect on how he thinks a football just made him fall in love with a random girl.
ā
From then on, you and Steve became fast friends. With only a month left to the school year, you two were attached by the hip. Sure, you made other friends, but Steve was your most constant.
A year went by, his feelings grew. He always catches himself looking for you in the hallways during breaks, passing you notes full of nonsense during the classes you have together, and going out of his way to get you the juice you like during lunch before everybody else gets to it.
More time passes, you just became even more radiant from the day he met you. You were so sweet, never failing to make everyone around you feel cared for. He thanks the heavens every single day for letting him experience you.
Getting teased by all his friends about how soft he gets for you, he couldnāt bring himself to mind, he just loved spending time with you.
What he loved even more was that it seemed that you liked spending time with him too. Waiting for him at the school entrance because he gets to school later than you, making extra sets of notes for him because you knew he never really paid attention during class, and inviting him over for dinner every sunday.
For once in his life Steve felt wanted.
Now itās the summer before sophomore year, you decided to join an all girls summer camp, despite Steveās protests. This is will be the longest he will have to go without seeing you since you got chicken pox last year. (That was the most devastating week and a half of his life)
āCome on, you canāt just leave me hereā he pouts while you pack your suitcase trying to hold in your laughter. He huffs as you eye him with your hands on your hips.
āStevie, itās only for a two months, you wonāt even notice Iām goneā you roll your eyes as you turn around to dig into your closet.
āTrust me, Iām definitely gonna noticeā he mumurs as he stares at the back of your head sadly. Just thinking of you being away for that long made his heart ache, he wonāt act clueless as to why. He loves you, with every inch of his fifteen year old heart.
āAt least itās an all girls campā he sighs absentmindedly, turning your head around you eye him, āSo what if itās an all girls camp?ā you ask as you slowly turn your body to face him fully.
Realizing how his previous statement could have sounded to you, he stumbled over his words to try to salvage an excuse. āYou know- Well- Boys are gross? Phew good riddance right?ā he scoffs as his cheeks turn warm under your gaze. āYeah youāre definitely grossā you laugh as you throw a sweater at him.
His eyes dart away from you trying to regain his composure. But if he just let his eyes stay with yours for a little bit more, he wouldnāt have missed the knowing smile that flashed across your face.Ā
The sun sets as you two immerse yourselves in conversation. Steve tried his best to ignore the tug in his heart every time he remembered that you would be leaving by tomorrow morning.
Setting aside the packed bags, you huff from exhaustion and throw yourself onto your bed, landing right next to Steveās sock-clad feet as he rests against your headboard.
Steve mopes and fiddles with the loose thread on the sweater you previously threw, you nudge his arm with your foot to get him to look at you, āDonāt be all pouty on our last day, dickheadā you say as you try to comfort him.
He huffs and pretends to throw a fit as he looks out your bedroom window watching the sun set further. After a pause, he murmurs āCan you promise that you wonāt forget about me?ā still looking out the window.Ā
You nudge him with your foot again, āIāll only be gone for a few monthsā you say as you laugh at his solemn expression. Noticing how his face didnāt lift, you add āAs long as you donāt forget me, Steve.ā as you smile at him.
āI couldnāt even if I triedā he replies gently, looking at you in a way that you canāt name. You could tell he was being genuine, but also that there was also something more there, you just couldnāt place what. Well, maybe not right now.
You smile, abruptly sitting up to face him which startles him enough that he jumps a little. āPussyā you giggle at him as you pinch his side, you lean over him to reach the drawer of your side table. Your shoulder brushes against his chest and he feels it stop his heart, he could smell your shampoo from the top of your head just a few inches away. God, he was whipped.
His trance was shattered when you grab something and quickly sit back up to face him, tugging his hand toward you and wiggling something onto his wrist. āWhat are you doing?ā he laughs as you slip what it seems to be a bracelet, shades of blue and white thread braided together.
āWhatās this for? Whereād you get it?ā he asks as he admires it, its a bit delicate for his taste but anything that comes from you is a treasure to him.Ā āLots of questions there, Harringtonā you joke as you slip on a bracelet of your own onto your wrist as well, now yours was like Steveās but the roles of blue and white were reversed, there was more white than blue but they were braided together nonetheless.
āItās for us, I guess theyāre kinda friendship bracelets⦠But I wouldnāt consider us friends, youāre definitely more than that to meā, you say while placing the two of your wrists side by side. Steve feels his heart melt at your words, he could only hope you felt the way he did, but he canāt risk losing what you guys had just from assuming.Ā
āSo like best friends?ā he adds nervously as he glances up to meet your eyes, you pause as you look at him, feeling your heart tug. Honestly, you still wouldnāt call it that either, you know you love Steve more than anything but is it completely platonic? The way he makes you feel is different than what you feel for your other guy friends, thatās for sure, but now all you can do is slowly nod.
āYeah⦠I guessā you smile softly at him. If Steve knew better he wouldāve noticed the way the curve of your lips dont quite meet your eyes, but he doesnāt know better quite yet.Ā
Moving to sit next to Steve against your headboard, now the two of you were shoulder to shoulder, āDonāt worry your big head about it too much, Stevenā you say gently, nudging his shoulder. Before Steve can retort, he feels a weight on his shoulder and glances to see you resting your head on it, giving him the sweetest softest smile. He feels his heart soar.
āYou know I hate when people call me that.ā he says slowly not breaking your gaze, he feels the heat across his cheeks. you laugh gently, āWell Iām not people.ā Then, he feels your arms circle around his waist, hugging him tight. Your head now under his chin and he feels you let out a content exhale. He doesnāt waste any time to return the hug, wrapping his arms around you, āYou definitely arenātā he mumbles into your hair.
A few knocks resound from your bedroom door, āCome inā you call out unmoving from your position against Steveās chest. āHoney, dinnerās ready-ā your mother was cut off from the sight before her. Steve couldnāt help but give her a sheepish smile, unsure if she would approve of the situation.
Your mother gives him a sincere smile back, his body relaxes when he realizes she didnāt mind at all. āWeāll be right downā your muffled voice replied. She laughs, āDonāt take too long, the food sāgonna get cold, Iām talking to you too, Steveā she points her finger in his direction before retreating back out the door. āYes Maāam!ā Steve yelled out before she shut it.Ā
He rubs your arm as if to wake you, āYou heard herā he whispers. When you donāt respond he resorts to gently shaking you, āHey, are you good?ā He asks gently, trying to angle his face down to get a look at you. āYeah, Iām just taking my timeā you finally say, voice still muffled.
He canāt help but snort at your behavior. You are absolutely everything to him.
Finally you untangle you arms from around him and sit up, he notices your eyes were slightly puffy and gasped incredulously, āHoly shit, are you cryingā he couldnāt help but smile at your state. āYeah, but donāt let it get to your head, assholeā you retort as you wipe at your eyes with your hands, still sniffling.Ā
Now, Steve could feel a tinge of burning in his eyes as well. You looked so sad looking at him with your glassy eyes, he feels his chest swell with emotion. āYou were the one telling me to calm down earlier, now look at you.ā He laughs as he sniffles back a tear.
āWell, that was before I realized I wonāt be here for your birthdayā you say voice wavering slightly as you feel emotion get caught in your throat. āGeez, I think your period is coming, dudeā He laughs pulling you into another hug. āHow did you know?ā You laugh as fresh tears run down your cheeks. āAnd I donāt mind if you miss my birthday, sure Iāll probably be pretty bummed, probably super bummed but as long as you have fun, Iāll be happyā he says wiping the tears off your cheeks with his thumbs.Ā
You feel your heart burn with affection at the gesture, itās moments like this when you mean what you said earlier. Steve is so much more to you than a friend, you could only wonder what he thinks. You then reach out wipe a single tear that escaped his eye, he canāt help but follow your finger but he managed to let his gaze land on your lips. His fifteen year old brain just about short-circuits when he realizes how closed the two of your faces are.Ā
āI think itās time for dinner, Stevieā you say, snapping him out of it. The look on your face makes him realize that you definitely caught him. His cheeks feel red hot when he coughs awkwardly, āYeah, yup, yesā he says quickly clambering off of the bed, immediately making a beeline for the door.
You love this weirdo.
After dinner, you saw Steve out to his bike, he thinks his dadās getting him a car for his birthday next month. You honestly wouldnāt be surprised, itās the least they could do for him at this point.Ā
āYou know what, Iām still coming over when youāre gone. I can not miss out on your Momās steak and potatoes.ā He says before he lets out a burp. You scrunch your nose in disgust and nudge him with your shoulder with a huff.Ā
Now heās standing in front of you in the middle of your lawn, rocking a little on his heels. āSo⦠I guess this is goodbye?ā He says gently. āItās see you later, Steven. Iām not going off to warā you say deadpan, trying to disguise your sadness terribly. He huffs out a small laugh at your retort.Ā
He takes a few steps forward and doesnāt hesitate to wrap his arms around you again in a hug, it gets so surprising how tall he gets over a few months. You wouldnāt be shocked if he absolutely towered over you when you get back.Ā
āPromise youāll write?ā You say gently into his chest as you wrap your arms around his middle. āOf course, dude. Not like I got anything else to do with you gone.ā He laughs into your hair. āGood.ā He feels you smile against him.Ā
After a pause he hears you call out his name. āYeah?ā He asks, letting go of you now, allowing him to look at your face now. Your face is flushed, with a mischievous grin on your face. āWhat is it?ā He continues, furrowing his brows at your expression.Ā
āCan you lean in your ear for me real quick, I got something to tell youā you say, trying to stifle your grin. āBut weāre the only ones out hereā he laughs unsure, not really trusting your intentions. He honestly thinks you might bite his ear off. āIām not gonna bite your ear off if thatās what youāre thinking.ā You add as you roll your eyes.
Steve huffs out a laugh at your ability to read his mind effortlessly. He hesitates but finally lets himself bend down to let you reach his ear, turning his head to the side so you could just say what you wanted. He feels the hair raise on the back of his neck when your breath fans slightly against his ear. Getting flustered, he impatiently prompts you to hurry, āWell?āĀ
He feels the soft air of your laugh, before he hears, āDonāt hang out with Tommy Hagan too muchā you giggle into his ear. He furrows his brows, head still turned to the side. He thinks youāre going to continue on since that canāt be the only thing you want to say. After a few seconds of silence, he asks confused, āIs that it? That wasnāt even a big deal-ā before he could fully turn his head back to face you, he feels you place a kiss onto his cheek.
He feels every nerve ending in his body explode.
Goosebumps travel down his neck down to every other part of his body. His heart stutters when he realizes it isnāt a quick peck either. After a few seconds he feels the warmth leave his cheek as you pull away.Ā
Head still frozen to the side, it takes your fingers to pull his chin back towards you for him to look at you again. You giggle when you see that his face looked as reddened as your face felt.Ā
āIāll see you in August, Harrington. Please behaveā you say as you dropped your hand and started walking backwards, smiling at his lost expression. Trying to find his words, he stutters, āSee yo- Good- Yea-, Goodnightā his voice cracking at the last syllable.Ā
You laugh as you wave goodbye, finally turning around to jog back into your home. Only glancing back at him when you open your front door. Giving him that same smile that always knocks him off his feet.
When you enter your house, Steve is still left reeling in your front yard. He lifts a hand to where you left the kiss, feeling his face still hot to the touch. Looking up to your bedroom window, hoping to see you one last time, but seeing the lights shut off. As much as he felt disappointed, he could still feel a lovesick grin forming on his face as he turned around to pick up his bike.
āAugust better be quickā he whispers to himself as he pedals home.Ā
likes and reblogs are heavily appreciated! i hope u guys enjoyed this one ;) already have a part 2 in the works... let me know if u would be interested in seeing that
š² āļøą¾ą½² × šŖš§š šš„ ššš«š§š¢š§š š¬ contains links to adult content on x. u must be logged in to view. have fun, angels ! ź£ mdni ź£
š¹ asking him to cum in you for the first time and he can't stop
š¹ being steve's pretty little play thing
š¹ bf!steve eats you out whenever you're stressed
š¹ he turns into a moany, whiny, baby when in your hands
š¹ steve's breeding kink goes brr whenever he's inside of you
š¹ morning sex w husband!steve before he has to go to work
š¹ makeout sessions are never not handsy with him
š¹ showing fwb!steve how good you're getting at riding him
š¹ sneaking up to frat!steve's room during a kegger
š¹ steve loves watching you when you're on top
š¹ he can't keep quiet whenever you're giving him head
š¹ he loses his mind when you tell him to lose the condom
š¹ what late night drives usually entail w bf!steve
š¹ when he walks in the door and needs nothing but you
š¹ when he's so good at eating you out but also loves it
šµšØšØš¤š²š§š šÆšØš« š¶šØš«š .ᣠlibrary taglist form guidelines
SUMMARY in which your now ex boyfriend cheats on you with his so called 'work wife.' your solution? getting back at him with his new girlfriend's newly dumped ex, steve harrington. you'll get your revenge for sure.
WARNINGS 18+ MDNI cheating, teamed up revenge dating, fake dating, toxic exes, rom com, rightfully petty reader w/ attitude, angst, fluff, smut every chapter youāre warned lol, steve and reader are both idiots who eventually fall in love, adult language, smoking/drinking, inspired by olivia rodrigoās āget him backā
WORD COUNT ?
CHAPTER ONE 18+
CHAPTER TWO 18+
CHAPTER THREE 18+
AUTHORS NOTE: hello! this will be a small mini series, i am still very much focusing on 'i'm your man.' it's just good for me to have several projects to go back and forth on whether it's series or one shots, so that way i'm not forcing myself to write something i'm not in the mood for.
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You ran out on Steve almost three years ago in the middle of a sweet fling, but now youāre back in Hawkins, and thereās a little girl on your hip that looks just like him. fem, 14k
afab reader, second-chance romance, girl!dad steve, slow burn idiots, no upside down auĀ
ā Ėļ½”āąØā”ą§ā Ėļ½”ā
You realise how fucked you are pretty quickly.Ā
Itās something in the way the kid is looking at you. Heās staring at you, not unfriendly but piercing, and his gaze keeps flicking to Leah like heās trying to make sense of her, and his mouth is stuck obnoxiously with his tongue flat and pulled into that cruel letter āSā.Ā
You freeze up like youāve been caught, which doesnāt help.Ā
And the kid spins in his Nikeās and races for the entrance, ditching a basket full of veggies and a pack of gum in the middle of the aisle.Ā
āOkay, Lee,ā you say, sweating despite the November chill. āLetās get going.ā
Leah grins in her seat in the shopping cart. āMeemawās?ā she asks.Ā
āYeah. Letās go make sure your meemaw had her dinner.ā
Your ears ring all the way home. They donāt stop ringing. You spend the night waiting for a phone call you donāt get, awkward and clammy. Thereās a certain way that rich families work in Indiana. You can see the coming hush money or the threat to leave town almost as clearly as you could see the loveless marriage years ago. You and Leah need to get out of dodge before youāre stuck having conversations you never wanted to have.Ā
I mean, who couldāve predicted that? One of Steveās teenagers recognises you in the grocery store three years after your fling, howād they even remember?Ā
The phone doesnāt ring, that night.Ā
Or the next.
Maybe Steve didnāt believe the kid. Maybe the kid had an emergency completely unrelated to Leah. Maybe Steve believed it and didnāt care. You deem yourselves safe from harm in a venture to the grocery store when your mom asks for chicken noodle soup.Ā
Itās there you recognise your mistake. Steve Harringtonās shiny BMW sits parked in the bay by the sign for the laundromat and the man himself sits inside with a paperback bent open on his thigh. Heās glaring at it like it killed his whole family.
You move bodily away from him with Leah clasped to your chest, wondering if you can beat him in, but then a chirp sounds near the door and you watch in slow motion as a young teenager brings a radio to his mouth and says, āCode milkshake!ā
You hear a curse and canāt help looking back, right at the bimmer, where Steve is looking up through the windshield with a look of frozen trepidation on his face.Ā
ā
So.Ā
How did you end up where you are?Ā
You arenāt one for thinking about the past. Donāt like doing it. In fact, you try your very hardest not to think of the past when you can help it. Once Leah was born, that was easy to do. Babies are demanding, they take over your entire life, and your new life in Portland was already busy to begin with. You find thinking of the past incessant and unnecessary, but. Things are happening oh so fast āyou had genuinely figured you could get through your homecoming without being spotted. You figured you could leave Leah at home with your mom while you shopped, but meemawās stroke has affected more than her body, and you couldnāt leave Leah there in good conscience in case an accident happened.Ā
Itās not like you had many friends, before you left. Any, in fact. Steve was the first guy to ever show any interest in you, and as nice as heād been in the quiet moments after, he hadnāt exactly brought you roses or promised you anything. Youāre the dummy who got pregnant by the āwashed outā king of Hawkins High. It was probably going to be one of his peers, and it was never going to be Nancy Wheeler.Ā
Things were obviously more detailed at the time, but you and Steve had come together in a fling. Itās not a relationship that youād pictured for yourself, but itās not as though you set your sights on him and thought, yeah, Iām going to fuck him. It was more that he was friendly, and you were both at the same bar at the same time sitting by yourselves, and with a little gin and a ton of mutual loneliness, itād felt natural to let him kiss you against the hood of his car. When he drove you home, worried youād get stuck in the rain, youād offered him into an empty house. Things snowballed from there.Ā
The sex was good. Steve was kind. He was a bit awkward from time to time and he didnāt know what to say without putting his foot in his mouth, but you liked it. Liked him.Ā
Then the test. Then the memory of his Harrington name, how his mom wanted him to marry a socialite and his dad was priming him to get into the family business, whatever that may be. That silly conversation about kids. āIād never put them through it,ā heād said, naked and tracing a star into your shoulder blades through the sheets, his hair damp at the nape of his neck with sweat, āare you joking? Theyād be the loneliest kid ever.āĀ
You remember laughing softly. Youād wanted him to say something different, but you arenāt sure what it is he couldāve said to make it right enough to stay.
In the end, you figured Leah could be part of a brand new start. You applied for a job in the classifieds and uprooted the rest of your life to go to it, and when you finally had your baby, you didnāt let yourself call Steve. What use would that have been, letting him smash the lingering, aching bit of your heart that wanted him to love you? You were smart enough then to recognise that your dream for the future was about as childish as getting knocked up at nineteen.Ā
It hurts now, though, as he gets out of the car, how badly you want him to want you, and how stupid youāve always been.Ā
Steve shuts the door to the BMW and makes his way in a jog across the parking lot. He breathes your name. Youāre nervous, not stupid. You donāt try to hide the baby.Ā
She grumbles on your hip.Ā
Steve stands in front of you. Heās remarkably not shouting at you, but heās not smiling, either. He looks different than the last time youād seen him for sure, fuller and broader, lip dark with stubble and his hair shorter (but not short). Thereās a funny scar stretching unkindly against his throat, startlingly new to you but clearly healed.Ā
He stands there in quiet.Ā
Leah makes a fawning sound, like sheās tired and excited to see a new person.Ā
āHi, Steve,ā you say, to get sound out in the air.Ā
His eyes fall on Leah. Sheās a good mix of you both. Got her dadās eyes and her momās nose and a handful of his beauty marks, small dark freckles that sprouted all over her body a few weeks after she was born.Ā
āIs she mine?ā he asks, cutting straight to the fat.Ā
You shift her closer to your chest. Heās impossible to read for once, not a lick of anything on his face as he waits for you to answer. The cold chaps your lips and the late-fall sunshine threatens to blind you where itās rising from behind him.Ā
āYou didnāt want to have a baby,ā you say carefully. Each word said with less enthusiasm than the previous.Ā
He doesnāt speak. Leah whines at the pause, her hand spreading against your collarbone in protest.Ā
āI know you didnāt. You said itād be miserable, and youād get stuck with a woman you didnāt love to save face, and I knew that. I didnāt see any good in⦠in making you go through that.ā
To your complete and utter surprise, his face softens. His mouth puckers in sympathy and his arm twitches like heās going to reach for you. His hair curls into his eyes in the cold breeze. He squints against it, gaze falling once again on Leah, who he canāt get enough of. Heās full-blown gawking at her, watching her sigh and sniffle and press her hand into your neck.
āIs she mine?ā Steve asks again.
You clear your throat to answer, but you canāt summon the words. Your nod is jerky and embarrassed and annoyed, all at once. Of course sheās his baby. She looks so much like him, and you never let anybody else touch you.Ā
Steve opens his mouth to finally speak and you cut him off. āWell, sheās mine,ā you say tightly.Ā
He nods like he understands. He doesnāt even look mad at the insinuation.Ā
āHer name is Leah.ā If heād been angry with you, cruel, even agitated, which maybe he deserves to be, youāre not sure you could offer this to him now. āShe⦠she looks a lot like you, huh?ā you ask.Ā
Steve manages a laugh, strained as it may be. āYeah. Yeah, she does.ā He swallows harshly. āI thought if I came by the house youād turn me away. Uh. Because I thought there mustāve been a reason you didnāt want me to know, but now weāre⦠here.ā
You glance around the parking lot. His tattle of a child has made himself scarce.Ā
āDo you wanna come home with me?ā you ask. Mostly for want of something to say.Ā
āYeah.āĀ
You go to leave, but Steve makes a sound and brings you right back. Without comment, he curls an arm around your shoulder and pulls you into a half-hug, slotting his nose against your temple like he used to, even as you tense up in his embrace.Ā
āI thought youād be more angry at me than this,ā you say under your breath.Ā
āYeah, thatās not really how I work.ā He parts from you awkwardly and points to the car. āIāll follow you?ā he asks.Ā
āOkay.āĀ
āOkay.ā He turns very suddenly and makes his way to his car.Ā
You meander to your own car and pop open Leahās door. āSorry, Lee,ā you murmur, tucking her into her carseat.
āWhy?ā she murmurs.
āWeāre gonna go to meemawās, okay?ā If your mom could hear you calling her meemaw before her stroke sheād have knocked you up the side of the head, but itās all Leahās ever known her as, and meemaw doesnāt have much choice in the matter now. Youād laugh if you didnāt feel sick.Ā
āOkay.ā
You kiss her cheek, getting stuck there with your nose in her hair, all manner of panic and awkwardness and Iād-rather-nots thrumming through you. I shouldāve stayed in Portland, you think.Ā
Leah kisses your cheek while youāre stooped there. Your misery takes a backseat as you gather your bearings.Ā
You climb into your own seat, close the door, lock it, and shove the keys in the ignition. Steveās car idles a few spaces behind, waiting for you to go. You cannot put this off much longer, but youād pictured the moment so differently, thereās a sense of unreality now. Is this happening? Did you really spill the truth to him the very first time he asked?Ā
Whereās your backbone?
Whereās your common sense?
With a groan, you pull the car out of the space and begin the drive to your momās house. You were never close with her, as strange as it seems. She was a woman with interests and her kid happened incidentally. It doesn't bother you anymore. You came to Hawkins to take care of her. Nobody else was going to do it for you, but so far sheās been an easy patient. She needs help making dinner and she canāt walk more than the length of the hall without finding herself breathless, but sheās recovering slowly, so long as her mental faculties recoup with her body, sheāll be alright.Ā
You, however, have screwed the entire pooch. You look at Leah in the rearview mirror and worry youāve ruined her entire life.Ā
āChill,ā you say to yourself quietly, almost missing the road to your momās house. Worst comes to worst and we go home to Portland, you tell yourself. Nothing has to change.Ā
āMommy?ā
āMm?ā you ask.Ā
Leah leans forward in her car seat, huffing with annoyance when the belts keep her in place. The jacket sheās wearing has bunched into a lump under her chin. āOff?ā she asks.Ā
āTwo minutes.ā
āOff.ā
āLet me park the car, Lee. Iāll take it off of you as soon as we get home.ā
She whines long and loud.
āSorry, sweet girl. Two minutes and weāre there.ā
Leah sulks the entire way there. You park in the space in front of the house and hurry out of the car, quick enough to see Steve in the bimmer pulling onto the sidewalk. You open Leahās door and offer her a huge smile, hoping to cull a tantrum with bubbly affection. āHi, off?āĀ
āYes!ā
You laugh to yourself and bring her out, even as your heartbeat climbs up your throat. You can hear Steve getting out of his car as you unbuckle Leah from the car seat and drag her out. You sit her in the slight dip of the window and use your stomach to keep her up as your fingers search for the zipper of her coat. You pull it tight down and unzipper her, freeing her of the thing that had been irking her so bad and restoring her good mood.Ā
She exhales dramatically in relief, which has you laughing again. āIs that better?ā you ask through it.
āBetter,ā she echoes.Ā
Leah sits up at the sound of shoes on gravel. Steveās crossing the drive, hands shoved in his pockets.Ā
āWho?ā she asks.Ā
Uhhhh.
āHeās gonna come in and have dinner with us, okay?ā
āYāokay.āĀ
āYeah?ā
Leah nods enthusiastically. You can see Steve grinning in your peripheral vision, and itās so much like Leahās smile you find your heart going haywire.Ā
āOkay,ā you say, your full attention to Steve. āIs that cool?ā
āCan we talk, first?ā
You donāt blame him for asking.Ā
āYeah, weāll talk first. But⦠my mom, sheās not doing the best right now, so. Maybe we should talk outside?āĀ
āIām not going to yell.ā
āNo, but. If youāre angry, I get it, but she canāt cope with that right now.āĀ
āAre you angry?ā he asks.Ā
āNo.ā
āThen we donāt have anything to worry about,ā he says, the sound of his smile palpable as Leah gives one back. āIām not gonna yell. I promise.ā
You show him into the house. It feels like walking yourself to the gallows.Ā
The room is narrow. The sides of your vision start to dissolve as you drop your car keys in the bowl by the door, then walk Leah to the kitchen. You hold her one handed as you palm off her shoes, dropping them and then her on the floor by the kitchen table. āOkay?ā you ask her.Ā
She wanders off toward the living room and the sound of TV.Ā
Steve Harringtonās standing in your momās rinky dink kitchen waiting for you to talk. Youāre standing there useless, taking sips of air that sting, waiting for him to cut the crap and berate you. It would make sense. If heās upset that you didnāt tell him you were pregnant, or that you were stupid enough to keep her, to get pregnant in the first place, it wouldnāt surprise you. Men are cruel, and Steve had a reputation for popularity. It would make sense for him to be mean to you now.Ā
āHow old is she?ā he asks finally.
āSheās turning two soon.ā
Steve seems to be holding his tongue.Ā
āJustā ask.ā You try to look sorry. āAsk me whatever you want.ā
āCan Iāā He throws a hand out, the first sign that heās not as genial as he appears. āCan I be her dad?ā
You flinch. āWhat?ā
āLike, I want to be her dad. A real dad. I want to be in her life, I want her to know me. Did you think I wouldnāt want that?ā
āI didnāt think you wanted kids at all.ā
āI want kids.ā Steve crosses his arms over his chest. āI always wanted a whole team of them.ā
āThatās not what you said.ā
āWhen? When you told me you were having my baby?ā
This is more what youād been expecting. Thereās a cruel pleasure in being vindicated. āWhen you told me you didnāt want kids, Steve. You said you didnāt want a miserable kid in a miserable marriage, what was I supposed to glean from that?āĀ
āExactly, I didnāt want a miserable kid, which is exactly what I was, and I didnāt want it in an arranged marriage that my mom thought would be good for me.ā His anger drains a little. āI never meantā I mean, even if I didnāt, you shouldāve told me.ā
āItās not fair to act like I wouldnāt have cared,ā he clarifies, frowning at you. Itās so disappointed-looking it pisses you off worse, but you're trying to keep a level head. Nobody here deserves for you to blow up and say words you donāt mean.Ā
You bite your lip. āIām sorry, Steve, but I wasnāt convinced that you would. I wanted what was best for me and her.āĀ
āI can be best for you both.ā
You wait for him to hold it up. To prove what he means.Ā
āIf sheās mine, I want to be her dad,ā he says.Ā
āIf?ā
He waves a hand, like he could roll his eyes. He should thank his lucky stars he didnāt. āNot like that, Iām not saying sheās not, I just want to look after her.āĀ
āSheās looked after.ā
āIām not saying sheās not,ā he says, uneasy now, shifting to hide a hand in his pocket. He wasnāt expecting you to be difficult, you think. āIām not saying that. Iām not saying anything about you, Iām asking you if I can do right by you.ā
āYou might not actually want her, Steve.āĀ
āI havenāt stopped thinking about her since the kids told me. I didnāt get a good look at her, but the idea? Just the idea of her? I wanted it.ā
You sigh, frustrated, and set your sights on the fridge. āCanāt believe you had kids posted up at Bradleyās to stalk me,ā you murmur.Ā
āI needed to see her for myself.ā
āSteve... Youāre twenty three. We arenāt married. You donāt have to be anything to her, you donāt have to do right by me, we donāt have to play house until youāre miserable. In a couple of months weāll go home to Portland and you donāt have to do anything. Iām sorry I didnāt tell you, but you donāt have to worry. You can tell everyone you tried and I said no and youāll still look good.ā
āWhy are you being like this?ā he asks, leaving little air between your sentence and his. āWhat are you talking about? Iām asking you if I can keep you guys and youāre trying to run me out?ā
āKeep us?ā you ask indignantly.Ā
āYes!ā He clears his throat. āI donāt get why you left without telling me and I am angry, but I also donāt understand what itās like to have to make that decision, and Iām sorry you made it by yourself, and I donāt blame you for running away. Okay? Is that okay?ā
Heās so loud, then, so tightly wound and upset, his voice a shade of pleading, that the protests youād been making die on your lips.Ā
āYeah,ā you say quietly.
āYou didnāt think I wanted a baby, and I guess I didnāt give you a reason to think that, but I do want one. I wouldāveā if youād told me, I wouldāve lost my mind. Iām still losing it.ā
You pull out a chair at the kitchen table to take a wobbly seat. Your heart is racing, that stupid kiddie feeling of being in trouble for hurting him clouded by a lingering sense of mistrust. Youād thought⦠all these years, that Steve didnāt want kids, or marriage, or anything, andā andā maybe you didnāt run away because of him, maybe it was all you, maybeāĀ
āHey,ā he says, a hand landing between your shoulders, āIām sorry.ā
āFor what?ā you ask, sharper than you mean to.
āI donāt know. I wanted you to stop freaking out.ā
āWell,ā you say, licking your lips, your breath coming short and shallow, āit didnāt work.ā
Steve Harrington rubs your back. You try desperately to chill out, Leah in the other room, your mom sleeping or listening, probably already wound up from all the ruckus, and Steve, who you havenāt seen in years, who used to kiss all over your face before heād hug you in the dark of his bedroom, waiting for you to calm down so he can say what he needs to.Ā
A chair pulls out next to yours after a while. Steve sits beside you, resting his hand on your knee.Ā
After a few minutes, you cover his hand with yours.Ā
āSheās beautiful,ā he says.Ā
āLooks like her mom,ā you mumble.Ā
āYeah, she does. More like me though.ā
You huff a weak laugh.Ā
āAre you gonna throw me out?ā Steve asks.Ā
āYou want to be her dad?ā
For a few seconds, you worry he hasnāt heard you. But he rubs a small back and forth on your leg and says, āPlease.āĀ
āOkay. Okay, then. Iām not letting you meet her if youāre not serious, Steve. You have to mean it.ā You raise your eyes to his and all his perfect lashes. āPromise?ā
He offers his pinky, which is so dumb. This whole scenario is so stupid. Too bad itās mostly (almost entirely) your own fault.Ā
You shake his pinky. He keeps them tied for a long time.Ā
In a rush, you sniffle yourself dry and usher Leah into the room with a hand on her shoulder. She is so, so small. At least your mom missed the commotion, sleeping sat up in the armchair.Ā
āYou promise?ā you ask Steve, pausing at the table.Ā
Steve nods emphatically. By the looks of things, heās all in.Ā
You pull your chair out opposite Steve and scoop Leah into your lap. You hold her wrist in your hand gently and lean down to talk in her ear. āOkay, Lee. I gotta tell you something, okay?ā
āYāokay.ā
āThis is daddy.āĀ
You can tell heās not expecting such a straightforward introduction, but after a moment, he cannot hide his smile. Leah looks at him with his almond shaped eyes, all smiles in return.Ā
āOkay? This is daddy, and heās gonna spend some time with us.āĀ
āHuh?ā
You point at Steve, smiling even as your hand trembles between you both. āThis is your daddy. He missed you very much and wanted to see you. Can you say hi?ā
āHi,ā Leah says, her voice raspy and high.Ā
āHi, Leah,ā he says, ever so slightly choked up. Just barely.Ā
āHe was my best friend,ā you say, āand he wants to be your best friend, too. Do you want to play a game with daddy?āĀ
āWamā play game?ā Leah asks Steve.Ā
āPlease, I would love to play a game. What game do you like?ā he asks.
āUmā¦ā Leah places her hand in his and you could probably weep, but heās smiling at her with so much love as he waves it up and down you never get there. She shakes her fist up and down in his, giggling when he over exaggerates her strength.Ā
āWoah, strong girl!ā he says. āDonāt break my arm!ā
Leah gives him a good shake.Ā
ā
āI do not understand why youāre so calm. How youāre so calm. This is not how Iāve seen you react to things.ā
Steve pushes the shopping cart into Robinās hip. She squawks and thrusts it at him, the crate of kiddie water bottles heād balanced on the bottom rung hitting him clean in the ankle.Ā
āHow am I supposed to react?ā he asks, wincing as he brings his leg up to rub at the new wound.Ā
āUh, to blow the fuck up?ā She tucks her hair behind her ears, staring at him. āI was expecting more whining, if Iām totally honest.ā
Steve gets back to the task at hand. The aisle theyāre in is pink no matter where you look, full of Barbie dolls and ballerina tutus and teddy bears with hearts in their palms. āWhat would you want if you were two?ā he asks.Ā
Robin offers one of her kinder smiles. āI guess Iād want everything.ā
āWell, Y/Nās not gonna like that.āĀ
He wants to take care of you both. He doesnāt want to make you feel like you werenāt doing that already. So. The cart is full of stuff for him mostly, things heāll need to look after Leah should he ever be allowed to take her by himself, which he assumes he will. Heās got diapers, sippy cups, wet wipes, rash creams, a mountain of clothes he has to remember to keep the receipt for, baby snacks, a changing pad, bath toys. He has a towel like a poncho with a ladybug hood and a great big bottle of bathroom cleaner to shape things up for his baby.Ā
He also got you pajamas. Heās not sure why. He remembers that old pair you used to wear whenever heād make it to your place with the pink and purple plaid, and heād been wondering if you kept them, and a desire to see you in them again had come over him and now theyāre in the cart. Heās hoping he can sort of slip them in between diapers.Ā
Steve doesnāt want to show you up, but he does want to prove heās being serious, emotionally and physically āfinancially. Leah is his baby. Kids are expensive, and she mustāve already cost you a small fortune, and you didnāt want his help but you can bet youāll be getting it, not singularly because he cared for you (he has to gloss it into that one word, care, things being complicated enough as it stands without remembered notions of falling and love) but because Leah is literally his baby.Ā
He pauses on the spot.Ā
Leah is his girl. Heās allowed to buy her things. It will not be an insult.Ā
He grabs a Barbie with a puppy dog on a leash, a box of stickle bricks, a teddy bear with a big cutesy grin, and purple bunny rabbit to be his best friend.Ā
Robin watches him put it all in the cart in silence.Ā
āIs that enough?ā he asks, despite previous internal decisions. Sheās his best friend. Everyone needs one.Ā
Robin turns on the spot to look at the shelves behind them, grabbing a box set of storybooks bound with ribbon down the spines. āThese ones are from me,ā she says, dumping them next to the second jumbo box of diapers.
āIām not, like, super angry,ā he says, getting behind the cart to push for the checkout. āI want kids. I want Leah. This isnāt a bad thing.ā
āYou kind of missed out on a lot,ā Robin says. Carefully, not to be cruel, but to present it to him in case he hasnāt thought about it. Obviously heās thought about it, but.Ā
āI mean, yeah. But do you remember being a baby?ā
āItās, like, a deep down thing.ā
He swallows. āSure, I donāt like that I didnāt get to be there when Leah was a baby, but⦠Iām finding it hard to be mad when she was protecting all of us from things we didnāt want, or, thatās what she thought.ā Steve gives a jerky shrug. āIām sure she got enough love from her without me, but Iām gonna make up for whatever she missed out on.ā
āOkay. Well, when you explode, Iām literally right here.ā
Steve is overcome with the urge to snuggle her in the middle of the store, but he hits her with the shopping cart again and feels the thanks get stuck in his throat. āIām not gonna explode. Iām happy.āĀ
Steve is thrilled. He has a baby. He has a child. Maybe itās not the wife and six kids he thought he wanted, but Leah is his baby.Ā
āSheās mine,ā he says.Ā
āI know, dingus. Youāve said it a hundred times.ā
He parks his cart at the belt behind a grandma buying cat food. āI canāt wait for you to meet her, Rob, sheāsāā
āSheās beautiful,ā Robin says, rolling her eyes. āWeāre way too young for kids, Steven. You were supposed to go to college.ā
āIām still gonna go!ā
āWith what money?ā
Steve will save again. Itās community college.Ā
Robin holds his eye. He avoids it, starts putting things on the checkout belt. āYouāre doing the only thing you can do,ā she says, āI donāt wanna be friends with a deadbeat, but I wanted you to go. Iām too young to be an Aunt.ā
āIāll going, Rob.āĀ
āFine. I believe you.ā
āCan you help?ā
She pulls stuff out of the cart reluctantly.Ā
Together, they pack what can be bagged and take it all to the car. Steve drops Robin off at home without much of a goodbye āeither sheāll call him tonight or heāll call her, ācos one way or another, theyāre gonna talk. Then he takes the side road to your momās house and parks the bimmer behind your old blue Pontiac.Ā
He grabs the toys and the bag of groceries. Heāll have to make another trip for the diapers, but he figures itās best to see your reaction before he lugs it all up the driveway.Ā
You answer the door. Parenting has been going better than expected considering you kept the baby a secret for two whole years, and youāre already smiling when you see him. Things were awkward that first week, but heās been coming by every single day after work if he works, bright and early if he doesnāt. He can tell youāre growing more confident in his promises. Heās not gonna realise how big this whole thing is and run. Heās well aware of how world-changing his decision was to stay, but it wasnāt a decision at all.Ā
āHi, is she awake yet?ā he asks. Leah naps every day at noon.Ā
āMm-hm. She was asking me for daddy all morning,ā you say. Secrets you may have kept, but youāre glad for both of them whenever Steve and Leah get along. āI promised youād be here after dinner.ā
āIs it cool that Iām early?ā
You eye the bags in his hands. āSure. I already told you, Iām not gonna dictate anything. You can see her when you want to⦠Whatās that?ā
āI was thinking Iād make dinner?ā He shakes the lighter bag. āAnd this is for Leah.ā
āRight. Okay.āĀ
You let Steve in. He, despite all things in his body that remember this song and dance and demand he kiss your cheek hello, powers through to the kitchen without making a fool of himself.Ā
āBrought your favourite. Thought Leah would probably like it, since you liked it so much,ā he says. āAnd those pastries you loved.ā
āYou want me to go grab her?ā
āWhere is she?āĀ
āSheās sitting with my mom. Donāt think she heard the door, she wouldāve come out running by now. Sheās a little sleepy.ā
āThatās okay. I can put all this away and Iāll go see if sheās awake.ā
You cross your arms over your stomach, leaning against the counter. āYou didnāt have to get stuff for me.ā
āI wanted to.ā
āYou donāt have to, though. Leahās your baby, but Iāmā¦ā
He feels achy in his jaw. He abandons the bag full of groceries to look at you fully. āIf youād turned up here without Leah, after two years of full radio silence, no letters and no clue where you went, if you came back, Iād want to see you. You know that, right?ā
āIā¦ā
āI asked your mom where you went, did you know that?ā
āNo.ā
āWell, she wouldnāt tell me.ā
āI donāt think she knew.ā
Steve hates how much that annoys him, hates the way he relates to it. He dries his hands on his pants, not sure if he wants to hug you or tip your head with his thumb at chin, forcing you to look at him, to say the things heās said in his head before bed a couple nights a week for years.Ā
Steve Harrington does not love by halves.Ā
āYouād tell me if you were gonna leave again, right?ā he asks.Ā
āWe are leaving.āĀ
āI know, I know, but. Youāre not gonna disappear in the middle of the night.ā
āNo, Steve. Iāll tell you before we go home. I promise.ā
His shoulders relax. āOkay, then, Iāll keep bringing stuff you like, too. Trade deal.ā
āMutually beneficial. I won't kidnap your baby again and you bring me raspberry turnovers.ā
āExactly.ā
You surprise him with a laugh. āOkay.ā
āOkay, good,ā he says, grinning, wondering if heās finally paving a path into your lap again.Ā
From the doorway of the kitchen comes a pleased gasp. āDaddy?ā Leah asks, her eyes widening in delight, feet stomping on the spot, āHi, daddy!āĀ
He was supposed to give this up for community college? Steve squats down in a half-second and holds out his hands, ready for an armful of sleepy toddler. Her hair is all puffy and her pajamas big at the neck like sheād wriggled for hours, but sheās soft, smells clean as he wraps his arms around her and she burrows into his neck.Ā
āHi, Leah,ā he says softly.Ā
Leah hums her content.Ā
āGood nap?ā
āYeah.ā
āYeah? Did you have a good dream?ā
She laughs as he strokes her back. He mustāve tickled her. āDa-ddy,ā she says, a long, pulling word.Ā
Sheās so small Steve canāt hug her properly like this, so he hooks her in one arm and stands up to his full height, catching your unreadable expression from over her shoulder. Whatever youād been thinking fades away, your smile strengthening as Leah pulls out of his neck to wave at you.Ā
āMommy,ā she says, poking at Steveās neck. āLook. Daddyās for dinner.ā
Steve laughs loudly. āIām for dinner? Youāre gonna eat me? I thought you liked me!ā His head falls in a dramatic agony. āLeah wants to cook me up for dinner, I canāt believe it.āĀ
āNo!ā Leah says, giggling as she grabs his face. She pulls at his cheeks, forcing his head up. āNot eating,ā she says, like heās silly.Ā
Steve shifts her so sheās sitting braced on his lower belly, looking down at her. God, sheās so pretty. Sheās perfect. Sheās tiny, slim for her age according to you, but she isnāt weak. She holds herself up, her hands confident as they spread over his chest. Steve has to confess that this feeling is the strongest heās ever experienced. Nothing compares to looking at this little kid who already treats him like heās the best person sheās ever met, knowing that sheās his. He has to look after her. He gets to be loved by her without hesitation. Leah has no reason to love him, and yet here she is giggling in his arms from the excitement of seeing him. Itās like every day she likes him more, and every day, Steve gets to love her more. Itās so weird, but it's nice.
āI brought you something,ā he says, shifting her again so he can cover her back with one arm, using the other to brush a stray bit of lint off of her face. āButā mommy, can she have it now?ā he asks.Ā
You flush. Steve recognises this look on you, pleased and startled. Heās seen it on you a hundred different times. You were always that girl who didnāt expect kindness, or to be considered. He remembers how endearing it was to surprise you with a kiss to say thank-you, or picking up the bill no matter how casual dinner felt, or something as small as helping you into your pajamas after youād both showered. It was heartbreaking, but heās never been unfamiliar with the bare minimum.Ā
āYeah, of course she can.ā
āAlright,ā Steve says, grinning. āYour Aunt Robin sent me with a gift for you, but daddyās is better, so you can have mine first.ā He twists for the bag itās in and yanks it out, Barbie to him so she canāt see. āItās only small, but I saw it and I thought youād like it.ā
āCan have?ā she asks.Ā
āDepends. Can I have a hug first?ā he asks, checkingĀ your face to make sure heās not being weird.Ā
Leah nods erratically and throws herself forward. Steve gets a big kiss right on his smooth-shaven cheek, and he canāt stop himself from beaming, his punched out sigh poorly suppressed as he turns her to give her a much gentler kiss at the very top of her cheek. āThanks, Lee.ā
Her eyes squint with a smile. āCan I have, please?ā
Steve brings the box up and tosses it to flip it, brandishing it right way round to her glee.Ā
āBarbie!ā she cries.
āWith a puppy!āĀ
āOh gosh.ā
Steve bursts out laughing. āGosh! Should we get the box open? Then you can gosh at the accessories. She has two pairs of shoes, Leah. Two!ā
Leah squirms to be put down, hands clenched tightly on each side of the box. Youāre already grabbing scissors to get it open.Ā
āThank you.ā You lean over Leah to start the dissection.Ā
āDonāt,ā he says, quiet but less shame-faced. āYou donāt have to say thanks.āĀ
You shake your head to yourself. āYeah, well.āĀ
āShe deserves it, and itās not up to you to say thanks. Iām serious.āĀ
āItās nice of you.āĀ
He doesnāt know how to prove how certain he is about staying. He decides to keep his mouth shut for now, which is hard. Almost slips up that whole evening. You donāt look happy when he doubles back before he leaves that night with the bag of snacks and the huge box of diapers, but he catches you as you and Leah stand on the stoop waving at the bimmer. Youāre smiling. A real one, teeth on display for the first time since you came home.Ā
ā
āOkay,ā you say quietly, āup, baby. And another one. Good job.āĀ
Leah demonstrates a unique level of concentration as she climbs up the stairs with you. Youād have carried her if she didnāt insist she could do it herself with a displeased squeal. Her eyes are nearly closed, her tongue slipping between her lips and a hand thrown out for balance, the other held in your own as she manages two, then three, the few shallow steps that lead into the WSQK building.Ā
āHi,ā you greet a quiet man sitting at the door. āIs Steve in?āĀ
āThink so. Why?ā
āI wanted to talk to him, if thatās okay.ā
The man gives you a suspicious look that eventually metes. āSure. Gotta knock the booth before you go in, though, they might be on the air.ā
āSure. Thank you.āĀ
Leah stumbles with you inside. Thereās a wide wooden panelled room and smaller glass one within. You knock on it and wait for movement, too scared to look through the panels. Youāve learned that Robin has her very own radio show on the 94.5 called The Morning Squawk, and Steve, through best-friend nepotism, gets to be her sound guy. He has this WSQK van they drive around to do on the road interviews, and theyāre both a hundred times happier here than they were rewinding tapes at Family Video.Ā
Itās a pretty firm knot of roots to lay.Ā
The door opens a good fifteen seconds after youād knocked. Youāre immediately greeted by a blondified Robin Buckley, her freckled cheeks slack with surprise. āUhā¦ā
āHi, Robin.ā
āHi,ā she says.Ā
The last time you saw Robin, youād been laying on Steveās couch in his socks and what mightāve been Robinās own sweatshirt, the three of you arguing on what movie to watch and what candy you were gonna tip into your popcorn. Youād laid your head in Steveās lap.Ā
āLeah,ā you say, clearing your throat as subtly as possible, āsay hi, bubby.āĀ
āHi, bubby,ā Leah says.Ā
Robin snorts.Ā
āThis is your daddyās best friend ever, Aunt Robin,ā you say, shooting Robin a sorry look as you mouth, āIs that cool?āĀ
Robin culls your misery and manages a real smile. āThatās me, babe.ā She bends at the waist. āOh, you really do look like Steve. Shit, this is so cool.ā Her awkwardness has melded to full-bodied delight. āYouāre like his twin! Well, you do look like your mommy, duh, but this is trippy! Hey, did you get your books?ā
Leah looks up at her with huge eyes.Ā
āDid you like your storybooks?ā you ask Leah, kneeling down behind her to hold her shoulder. āAunt Robin gave you those ones, remember, daddy read one to you about the ugly duckling?āĀ
āThe duckies,ā Leah says factually.Ā
āAwesome,ā Robin says. āIām so happy you liked them, sweetie. And Iām so happy to meet you.āĀ
You donāt question for a second that she means it.Ā
You pat Leah on the shoulder. āAunt Robin is your daddyās best friend in the whole world.āĀ
āDaddyās here?ā she asks Robin.Ā
āUh, not right now, he had to go get lunch.āĀ
āOh.ā
āBut you can totally come in!ā she says, opening the door to the booth wide. āI can show you how the radio works! And then Steveā then dad can come back. I bet heāll be here any second.ā
āYouāre not busy?ā you ask.Ā
āI mean?ā Robin laughs, nervously incredulous, āif I ever have kids theyād be her cousins. Thatās pretty important. And, like, sheās Steveās, so? Iād die for her?ā Robin scratches a hand through her hair. āCome on, baby Stevie, Iāll show you the keyboard. Itās your dadās favourite gimmick.āĀ
You hover in the middle of the small room as Robin slides a chair over to the desk with a keyboard and a mic balanced on top of it. She glances at you before she holds her hands out to Leah, and Leah goes into them willingly. Robin pulls her up and settles her in the chair. She can barely see the keys, but sheās already reaching for them as Robin starts to explain which ones do what, toggling a switch that you assume makes sure whatever sounds Leah plays are off air.
You sit yourself down on a loveseat by the door.
āWe can play all of this stuff on the radio in the car,ā Robin says, ādo you listen to the radio?ā
āThe music, bubby,ā you say.Ā
Leah gives a neck-breaking nod.Ā
āWell, me and dad choose what songs to play. Do you have a favourite song?āĀ
āShe loves āSave it For Laterā by The Beat. She gets super into it,ā you say.Ā
āOh, we have that one! Letās queue it up, Leah.ā
Leah mashes the keyboard in a cacophony of introductions and funny sounds, then a long run of the Rockinā Robin intro. She finds a sound bite of applause loaded up on the tape deck, hitting it over and over as she giggles.Ā
āBe careful, Lee, donāt break it.ā
Her hitting doesnāt slow.Ā
āLee,ā you say more firmly, ābaby, stop. You have to be nice. Donāt slap the buttons.āĀ
Leah throws you a glare. āMommy,ā she whines.Ā
āWhat? You have to be nice to other peopleās things. Aunt Robin is letting you play with her keyboard, but itāsĀ important. Itās okay to try all the buttons! But with nice hands. Yeah?ā
The ajar door opens fully. āIs my Leah not being nice?ā Steve asks, already beaming with all his teeth as he sees her behind the keyboard. āI donāt believe that for a second!āĀ
Leah wiggles her excitement in the depths of the chair. Doesnāt bother calling out for him, thereās no need. Steve laughs, saying hi with a quick hand dropped on your shoulder, the gentlest squeeze anyoneās ever given with his thumb rubbing a half circle before he bends down by Leahās chair. āHi,ā he says, your heart beating so loudly in your ears that you hardly hear him. āYouāre at the radiohouse! Did Rockinā Robin show you how to play a song? Do you wanna talk on the microphone?āĀ
āHi,ā Leah says.Ā
āHi.ā
āHug me now?ā
Steveās like butter in the sun. He melts into nothing. āYeah, babe, right now.ā
She slinks forward and he picks her up, standing with a baby on his hip like heās been doing it all his life.Ā
āIām gonna play her a song,ā Robin says. āMy queues almost empty.ā
āOkay, thanks,ā he says, to which Robin wrinkles her nose.Ā
āSure,ā she says, sending you a look as she heads to her desk. Like, get a load of this idiot.
Steve presses his nose to Leahās hair and smells her. Then he smiles, patting the small of her back.Ā
Leah looks straight at you and says, āDaddyās here,ā in case you werenāt aware.Ā
Steve blinks away a pained flutter, his brow pulling like heād been in pain, quickly wiped away and hidden by the time Leah glances at him again.Ā
You think maybe, for a second, heād wanted to cry.Ā
āSteve?ā you ask quietly. āYou okay?ā
āYeah. No, yeah.ā
āYou sure?āĀ
He tugs Leah higher on his hip. āIām okay,ā he tells you, holding your gaze, his left sclera bloodshot but his nearly-tears blinked away. āIām great, ācos Leahās here,ā he adds, pressing his mouth to Leahās cheek, āat work! Sheās a working girl now, we gotta get you on the payroll.āĀ
Itās a little while later, sitting on the couch and waiting for Steve to ask you what it is youāre doing here, when the door opens. Leah perks up in his lap, the headphones sheād been wearing falling down around her neck in a heap that makes her cringe, giving a warbly cry as Steve offers assurances to her.Ā
Youāre focused on the teenager standing in the door. Itās the kid.Ā
His eyes widen at the sight of you.Ā
āLucas Sinclair,ā you greet, giving him a stony look. āYou ratted me out.ā
āUhā did I?āĀ
āI know it was you.āĀ
Lucas grimaces. āAre we sure it was me?ā
āI saw you.ā
āSteve couldāve got the information from anyone.ā
You glare for a few more seconds, then relax. āIām messing with you, Lucas. Iām not mad. Even if you are a narc.ā
āI am not! I told Dustin and it was Dustin that radioed Steve. Heās the narc. I said we had to wait for proof.ā
āWell, thanks for trying.ā
Lucas hesitates with you, though he comes further into the room and lets the door shut behind him. āI am sorry. Kind of.ā
āWeāre working things out.ā
Leah tugs the headphones off of her head and out of the outlet in a great show of toddler rage, Steve laughing where he holds her. He grabs the headphones before Leah can throw them at the floor. āHey!ā he admonishes through laughter, āThose arenāt mine, babe. Should we put them on the desk?ā
Steve takes them from her and sets them high. He moves the chair, bumping Leah on his knee, forcing her eyes to the new figure in the room. āLook, Lee, itās your Uncle Lucas.ā
Lucas gives an awkward, endearing smile. āHi.ā
āHi!ā Leah says.Ā
āWhatās up?ā Steve asks.Ā
āCan I get a ride, tonight? I asked my dad but heās going to that miniature car thing.āĀ
āWhere to?āĀ
āMaxās.ā
āWhy are you being cagey?ā Steve asks, lifting an eyebrow.Ā
āIām not!āĀ
āYou so are, dude. Whatās happening at Maxās?āĀ
āNothing! She doesnāt, like, know Iām going, thatās all.ā
Steve leans in his chair in what would be a total act of casual derision if he werenāt also holding Leah to his front, his fingers waving patterns into her tummy affectionately. āSo Iām gonna be on her shit list for whatever it is you have planned? No deal, dude.ā
āIām not in trouble. Sheās not mad at me,ā Lucas says.
āFor once.ā
āSheās not. I have a surprise planned? And itās gonna get ruined on my bike, so.ā
Steveās suspicion wavers. āWhat sort of surprise?ā he asks.Ā
His smile is nice. Doesnāt it suit him? Heās calm where he sits despite the rumble of noise coming from Robinās booth and Leah talking to herself in his lap. The red glow of the ON AIR light makes his brown hair nearly purple at the tops but leaves his face untouched, tan fading pale in the fall, his beauty marks the darkest bit of colour to him when you arenāt looking into the well of his eyes. His irises are like wet tree bark. His lashes look long from across the room.Ā
And his biceps donāt look half bad when theyāre wrapped around your baby. Her tiny stature emphasises the bulk heās put on while you were in Portland. Youāve been noticing more of him latelyāhis weight gain, the change in his muscle, the cut of his hair, those reading glasses he keeps in the console of his car. But there are things about him that didnāt change. Heās pretty happy, as things go. He likes doing things for other people.Ā
Their conversation drifts into focus. āā¦not too much, right?ā
āNah, I think thatās appropriate. Four years of dating is a long time.āĀ
āEven if youāre broken up for half a year in the middle?ā
Steve chuckles. Leah looks up at the sound. āI wouldnāt mention that part,ā he says. āLook, Iāll come get you after Iām done hereāā
āYouāre not coming tonight?ā you ask, entirely sincere in asking. Not a lick of judgement in it, but surprise, and a second emotion you arenāt eager to name.Ā
āI wasā I was gonna come,ā Steve says. āIf thatās cool.ā
āOh, sure. Sorry. I thought you wereā Yeah, itās fine,ā you say.Ā
Steve looks at you for a long second. āI canāt miss out on dinner,ā he says, dipping down to speak in Leahās ear, ācan I? What am I making tonight, Lee, do you remember?ā
āSāgetti,ā she says, with a vindication bordering evil.Ā
Steve presses his lips together. Shrugs at Lucas smugly. āSāgetti,ā he says. āIāll be there at six, okay?āĀ
Lucas shoots an āAwesome, thank you, sorry,ā over his shoulder as he leaves.Ā
āThank you sorry,ā Leah repeats.Ā
Steve has to lock into work and he doesnāt ask you to leave, moving Leah around in his arms and plugs the headphones in. She enjoys the novelty enough to sit there without complaining, bathed in attention. Itās weird to have Leah with you without having to look after her. Like, she gets uncomfortable and Steve moves her. She whines in his arm and he opens a drawer to uncover a bag of chips. He does ask if itās alright for her to eat them, but you say yes and he doesnāt need guidance after that. He wipes her dirty face in his sleeve and twists a knob on the keyboard.Ā
He is startlingly capable.Ā
You are startlingly hot.Ā
You pull at your neckline, wishing youād brought a book to read or a zip tie to garrote yourself with for thinking such stupid shitty thoughts.Ā
ā
Steve packs his shit up at five with Leah on his hip, happy to stay with him. Youāve been quiet bordering silent and he hasnāt summoned up the bravery to ask why. He didnāt wanna look a gift horse in the mouth, ācos youāre here, and you brought Lee without any begging on his part. He shows her off to everyone they pass on the way out, less subtly to the smiley cleaner Cindy who loves to call him handsome in the morning. Whoās this? she asks.Ā
This is my baby, Leah.
The problem arises when heās trying to pass Leah to you to part ways in the parking lot.Ā
āI donāt think Iāve ever heard something that loud,ā Robin laments, blinking fast. Because, despite years and time to learn, heās her ride home.Ā
Leah screams another ear-splitter. āNo!ā sheās shouting. āNo, no!āĀ
She sobs.Ā
You try to disentangle her from Steveās chest. He can feel your individual fingers pressing into his pecs. āLee, come on!ā you say, laughing nervously. āDaddy has stuff to do, weāll see him for dinner!ā
She sobs louder.Ā
Robin shakes her head as though dislodging water from her ears.
āBaby, please,ā you say, apparently possessing the patience of a god, āitās okay, I promise, itās not long. Weāll be okay for a bit.āĀ
Leah sews her hands in his hair tightly, yanking until it stings. Steve flinches and you immediately stop trying to make Leah disengage.Ā
āSorry, honey,ā you say, and Steve realises with a full body start youāve spoken to him, your hand resting open on his upper shoulder. Itās an obvious slip of the tongue. You lean forward with a slight stammer, āIā Leah, donāt pull, youāre hurting.ā
āNot going,ā Leah says.Ā
āJust for now!āĀ
āNo!ā
You give Steve a wide-eyed frown. āIām sorry, I donāt know whatās going on. She doesnāt do this⦠usually.ā
āThatās okay, itās fine, maybe you could come with me?āĀ
You nibble your lip. āI gotta go check on my mom, I havenāt been home all day, I donāt know if sheās eaten yet.āĀ
Steve tries to pass Leah into your arms with renewed purpose. The snap of hair behind his ear gives him pause. āUh, can she come with me?ā Steve asks, loud now, his head angled against her hand. āOw, Lee!ā
Leah stops pulling his hair with a sob.Ā
āIāll take her with me and Iāll drop Robin off, pick Lucas up early, and weāll come straight to the house.ā
You falter.
The thought of you not trusting him hurts his stomach, but you say, āSteve, can you deal with that? She might not get any happier for a while.ā
āSure I can, youāve had to do it a hundred times. Iām mostly patient. If she doesnāt calm down, I wonāt yellāā
āI didnāt think you would.ā You pout, wrinkling your nose. āYouād have to move the car seatāā
āYeah, I got one.ā
āYou got a car seat?ā
āInstalled it last week. Jesus Christ, Leah, not the hair!ā He reaches up to force her hand as gently as he can away from his scalp. āBaby, owwww. Not the hair.āĀ
Leah shudders away to check heās not angry. He can see it on her tiny face, the worry. He brings his hand to her cheek, finds his hand is too big, and has to rub her cheek with his thumb alone. āYou wanna come with daddy to drop off your Aunt Robin?ā he asks.
āYeah.ā
āYeah?āĀ
āCome with you,ā she says, a crocodile tear rolling down her cheek.Ā
āBut mommy has to go home, is that okay?āĀ
Leah shudders again. āYāokay.ā
āOkay. Give mommy a big kiss,ā he says, repeating one of your favourite lines when itās time for Steve to leave.Ā
You get a kiss. Youāre startled, he thinks, almost expressionless in how slack youāve gone, but Steve smiles at you and you smile in turn. āYou know how to do the car seat?ā you ask.Ā
āSure. Itās got the two mechanisms, right? Her arm goes through each of the triangle strap thingys?āĀ
āYeah. Okay. Are you sure you can manage?ā
āAre you okay with me taking her?ā
You shrug. He can see why Leah does it as much as she does. āI guess I am. I mean, when we go home⦠like, youāll have to have her for summers, I guess?ā you ask, and youāre as beautiful as you usually are, the awkward twist of you and your tired eyes donāt touch it. You were beautiful when he walked into the sound room and found you in the loveseat, beautiful when you told him youād stay for now without saying goodbye, beautiful when he spotted you across the parking lot with his surprise on your hip. Youāve always been beautiful. He knows you donāt feel strongly about your looks, but he does, and now you made his girl? And she looks so much like the two of you?Ā
Steve stares at you, not even in hopes of any realisation, but he stares at you and thinks I cannot let this girl go back to Portland without me.Ā
He doesnāt expect you to stay. All he needs is to beg a ride.Ā
Because yes, Steve will become your awkward cling-on. Heāll find a shitty apartment close to you and heāll build his life around Leah if thatās all he can have.Ā
But itās not everything he wants.Ā
āYou go take care of your mom, and weāll meet you for dinner at 6? 6:15 at the latest?āĀ
āOkie dokie.ā
Steve rolls his eyes to stop from kissing your cheek. āSay see you later, mommy,ā he tells Leah.Ā
āSee you later, mommy,ā Leah says.Ā
You use his shoulder as an anchor to kiss her cheek. He swears you rub his arm as you pull away, but Robin would call that delusional thinking. āSee you soon, bug.ā
He watches you walk away. Every step is perfect. āYour momās such a bombshell,ā he murmurs, āholy sugar, sheās everything.ā You turn over the top of the car and give him a wave, blowing Leah a kiss. He wants to catch it. He finger waves back.Ā
Then he spins and finds Robin judging him hard.
It takes them twenty whole human minutes to figure out how to get Leah safely secured in her car seat. Then he spends four minutes framing her face in his hands and kissing her cheeks, enamoured beyond anything to see her in the bimmer. Robin laughs at how lame he is and he strokes a hair off of Leahās forehead rather than feed into her ridicule. His baby laughs up a storm as he chucks her under the chin.Ā
āSteve, Iām gonna starve!ā Robin warns.
āRight, right!āĀ
He kisses Leahās small forehead and clambers out.Ā
Robin talks a big talk, but she bends around in the passenger seat to chatter to Leah the whole way to her neighbourhood. āAnd then dad got us stuck on the side of the road! It was crazy! I told him we were in trouble and he kept laughing! But nothing is that funny, Leah, nothing. I think itās ācos your dad has a bunch of screws loose from that time he slipped on melted ice cream at work.āĀ
āDonāt listen to her, Lee!ā Steve protests, laughing at her rolling giggles.Ā
āHe busted his head! Luckily I saved him, because I am very very smart and I went to campāā
āYou went to Girl Scoutās sleep away camp, thatās not real camp! You were there for a week.ā
āBut they taught me what to do when your dingus gets a concussion,ā Robin says, in her silky radio voice that Leahās magnetised to. āAnd thatās why dad only looks a bit wonky, as opposed to a lot.āĀ
āIām not wonky, am I, Lee?ā Steve asks, checking the rearview for her.Ā
āWonky?ā she asks.
āDoes daddy look wonky?ā
āMm,ā she says.Ā
āWhat! That is so mean! Baby, I thought you liked dad?āĀ
She giggles and goes all shy. Robin, bless her clumsy, alternative, mixed-up huge heart, goes soft as taffy against the seat. āWe donāt like him at all, do we?ā she asks, reaching out to rub Leahās arm. Steve nearly hits a curb trying to watch. āStinky dad. You can be my girl instead, if mom wants to share. I donāt mind your Harrington blood.āĀ
He drops Robin off, but her mom comes out and wants to meet Leah and thatās a whole thing. Sheās squarely heartbroken when she first sees her, going, āAw,ā and āOh,ā as her eyes fill with tears.Ā
āMom!ā Robin says.Ā
āSorry, but sheās beautiful. Well done, Stevie.āĀ
He murmurs a Thank you, Mrs. Buckley and gets the usual Itās Melissa, Steve.
It takes another ten minutes to get Leah in the car after her quick trip. He heads straight for Lucasā and finds him freaking out about the bouquet he got Max āErica told him to put salt in the water to keep them fresh. Steve drives him to the florists ten minutes before they close and they end up with two smaller bunches combined into a vibrant hodgepodge.
Steve buys a handful of daisies for Leah, tucking one behind her ear.Ā
Max likes her flowers, but sheās far more interested in the baby. Lucas stands behind her rubbing his mouth.Ā
āShe does look like you,ā Max says thoughtfully.Ā
āRight? She has my eyes.ā
āYeah.ā Max leans into the car. āHi, Steveās baby,ā she says quietly.Ā
āThis is your Aunt Max,ā Steve says.Ā
Leah, who has taken all these new aunts and uncles in her stride (or is too young to get what the hell is going on), offers Max a huge smile with her tiny baby teeth. āHi Amā Max,ā she says.Ā
Max grins despite herself. āHi. Are you having a good day?āĀ
āYessss.ā
āYeah?ā She glares at Steve momentarily before standing in front of him, like sheās annoyed heās seen her being normal, like he doesnāt catch her in a good mood all the time. āDonāt worry, you donāt have to lie. Did you have dinner?āĀ
āMax, I am perfectly capable of looking after her.ā
āIām just checking!ā She shakes Leahās hand nicely. āThis party had enough boys,ā she says.Ā
Steve ruffles Maxās hair, unbound and bouncing behind her. Heās lucky he makes it to the car with his hand.Ā
Steve sighs when theyāre on the road to your place. āOkie dokie,ā he says, clenching the steering wheel to listen to the leather creak, āletās go see your mom. Itās onlyāā He checks his watch. Blinks big and wide. Itās 6:37PM already, and itās a five minute drive to your side of Hawkins. āOh, my god. Youāre mom is gonna kill me dead.āĀ
āKill?ā
āKiss!ā he says, cringing. āYep, sheās gonna kiss me! No other words.āĀ
āYāokay.ā
āWho taught you to say that so cutely?ā he asks, fully stressed now, the tightness in his voice surprising a giggle out of Leah. āStop laughing!ā
She giggles worse.Ā
He canāt be more anxious as he pulls up to the house. He climbs out of the car, grabs Leah from her car seat, and in his rush to get her home before you murder him, slams his head so hard into the roof of the car he sees stars.Ā
āOh, fuck,ā he says, holding Leah to his chest as his vision fades out.Ā
Your laugh sounds out from behind him. āEvery parent has to do it, Steve, Iām sorry to say,ā you call, jogging down the path to the car. āI was wondering where you guys went. Itās⦠Steve?āĀ
He blinks hard as he stands up, his arms around Leah shaky as his head pounds and pounds and pounds. āSorry,ā he says.Ā
āSteve, whatās wrong?ā You rest your arm behind his shoulders to hold him. āHey, are you okay? Do you need to sit down?ā
He urges you to take Leah.Ā
The pain is radiating from the centre of his skull outward, into each eye and down the nape of his neck. Itās such a sudden sharpness he loses his breath, spotty vision fading in and out as he curls into himself.Ā
āLee, can you go inside, baby?ā he hears you ask. There are a few steps, your dark shadows on the ground drifting further away before one returns, all alone. āSteve, what happened? How hard did you hit your head?ā you ask softly.Ā
āItāsā I got thatāā Every word pulls at the nausea brewing in his stomach. āIām gonnaāā
Steve gags. He aims for the grass. Everything goes white.Ā
ā
Steve does a valiant job of keeping himself upright long enough for you to sit him down inside, but after that, heās useless.Ā
āOkay, itās okay,ā youāre saying, a ringing in your ears you canāt cope with, āitās alright, Steve, youāre okay. Come forward, honey, let me seeāā
You arenāt sure heās conscious, but he slumps forward regardless to expose the back of his head. You feel through his hair and pull your hand out quick to check for blood on your fingertips, but they come away clean.Ā
āDaddy?ā Leah asks, wandering into the living room with her little smile and a daisy drooping behind her ear.Ā
āHow was meemaw, bub?ā you ask.Ā
āSleeping.ā
āWhy donāt you go snuggle with her for a minute? Iāll bring you a buppy?ā
Leah hugs your leg from behind. āBuppy?ā
āYeah, do you want one?ā
Leah shoots for the bedroom. You take her absence as an opportunity to pull Steveās head up, meeting his droopy gaze. āSteve, baby,ā you say, so softly itād be a wonder if he could hear you, āare you okay?āĀ
He groans. āJust a migraine.ā
āAre you sure?ā
āFeels like one.ā
āYou get them a lot?ā
āMore since you left.ā
You swallow roughly. āIām gonna call an ambulance.ā
āNo.ā At that, he sits up, holds his own head up to plead, āYou donāt have to. Iām fine, this just happens sometimes. After I hit my head at the mall, I get these killer migraines.ā
āYou hit your head, though. I think you have a concussion.ā
āNot my first one.ā
You hold his cheek in your hand. Your thumb brushes over his beauty marks. āNo?ā you ask.Ā
āHad three.ā
āYou never told me.ā
āI know. Didnāt want you to think I wasā some loser? I donāt know. I donāt know, I donāt know why it was hard to be honest with you, guess I thoughtā itās not like itās ever done any good before. I always say the wrong thing.ā
You get on your knees in front of him. To cope with the strain of looking up at him, but more to see him face to face. āSteve, you nearly yacked in my yard. I think weāre past appearances.ā
Steve covers his mouth with a big hand.Ā
You tuck as much of his hair behind his ears as you can. āCan you look at me? I want to check your pupils.āĀ
He opens his eyes properly, pouring his gaze into yours without hesitation. You check the size of each pupil and find them normal, though the longer he looks, the bigger they become. āI think thereās something wrong, Steve. Your eyes are blown.āĀ
āItās fine. Itās not ācos I hit my head. Itās a headache.āĀ
āYou almost knocked yourself out. Youāre throwing up. What if I donāt call the ambulance and Leahās dad dies on my couch?ā
āI donāt need an ambulance. I barely puked, it was all spit.ā
āSteve.āĀ
āIām serious. I didnāt even go for the first two concussions, and the third one, they said this could happen. Turns out that taking a couple of bad knocks to the head makes you fragile, Iām fine.ā He cups your cheek. āJesus, donāt feel sorry for meāāĀ
āI do feel sorry. Iām so sorry.āĀ
Seconds of stringy silence follow. He squints at you through the pain. āItās okay,ā he says, his own thumb rubbing at your veins. āIām sorry, too.āĀ
You pull his hand off your face. Not without care.Ā
āā¦Can I please call an ambulance?ā you ask, uneasy.
āI donāt need one.āĀ
āHow do you know?ā you whisper.Ā
He turns his hand in your grip to hold yours. His eyes are brown and teary with pain, but theyāre so familiar. āI just do. Can you trust me, please?ā
You try to stand. Steve squeezes your hand in his and makes you sit on the couch beside him as his eyes shutter closed and his head tips back, the column of his throat there and pale and working as he swallows his pain. You stare at the length of it with your hand too hot in his grip, wondering when itās acceptable to pull your hand away, and if youād even want to when the time came.Ā
You told me you didnāt want this, you think, your two joined hands rising and falling where heās pulled them to his chest. You swear you can see his heart in his chest. The gentle bump-bump of it against skin. A miserable wife.Ā
āCan I get you anything?āĀ
He croaks a hum. āMm, no.ā
āAre you sure? I have aspirin.ā
His fingers flex. āItāll go away.ā
āWhen?ā
āIt depends. It can take a few hours, sometimes, but I donāt get the worst of the pain for long.ā His voice is hoarse with its quiet.Ā
āThe other times?ā
āThey can last for days.ā
Youād seen the physical change in Steve. He went weak and sweaty in seconds. His nausea was obviously extreme. You can feel the tremor in his hand as he talks like every word spurs pain.
āIt wonāt, though,ā he says. āDonāt worry. I need five minutes and I can make dinner.ā
āUh, no you canāt. You can sit right here until you feel better, thanks.ā
He sinks impossibly further into your momās old couch. āOkay. Sorry.ā
āItās okay.ā You lower your tone. āI donāt mind. Iām sorry if you thought I would.ā
āI didnāt mean toāā
āTo what? Give yourself a concussion on the roof of the car? I gathered that.ā
āDidnāt mean for it to become your problem,ā he says.Ā
āYouāre not a problem, Steve. I promise.āĀ
You fight for better judgement and lose, letting yourself caress a piece of hair away from his pale neck.Ā
āI think I really screwed up,ā he says. āThink I made out all the wrong things. You didnāt think you could tell me about the babyāā
āWe donāt have to do this againāā
āYeah, we do. We do. Because I made you think I wouldnāt want you. I lied to protect my ego and I couldāve had everything I wanted,ā āhis brow pulls tight and glared, his jaw rigidā āand I hurt you.āĀ
āI hurt myself. You didnāt make me run away, Steve. I did it all alone. Iām good at that.āĀ
āI donāt want you to be alone.ā
āI donāt want you to live a life that you hate.āĀ
āI donāt. I wonāt. How could I ever hate anything about her?ā
You have to give him that. But. āI didnāt tell you for a bunch of reasons, Steve,ā you confess, hardly wanting to let it out. āI was scared of everything, you and your parents, making you into the reluctant husband, orā or at the least the reluctant father. I didnāt want to deal with it. And I didnāt wanna be that stupid girl who got knocked up by the prom king. I ran away and nobody had to know.āĀ
āIt wouldnāt have been like that.ā
āI realise that now.āĀ
His head lolls to see you. He pulls his lashes apart enough to peek through them, that dark hedging a line youād like to count. You tip your head toward his and face him across the couch cushions, hands joined and hot as a hearth.Ā
āIt was never messing around, to me,ā he says quietly. Sweat wets the hair at his temples.Ā
āYou donāt have toāā
āI got my heart stomped on pretty hard over and over and I stopped trying. I put all my cards on the table every time. But with you, I couldnāt do it again. I thought I couldnāt, so I acted less into you than I was.ā
You remember all his kisses and tight armed hugs, his affectionate nudges, his nose lined to your temple as he bore down. It hadnāt felt like less. But youād never thought it was more, either.Ā
āI pretended we were this summer fling, told you I didnāt want kids, that I wanted to live in the city and get a full time job at a firm with a company car, like that stuff mattered.ā He frowns at you deeply. āIām sorry. I wish I could change it.āĀ
His throat bobs.Ā
āSāit still hurting?ā you murmur.Ā
āSo much,ā he murmurs too, holding your hand against his heart. āI canāt get it to stop.āĀ
āI canāt do this with you.āĀ
He shakes his head minutely. āMānot asking you for anything you canāt give me. Iām just sorry.āĀ
You want him to lean in and align his mouth to yours. You imagine it vividly, the press and taste of him, the scratch of the stubble on his upper lip and his hand slipping behind your neck, squeezing your nape gently, his thumb at the hinge of your jaw trying to open your mouth. You want him so badly itās a palpable ache in your teeth, like heās already kissed you harsh and quick, that clack of a collision and the subsequent metallic on your tongue.Ā
But you arenāt lying. You canāt do this.Ā Ā
A thudding noise echoes from your momās room, compelling you up and away from his warm touch. Your hand sings with pins and needles as it falls out of his.Ā
āLee?ā you call. āSorry. I have to go make sure sheās okay.āĀ
He frowns again as he pinches the bridge of his nose. āThatās fine. Iāll be here.ā
ā
The bedroom throw blankets havenāt changed since you were here last. Your mom didnāt waste much time turning it into a guest room, but the sheets and blankets are the same, soft with wear in your hands as you lay them out. Leah waits for you to finish before climbing into bed, her bottle teat bitten between her teeth. It slips out of her hand with a rush of air as she slips into the pillows. You pick it up and offer it to her again, your shoulders aflame with the weight of an uncommon gaze.Ā
āWhat side do you sleep on?ā
Steve, at half-mast but less obviously pained, takes his time answering.Ā
āLeft.āĀ
āLeft sideās all yours.ā
He shuffles forward in a polo and a pair of his old sweatpants. You, in a horrible stroke of great luck, had them in the bottom of the chest of drawers.Ā
āMake room for me?ā he asks Leah.Ā
She grins around her bottle.Ā
Youāre pretty sure that if Steve canāt open his eyes for more than ten seconds at a time, he canāt drive, and you donāt want him to fall asleep at home and never wake up. Hence your impromptu sleepover. The bed is a queen and you have a shared child as a buffer, but youāre already annoyed with yourself. Your arms keep remembering what it felt like to stretch out over him whenever he ended up on his front. It is not helpful.Ā
You put the big light out and the nightlight on, a ladybug on a mushroom that glows a warm orange on Steveās side of the room. In your own sweatpants and a vest, you climb into the right side of the bed and nearly fall straight back out at the lack of space.Ā
Steve curls an arm around Leah tentatively, encouraging her into his side to make room for you.Ā
āYou okay?ā he asks Leah quietly.Ā
āYou okay, daddy?ā she asks.Ā
āIām fine, beautiful. Iām good.ā
āSleep?ā she asks.
āWith you, if thatās cool?ā
āCool,ā she says decidedly.Ā
When you lie down, Leah immediately rolls out of Steveās grip and makes herself comfortable in the curves of you, her nose digging hard in your arm, the bottle warm on your chest.Ā
āIāll move her when she falls asleep,ā you whisper, nodding to the foldout cot next to the bed with its padded interior.Ā
Sleeping in the same bed as Steve Harrington is a long gone artefact of the past. Itās odd to be face to face with him, to smell him so close, the toothpaste on his breath and the salty, earthy sting of sweat mixed with allspice. You donāt strictly mind it, but you didnāt think youād ever be this close again. It hurries the heart. You miss him like a slap.Ā
Refusing to think on it is the best way forward.Ā
āYou sure youāre okay?ā you ask him under your breath.Ā
Leah suckles at her bottle, breaking the quiet, though itās a monotone sort of sound. Steve doesnāt answer. You glance at him and find him dozing already, not a blanket over him nor a sheet untucked.Ā
āSteve.āĀ
He blinks to attention. āHuh?ā
āPull the blanket up over yourself.āĀ
He must like your tone. Youād gone soft by accident, too used to lulling Leah to sleep via sweetness and dulcet murmuring. He kicks it down and then pulls it up to his ribs, a tight white parcel with the pink throw laid over his feet.Ā
āItāll be cold tonight. Does that make the migraines worse?ā you ask.Ā
āNo. Iāll be okay.ā
You let him fall asleep. Leah snuggles under your chin. This isnāt the daydream. You arenāt being cuddled and coddled by warm kisses along the side of your face, his big arm around you, your baby between you. Steve keeps a good distance and heās exhausted.Ā
Leah takes a lot longer to fall, but when she does itās for keeps. You give her ten minutes tucked up on your chest but decide to move her when you feel your own eyes drifting shut. A rush of unnecessary shushing and a soft kiss later, you creep toward the bed and lay down on your side. Steve sleeps as your mirror, one cheek and eye hidden by the pillow, the sheets pulled haphazard over his hip. You yank them from under you and pull them up to cover him to the shoulder, tempted to tuck his hair behind his ear again. Itās long enough.Ā
āCan feel you staring,ā he whispers.Ā
Your heart leaps in shock, though thankfully you donāt jump. āHm?ā
āStaring at me.ā
āTrying to gauge whether you died in your sleep.āĀ
āStill ālive.ā
You do reach for him, then, stricken by how badly you want to take care of him. āI can see that.āĀ
He peeks down at your hand on his cheek and grins dopily. āMissed you,ā he says.Ā
āMissed you, too.āĀ
You wouldnāt tell him if it werenāt dark, if he werenāt in pain.Ā
āYou did?ā he asks.Ā
āI always miss you,ā you say. You pull your hand away like itās him thatās said the wrong thing, annoyed at your own boldness, moving onto your back to stare at the ceiling.Ā
He feels at your wrist, up your arm. Steve slides his palm over your stomach and holds it there. When youāre starting to think he mightāve fallen asleep again, your breath aching in your throat to be expelled, he presses down carefully and sighs. āI wish I got to see it. Donāt know why you were alone.ā
āI wasn't.āĀ
āWouldāve looked after you, though.āĀ
āSteveā¦ā
āI wouldāve.ā
āI know.ā You know now. You couldāve stayed here and had him look after you, but itās not what you wanted. āI wanted⦠more, than that.ā
He stares at you across the pillows. Your breath catches as he brings his hand up to your cheek and encourages your head toward him, as he lifts himself up off the pillows to bear down over you.
āDo you still want that?ā he asks.Ā
You laugh, weak and weary. āNot when youāre concussed.ā
He laughs in your face. Itās quiet to leave Leah sleeping, and to stop from hurting himself again, but itās a genuine laugh of joy leaning over you. His hair falls in his face and heās beautiful. All freckled and gold in the dim amber light sunning in from behind him.Ā
āI am not concussed,ā he says, leaning down.Ā
You donāt kiss. Wonāt lift your lips to his where he waits, though waiting might not be the right word. Itās like heās alright with anything youāre about to do, or not do, sharing your breath.Ā
āI donāt believe you,ā you tease lightly.Ā
Heās moved so much to be over you. It is unquestionably the position of a man whoās going to kiss you.Ā
You press your forehead to his chin.Ā
āWe should sleep,ā you say, because you shouldnāt kiss.Ā
Portland feels very, very far away as he trails his fingers down the front of you and takes a handful of your hip.Ā
āIām not concussed,ā he says, though itās not asking for anything; Steveās already pulling away. He sits up and slightly away from you, rubbing a wave into your abdomen lovingly, like you never went to Portland at all. Like itās the sleepover after a night spent kissing slow and watching shit TV. āGet some sleep, angel,ā he adds, so quietly youād doubt he spoke if you hadnāt watched his mouth shape the words.Ā
ā
In the morning, you wake to find Leah chest to chest with Steve, his hair like water on your pillows.Ā
āAnā my hand anā my nose as my mouth,ā she says factually.Ā
āAnd your ears,ā he says back to her quietly, stroking a path from her shoulders to her lower back and up again. āYour eyebrows, and your hair, and your neck.ā
āYeah.ā
āYour tummy, and your legs, and your little toes.ā
āAmā my toes,ā she says.Ā
āEven your toes are pretty,ā Steve agrees. āāCos duh. Leahās the prettiest girl I ever met, right?ā His voice drops low enough to rattle hoarsely. āJust as pretty as mommy. I didnāt know that was possible.ā
You hide your face in the pillows, pretending to sleep.Ā
This is not going to go how youād first thought.Ā
ā
thank you for reading!! so excited I love steve and I know he could be bitchier and angrier here but Iāve decided to make him whipped instead cos heās cute when heās in love and if itās not implied enough heās still whipped for the reader lol. hope you enjoyed it thank you very much for reading and taking the time
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If the second I try to let you into my life and tell you what is happening you immediately start criticizing me and telling me that everything I have ever done is a mistake do not start to complain that I donāt tell you anything
Okay I so very much want criminals thinking Red Hood is not killing then because Batman offered him cookies. And what if they think Red Hood started working with the bats because of cookies in the first place?
I now want this
as some criminal trying to explain how red hood ended up working with the bats
And then I want my beloved thug named Jeff to, as Dan is putting together the PowerPoint, go recruiting and find a baker to bring into the fold because they need all the enticements they can get their hands on if theyāre going to get their boss back
Or just one of Red Hoodās goons to straight up go to culinary school or whatever because apparently boss likes cookies enough to work with Batman so surely if they can do betterā¦
Our main thug Jeff luring the Red Hood into their old headquarters just for Hood to walk into the main meeting area that had a table absolutely loaded with different baked goods.
Jeff: listen bossāI can still call you boss right?ā anyways boss, so a bunch of us got together and put our man Billā(say hi to Hood Bill!)āthrough patisserie school. Itās always been a dream of his. But anyways, this way you donāt have to go to the bat for cookies. Bill here learned to make 34 different types! Along with a boatload of other stuff. That way you can come back. Batman has nothing to hold over you now.
Jason, touched (heās not crying youāre crying): yeah man
Later:
Jason: Sorry B, they made too good of an argument.
As Jason turns and walks out you can see Damian clinging to the back of his jacket like a baby koala (he heard about the baked offerings).
I was smiling till the end, and the image of gremlin Damian absolutely latched on and clutching to the back of Jasonās jacket just fricking SENT ME!š
You know this sort of thing is definitely what would make people go from āI canāt believe Batman has sidekicks those poor kidsā to āI canāt believe Batman is single-handedly keeping these feral children on the side of the heroesā
Bruce sad and rejected dejected goes home to the cave. Babs, goddess that she is, let Alfred know that Bruce was having a shit night so there Agent A is with a container full of cookies. Like the best kinds too, ginger snaps, white chocolate macadamia, maple almond oatmeal bars, the works. And Bruce eats one and his little himbo, under fed and under rested brain says āwait, Alfred makes cookies! Why was I giving the kids store bought ones?ā
So while holding the container he rushes back into the night to remind his kids that HE can grant them access to Alfred grade cookies! He gets to try Jeffās cookies and though not as good he can see why Jason would like them. āHey, Jeffrey, how would you like to further your confectionery education?ā
IM CRTYING my face was literally buzzing from lack of oxygen i was laughing so much ofmg
okay how has no one put this yet: the villains of gotham start carrying around cookies. like, damian pulls out his sword and the thug just drops to his knees and holds out a cookie on both hands, his head bowed.
theres also bound to be a villain that would try to poison him, but damian can read body language so he just
Robin, crossing his arms: Take a bite of it
Thug, sweating: W-What?
Robin: Take. A. Bite.
and like. this dude KNOWS hes going to the hospital either way so hes gotta choose whether he wants to have his stomach pumped or get a cast for his broken arms.
rian johnson has managed to evade all common ethical problems in his screenwriting and i want everyone to know that the knives out mysteries are a perfect representation of how to write about a certain community respectfully AND simultaneously not make a big deal of how good you are at being a diverse writer.
in knives out and glass onion, both main characters are women who have been wronged by the other main character(s)āin marta's case, she experiences xenophobia from the thrombey's constantly; in andi's, she came up with a billion dollar idea which was stolen by a white man. when she took him to court for it, her entire friend group sided with this man; this directly affects helen after andi's death.
andi and marta's stories specifically represent real experiences for women who are minorities in america, but the stories are told without being too ham-fisted or obvious about it. these aren't stories about racism, xenophobia, and misogyny, they're stories involving racism, xenophobia, and misogyny, which i feel is something you don't often see. they're not triyng to prove a point by telling these stories, they're just stories being toldāit's a difference that's hard to describe, but you know it when you see it. it's got less of a looking-into-the-camera-for-emphasis vibe.
alongside this, benoit was never a white/male savior to neither helen nor marta (respectively). he helped helen when she came to him about andi and he stood behind marta when he saw the tox report, but he never took over the case and they were never treated like damsels in distress. in the end, helen and marta took control of their own revenge and benoit nudged everyone else to the side while they did it. benoit is not the hero of these stories, helen and marta are.
this is good fucking writing!!!! i need film bros to be positively insufferable about rian johnson NEOW
edit 12/26/22: i've been told that ana de armas is a white latina. genuinely i did not know, she always looked brown to me and i haven't seen her in anything other than knives out, that's truly my bad. i've updated the post now to change the language about marta, other than that everything remains!
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