Dustin, Lucas, El, and Mike riding on a bike to save their friend from the upside down those stranger things you know we're living those stranger things
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If you are interested in my Heaven Knows I'm Miserable Now story please read!
Since season 5 vol 1 is out and Will has powers, I don't feel right adding another character having powers. And I'm sure that I can probably make it work if that is what you guys want. However I have another storyline idea. In one of the stranger things comics I forgot the name of it will distract the demogorgon from getting Nancy while she's escaping. So I'm thinking that y/n is with Will when he distracts the demogorgon and they both run towards the tree after Nancy and you get through but Will doesn't.
So I'm leaving this up to you because I'm okay writing this either way, I have ideas for both. Either y/n gets out through the tree with Nancy and helps her and Jonathan with their trapping the demogorgon plot. Or y/n stays in the upside down with will till the end. Which I think would mean that you would also get powers. So I want you guys as the readers to tell me what you think/would rather read.
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summary: Steve tries his hardest to make a move, but every time he gets close to saying the words, your younger brother Dustin interrupts him. Every. Single. Time.
word count: 9.3k+
pairing: steve harrington x henderson!fem!reader
notes: every time a new season of stranger things comes out, my obsession and love for steve harrington comes back. so, this is my first time writing for him! i've read pretty much every steve x shy!reader fic out there and since i have this account now i thought i'd try my hand at writing for him
warnings/tags: no use of y/n, reader is dustin's older sister, shy!reader, takes place at some point in between seasons (aka steve works at family video), dustin is accidentally cockblocking steve and his sister, yearning!steve, dustin is pure chaos, fluff, robin is done with steve's shit and excuses, steve is a bit awkward when it comes to romance
The Henderson house was always a little too full of noise, but it wasnât the kind that grated on you. It was the kind youâd grown up with. Dustinâs voice carried down the hallway while you sat in the living room sorting through a pile of tapes Steve had let the two of you borrow. Someone had returned Back to the Future without rewinding it, and Steve would absolutely yell about âproper tape etiquetteâ the next time he saw Dustin. You smiled to yourself as you sifted through the stack.
Soft knocking sounded at the front door. It wasnât franticânot monster-knockingâjust two taps and a beat. The kind Steve used when he didnât want to startle anyone. You pushed up from the floor, dusted your hands on your jeans, and opened the door to find him leaned against the frame in that casual way of his that was way too intentional to be casual.
He gave you that lopsided grin, the one that always sat just shy of confident when it was directed at you. âHey. Dropping these off before Henderson scratches them. I swear he puts the tapes in the VCR with the same enthusiasm he has for summoning demodogs.â He lifted a paper bag full of rentals and offered it out.
You stepped aside to let him in, taking the bag but not before his fingers brushed yours. The contact sent a flick of warmth up your arm, not the dramatic kind that makes people gasp in books, but the kind that catches quietly under your ribs. You werenât sure if he noticed, but his hand pulled away a little quicker than necessary.
Dustin shouted something from the back room, loud enough to rattle the vents. Steve huffed a laugh and nudged the door closed behind him as he walked into the living room. He kicked his shoes off like heâd done it a thousand times, because he had. This place had become familiar to him. Youâd become familiar to him. And somehow that knowledge warmed you more than the afternoon sun slanting across the carpet.
He flopped onto the couch, elbows over the back, letting his head fall back dramatically. âI swear, every time I pick something up from Family Video, Kline shows up to yell about our shelving. Every time. Like I chose the shelving. Like I personally installed the shelving.â He peeked at you through the fall of his hair, the grin returning. âAnyway. I figured you might need something new to watch, unless Dustin has you trapped in one of his weird sci-fi marathons.â
You settled on the other end of the couch, cross-legged, the tapes set between you. âItâs not that weird,â you said softly, though the smile gave you away. âAnd you survived the marathons, too.â
âBarely.â He let out a dramatic sigh, then let the act falter as he turned to face you fully. His knee brushed yours in a way that felt almost accidental but never quite was when it came from him. He always hovered near youânot close enough to overwhelm, but close enough that you felt seen. Youâd gotten used to it. Maybe too used to it.
There was something different in his face today, something you couldnât place. Not nerves exactly, but something halfway between steady and uncertain. His gaze lingered on you longer than normal before shifting to the tapes in your lap. âYou find anything good?â
Your fingers drifted over the covers without thinking. âTrying to. He mixed everything up again. Iâm pretty sure one of these cases has two different movies shoved in it.â
âClassic Henderson,â Steve murmured, but he didnât seem focused on the tapes anymore. His eyes had softened in a way that made your pulse stumble. He looked like he was about to say somethingâsomething real, something heavy enough that he hesitated. âHey, I was actually gonnaââ
Dustin barreled into the hallway, a crash of sound and limbs. âSteve! Youâre here! Good, because I figured out what was wrong with the antenna, and you have to see it, itâs so sickââ
Steve deflated in an instant, head dropping back against the couch. The moment snapped like it had never been there at all. Dustin launched himself into the room, completely oblivious, waving a broken piece of metal dangerously close to Steveâs face.
Steve sat up with a tight smile, rubbing his hands over his jeans like heâd been caught doing something he shouldnât. You felt the shift, that soft invisible thread between you pulled taut before disappearing entirely. He shot you a glanceâquick, almost apologeticâbefore catching whatever Dustin was waving at him. âOkay, okay, dude, relax before you impale me. Whatâd you do now?â
Dustin launched into an enthusiastic explanation, words tumbling over each other. Steve tried to look interested. Mostly, he looked like a man whoâd been shoved out of a doorway heâd just worked up the courage to walk through.
You sat quietly beside him, listening to your brother ramble, but your attention kept drifting back to Steve. It was in the set of his shoulders, the unfinished words still lingering behind his eyes. Heâd been trying to tell you something. And whatever it was, he wasnât done trying.
You werenât sure what would happen when he finally managed to get you alone long enough to say it. But for the first time in a long time, the thought didnât scare you. It sent that same gentle warmth rising in your chestâthe kind you didnât quite know how to name yet, but couldnât ignore anymore.
---
The ride home from the Wheelersâ had always been a cramped, loud, chaotic experience, mostly because Dustin treated the back seat like a moving laboratory. Tonight was no differentâheâd tossed a backpack stuffed with papers, wires, and half-built gadgets across the seat before climbing in, muttering about how he needed to reorganize everything âfor efficiency.â Steve had glanced at you in the driveway with a weary, amused smile that told you he already regretted offering the ride, but heâd unlocked the car anyway. He always did.
You slid into the passenger seat and buckled in while Dustin slammed the back door shut with enough force to make Steve wince. Once everyone was settled, Steve started the car, the headlights cutting through the warm, late-evening haze that hovered over the quiet street. The windows were cracked just enough to let in the summer air, and you rested your hands in your lap, feeling that comfortable, familiar tension settle between you and Steveâthe kind that was never unpleasant, only warm and awkward in a way youâd grown used to.
He glanced over as he pulled away from the curb. âSo. Did you guys have fun or did you suffer through another round of Wheeler Monopoly hell?â
The question was casual, but the look he slid you was not. It lingered, soft at the corners, a little nervous in the middle. You felt the weight of it press lightly beneath your ribs. âIt wasnât that bad,â you said quietly. âDustin tried to cheat four times.â
âHey!â Dustin snapped from the back seat. âThree times. The fourth doesnât count because the rulebook didnât specifyââ
âIt absolutely specified, dude,â Steve said, shaking his head. âItâs a published game. There are rules. You canât just invent your own stock market mid-round.â
âI was innovating,â Dustin insisted, already rummaging for something in his bag.
Steve exhaled through a laugh and shot another glance your way. He always did thatâthrew his jokes toward the air, but aimed his eyes at you, as if checking whether you were smiling. And you were, even if you looked down to hide it.
The road curved toward your neighborhood, streetlamps drifting past in golden streaks. From the corner of your eye, you noticed Steve tap his fingers nervously on the wheel, like he was working himself up to something. His shoulders were tight, his jaw flexing softly the way it did when he was trying to gather courage without drawing attention.
After a moment of silence, he tried again. âListen, Iââ He cleared his throat. âThereâs something Iâve been meaning to tell you. Actually, not tell you, more like⊠ask you? Or maybeââ
Dustin leaned forward between the seats so suddenly that both you and Steve flinched. âOkay, so imagine this,â he said, breathless with excitement, waving a notebook near Steveâs face. âIf I rewire the antenna and get the gain up by just, like, one decibelââ
âDude, hold on,â Steve said, swatting the notebook away gently. He tried to keep his voice even, but you could hear the frustration simmering underneath. âIâm talking.â
âYou werenât saying anything important yet.â
Steve inhaled slowly through his nose, gripping the wheel like it might keep him grounded. You bit the inside of your cheek to stop from laughing, because you could see the exact moment he abandoned his almost-confession and resigned himself to Dustinâs rambling.
âJust⊠go back to whatever you were doing back there,â Steve muttered.
âYou mean saving science? Already on it.â Dustin retreated to the back seat and immediately started scribbling again.
Steve let out a long, slow breath, the kind he usually saved for demobat stories or Customer Service Nightmares at Family Video. He didnât look at you yet. You didnât look at him either. The interrupted moment hung between you, fragile and obvious.
When he finally risked a side glance, the faintest smile tugged at his mouthâa mix of embarrassment and something softer. âAnyway,â he said quietly, âI was just gonna ask if you, uh⊠had a good time tonight.â
Heâd changed his wording at the last second. You heard it. You wondered if he knew you heard it. âI did,â you murmured, letting your gaze settle on him. âIt was nice.â
That small smile of his grew a little, warming the dim car. He was about to say something elseâyou saw the breath he pulled in, the shift of his shouldersâbut Dustin cut him off again. âSteve, turn left! You missed the shortcut!â
âItâs literally two minutes longer,â Steve snapped. âTwo minutes! Weâre talking blocks, man, not a cross-country trip.â You stifled another laugh. Steve shot you an exhausted, pleading look before turning onto the familiar street. When he parked outside your house, he put the car in park but didnât immediately shut off the engine. His fingers tapped the wheel again, a restless rhythm. âHey,â he tried once more, turning slightly in his seat. âI wanted toââ
âSteve, can you help me carry my stuff!?â Dustin bellowed as he launched himself out of the back seat, already grabbing for the door to your house. âI need both hands and probably yours too!â
Steve sagged back against his seat like someone had deflated him. He dragged a hand down his face, muttering something that sounded like a plea for mercy.
You reached for the door handle, hesitating for just a heartbeat. âYou can tell me whatever it was later,â you said, voice soft enough that only he would hear.
His eyes found yours again. Whatever heâd been trying to say was still there, simmering just under the surface. A slow smile curved onto his lips, small but genuine. âYeah,â he murmured. âLater.â
You stepped out of the car, the warm summer air brushing your face. Dustin yelled your name from the porch. Steve groaned, climbed out of the driverâs side, and shot you one last look before going to help your brother.
It wasnât the confession heâd wanted to give you. But it was comingâyou could feel it. And judging by the way he watched you walk toward the house, he wasnât giving up yet.
---
Family Video was quiet in that late-afternoon way that made the fluorescent lights buzz louder than any customer ever could. The aisles were empty, the return bin was half-full, and Steve was leaning over the counter like a man whose soul had been wrestled out of his body. He kept folding and unfolding the same tape return slip, eyes unfocused, jaw set in that defeated angle that Robin recognized instantly. She flicked a pen cap at his shoulder. âOkay, whatâs with the tragic slouch? Did someone rent all the good horror movies again, or are you just being dramatic for attention?â
Steve didnât look up. He just made a noise that couldâve meant many things: frustration, embarrassment, existential collapse. Robin sighed, circled around the counter, and planted herself across from him with the posture of someone preparing for an interrogation. âTalk,â she demanded, snapping her fingers in front of his face.
He swatted her hand away. âStop. Iâm not a dog.â
âCouldâve fooled me,â she muttered. âNow spill it. Your energy today is⊠weird. And not the usual âIâm pretty but tiredâ weird. This is âsomething happened and Iâm repressing it like a cowardâ weird.â
Steve groaned, then let his forehead drop onto the counter with an audible thunk. âI tried to talk to her again.â
Robin perked up instantly. âOh! Finally! Great! So whatâd you say? Did you ask her out? Did you actually form a full sentence? Did youââ
âI didnât get that far,â he mumbled into the countertop. âDustin wouldnât shut up.â
Robin blinked once. âLike⊠interrupting you?â
âLike climbing over the front seat of my car with a notebook to show me a sketch of an antenna while I was trying to confess my feelings.â Steve lifted his head, eyes hollow with dramatic suffering. âIt was like being attacked by a hyperactive raccoon.â
Robin snorted so hard she almost choked. âGod, thatâs beautiful. Horrible. Hilarious. But mostly horrible.â
âThank you for your support,â he said dryly.
âOh, Iâm supporting you,â she assured, tapping the counter rhythmically. âJust not your terrible strategy. You need to stop trying to talk to her when Dustin is within a three-mile radius. Heâs like a tiny tornado with opinions.â
Steve pushed his hair back with both hands. âI know, I know. I just thought maybe heâd⊠I donât know, fall asleep? Or get distracted? Or explode?â
âHeâs Dustin,â Robin reminded him, eyebrows raised. âHe gets more energized as the day goes on. By midnight heâs seconds away from achieving orbital lift.â
Steve sighed again and leaned back against the counter, arms crossed tight. âI just⊠Iâm not good at this stuff, okay? Sheâs not like those other girls I used to date. I donât want to rush it or freak her out.â
âThatâs sweet,â Robin said. âBut also incredibly stupid.â
He glared at her. âHow is that stupid?â
âBecause youâre overthinking it, dingus,â she said, flicking his forehead as punishment. âShe already likes you.â
Steve froze, blinking. âSheâshe does?â
âOh my god.â Robin pressed the heels of her palms into her eyes. âYouâre helpless. Youâre actually helpless.â
âThatâs not an answer!â he hissed.
Robin dropped her hands and stared him down, speaking slowly for maximum effect. âShe. Likes. You.â
Steve stared back, a flush creeping up the side of his neck. âYou donât know that.â
âI absolutely do.â She jabbed a finger into his chest. âYou get all flustered and stupid around her, and she gets all quiet and wide-eyed around you. Itâs like watching two baby deer try to merge onto a highway.â
Steve let out a despairing noise. âI canât believe you compared me to a deer.â
âOh, youâre both deer,â she insisted. âDeer in love. Pathetic. Adorable. Infuriatingly slow.â
He ran a hand over his face again, groaning. âI just⊠I want it to be the right moment. And every time it almost isââ
âDustin blows it,â Robin finished. âBecause that kid has zero awareness of anything except science and snacks.â
Steve laughed, but it was tired around the edges. âYeah. Pretty much.â
Robin planted her hands on her hips like she was about to deliver a lecture. âOkay. Hereâs whatâs going to happen. Youâre going to ask her out. Soon. Not âeventuallyâ or âwhen the universe aligns.â Soon. Before Dustin adopts you into his personal schedule for the week.â
âIâm working on it,â he insisted.
âNo, youâre not,â she said. âYouâre waiting for signs and moments and dramatic lighting. What you need to do is open your mouth and say, âHey, I like you. Want to go out?ââ
Steve looked deeply scandalized. âThatâsâno, thatâs too blunt. I canât just say it like that.â
âWell, you definitely canât say it while Henderson is crawling on the car seat like a feral goblin.â
âOkay, thatâs fair.â
Robin leaned her elbows against the counter, eyeing him closely. âBe honest. Are you scared because sheâs quiet?â
He hesitated before nodding once. âI donât want to make her uncomfortable. Sheâs been through⊠a lot. We all have, but she⊠you know.â
Robin softened. âYeah. I get it. But trust me, sheâs not scared of you. Sheâs scared of⊠saying the wrong thing. Or being too much. Or not enough. You two speak in the same dialect.â
Steveâs breath stalled at that, chest tightening with something warm and nervous. âSo⊠what do I do?â
âWhat Iâve been telling you from the start.â Robin shrugged, smirking. âAsk her out, dingus.â
The bell above the door chimed as a customer wandered in, and Robin gave Steve one last pointed look before heading into the aisle to help. Steve stayed behind the counter, resting both palms flat on its surface, grounding himself. He took a deep breath and whispered to no one, âOkay. Ask her out. I can do that. I can do that.â
But even as he said it, he already knew one thing for sure: if Dustin showed up again, this plan didnât stand a chance. And somehow, that made him smile anyway.
---
The Henderson garage always smelled faintly like dust, motor oil, and whatever science experiment Dustin had last abandoned on the workbench. That afternoon, the air was warm enough that the open door let in a slow spill of sunlight, brightening the cluttered space in strips. You stood beside one of the folding tables, sorting through the mess of screws and wires Dustin had dumped out âfor easier access,â which, in reality, only made everything harder to find.
Steve hovered nearby with a half-hearted attempt at organization. He picked up tools, put them down, nudged wires into a neater line, and occasionally wiped his palms on his jeans like he wasnât sure what to do with his hands. You noticed the way he kept drifting closer, every few seconds glancing at the house as if waiting for an opening that hadnât come yet.
Dustin had barreled inside moments earlier shouting something about a âcrucial componentâ and promising to return quickly. Experience had taught you that âquicklyâ usually meant at least fifteen minutes. The sudden silence left the garage feeling strangely private, a pocket of quiet neither of you were used to sharing without your brotherâs voice filling it.
Steve leaned a hip against the table, crossing his arms loosely. âYouâd think for someone so obsessed with organization, heâd, I donât know⊠actually organize things.â
A soft laugh slipped out of you before you could hide it. âHe says he has a system.â
âYeah, well, his system is âpile everything in the same place and pray.ââ
You didnât mean to meet his eyes, but when you did, the warmth there caught you off guard. He smiledânot the big, charming grin he saved for customers or jokes, but the smaller one he used when it was just you. Something quieter, something that made your stomach tug downward and your breath lift higher at the same time.
For a moment you thought he might look away. Instead he took a step closer, letting his fingers trail lightly over the table until they stopped near yours. He didnât touch you, but the space between you shrank until it was impossible not to feel the gravity of him. âHey,â he said softly, more serious now, âcan I ask you something?â
Your pulse jumped. He didnât try to hide the nerves this timeâhis voice was careful, his eyes steady but uncertain, like he was testing thin ice. You tucked a loose screw back into the tray just to have something to do, but you nodded. âYeah. What is it?â
Steve drew in a slow breath, shoulders rising, then dropping. He shifted so he was standing directly across from you now, close enough that you felt his warmth even through the small distance. âIâve been⊠trying to find the right moment to say this. Probably overthinking it. Definitely overthinking it,â he admitted, rubbing the back of his neck. âBut every time I try, something happens, and then I lose the nerve, andââ
He stopped, hands falling to his sides. His gaze flicked to your lips before returning to your eyes, almost apologetically, like the glance had slipped out by accident. âI really likeââ
He didnât get the rest out because Dustin slammed the back door open so hard it ricocheted off the wall with a loud crack. âFound it!â he shouted triumphantly.
Steve jolted back like someone had yanked him by the collar. You startled, the sound hitting you like a small explosion in the otherwise quiet garage.
Dustin sprinted inside with a fistful of random parts, not noticing the way Steve took two hasty steps backward or the way your breath had caught halfway up your throat. He launched straight into an explanation, words tumbling over each other at impossible speed.
âOkay, okay, okay, so remember last week when the signal strength dropped? I swear it wasnât my fault, but I triple-checked, and it turns out the grounding was off by like a millimeter, but I fixed it, and then I realized if we attach thisâthis right hereââ He shoved the piece of metal inches from Steveâs face. Steve blinked rapidly, stunned, trapped in the whirlwind of Dustinâs enthusiasm. ââthen the whole thing works even better! Isnât that awesome?â
âYeah,â Steve croaked, the word paper-thin. He cleared his throat and tried again. âYeah, buddy. Thatâsâuh. Great.â
Dustin looked between the two of you, oblivious to the tension heâd vaporized. âCome on, we have to test it. Steve, you hold the end with the clamp. And donât drop it this time.â
You watched as Dustin pulled Steve by the wrist toward the other table. Steve threw you a look over his shoulderâa silent, desperate I was so closeâbefore letting himself be dragged into whatever experiment Dustin was constructing.
You swallowed, grounding yourself against the table as the adrenaline slowly ebbed. You replayed the moment in your mind, the warmth in his voice, the way heâd leaned in like he was finally ready to say the thing heâd been dancing around for weeks.
You didnât need the rest to know what heâd meant. And even though the confession had shattered midair, it left a soft, glowing heat in your chest that didnât disappear.
Steve shot you another look while Dustin explained the next step, his expression full of apology and frustration and wanting. He wasnât done trying. And now, for the first time, you knew that for certain. Even if Dustin was determined to make it the longest confession in history.
---
The Wheelersâ basement was the kind of cramped, mismatched space that shouldâve felt chaotic, yet somehow always managed to settle into its own kind of rhythm. Blankets draped over the back of the couch, half-finished board games littered the coffee table, and a small mountain of snacks threatened to avalanche off the folding card table by the wall. The worn carpet muffled footsteps, and the single lamp cast the whole room in a warm amber glow that made everyone look a little softer, a little more like themselves.
Mike sat cross-legged near the TV, fiddling with the dials like he was performing surgery. Will had his sketchpad propped on his knee, quietly drawing as he waited. Lucas and Max were arguing over whose movie pick was superiorâwhich mostly meant Max was calling Lucas boring and Lucas insisting she had no taste. Eleven sat beside Max, combing her fingers through a bowl of M&Mâs in strict color order. Nancy leaned against the far wall, arms crossed as she offered periodic commentary, half amused and half exhausted by the groupâs indecision.
Robin stood behind the couch drumming her fingers along the backrest, eyes drifting toward you with the kind of knowing smirk that made you want to hide under a blanket. Sheâd been watching Steve all night like she was tracking wildlife behavior for a nature documentary.
And SteveâSteve had claimed the floor beside you the moment everyone settled. He hadnât even pretended to consider another spot. Heâd just dropped down next to you, close enough that your knees brushed whenever either of you shifted. Every now and then you felt the light press of his shoulder barely grazing yours, the warmth of him almost magnetic. He looked relaxed, but youâd known him long enough to recognize the tension coiled beneath the easy slouch. He wasnât just sitting near you; he was waiting.
The chaos around you built into its usual storm of voices, and you let yourself sink into the noise until it felt like background static. You were comfortable like thisâsurrounded by people you trusted, tucked into a corner where nothing demanded too much of you. Steve mustâve sensed the way your shoulders unknotted, because he leaned in slightly, voice pitched softer than the rest. âHey,â he murmured, letting the word drift just for you. âYou holding up with all these maniacs fighting about cinema like itâs life or death?â
You smiled, looking down at your hands for a moment. âIâve witnessed worse. Dustin tried to convince me Star Wars counts as a Thanksgiving movie.â
Steve snorted, head tipping just a little closer. âHe tried that on me too. Henderson logic is a dangerous thing.â
The way he said itâsoft and amused, with that small, private grinâmade your cheeks warm. You felt it before you could control it, and you ducked your head slightly, pretending to focus on Max and Lucas arguing in the middle of the room. Max pointed her movie case at Lucas like a weapon. âThis is a classic. You have no taste.â
Lucas folded his arms. âYou say that about everything you like.â
âThatâs because Iâm right.â
Robin leaned closer to Nancy and muttered, âIâm taking bets on when this turns into a wrestling match.â
Steve laughed under his breath, then looked back at you. The basement noise faded as his attention settled directly on you, the air shifting in that fluttery way it always did when he got close. His knee nudged yoursâgentle, deliberate. You looked up, and the moment your eyes met, something tender flickered across his face.
He angled toward you fully now, ignoring the group entirely. âHey,â he said again, quieter this time, âthereâs something Iâve been wanting toââ
âOh my god.â Dustinâs voice ricocheted down the stairs like a missile.
Steve closed his eyes, shoulders slumping in a despair that bordered on spiritual defeat. You startled just slightly as Dustin burst into the basement carrying two bags of popcorn and a bowl of something that was probably too sticky to be allowed near the carpet.
âI got snacks!â Dustin declared triumphantly. âMike, move over! Will, stop drawing sad trees! Everyone, I have news!â
Robin groaned. âHere we go.â
Nancy pinched the bridge of her nose. âDo we want to know?â
Dustin ignored everyone and marched directly toward you and Steve. âOkay, so, youâre all gonna think this is genius, because it is,â he announced, setting the popcorn in the middle of the floor like it was an offering to the gods. âI mixed extra sugar into the caramel corn so we can stay awake through Lucasâ boring movie pick.â
Lucas sputtered. âItâs not boring!â
Max kicked him lightly. âItâs very boring.â
Steve tried to inhale, tried to restart the thing heâd been about to say, but Dustin plopped down between the two of you before he could get a syllable out, wedging himself with a full-body flop. Steveâs head snapped toward the ceiling like he was pleading for divine help.
âDude,â Steve said weakly, âIâI was literally talkingââ
âGreat, you can finish later,â Dustin chirped while shoving popcorn into Steveâs hands. âRight now we need someone to test if the caramel-to-corn ratio is perfect.â
Robin snickered from behind the couch. âThatâs the face of a man in agony.â Steve shot her a death glare. Robin only winked.
You sat very still, aware of how drastically the moment had shifted. Steveâs knee no longer brushed yours. His shoulder was no longer angled toward you. His expression, however, still carried that raw, half-exposed something heâd tried so hard to reveal before the interruption.
He looked at you again, a brief, fragile glance over Dustinâs headâapology, longing, frustration, all tangled together. You smiled gently, a small reassurance even if the moment was lost. His chest eased, just a bit.
Dustin, oblivious, leaned back between you both. âOkay! So. Whoâs ready for a triple-feature?!â
Mike groaned loud enough to shake dust from the ceiling. Eleven offered a polite but confused nod. Will kept drawing. Nancy debated walking out. Lucas and Max started another argument. Robin leaned over the couch, whispering something at Steve that made him mutter a threat with no real bite.
And you sat there, tucked between your friends and your brother, with Steve only inches away behind an accidental Dustin-shaped barricade.
Another moment ruined.
Another truth postponed.
But Steve caught your eye again, a small promise resting quietly behind the frustration. He wasnât giving up. Not yet. Not at all.
And you found yourself hopingâmaybe for the first timeâthat Dustin might eventually take a snack break long enough for everything to finally fall into place.
---
A Saturday afternoon at your place was usually a safe bet for quiet, especially when Dustin wasnât home. Heâd taken off earlier with Lucas and Mike, something about a âhigh-stakes campaign planning session,â which meant you finally had a few hours where the house wasnât vibrating with teenage enthusiasm. Steve had stopped by under the guise of âchecking on that toolbox he left in the garage,â even though you both knew heâd left it on purpose the last time he was here.
You were sitting beside him on the couch, legs tucked beneath you, a gentle buzz of nerves threading through your chest. He was closer than usualânot subtle about it, either. His knee brushed yours whenever he shifted, and he kept glancing over with this determined little crease between his brows. You could tell heâd spent all morning psyching himself up to try again.
He cleared his throat and leaned toward you, elbows on his knees, hands clasped like he needed to keep them steady. âSo Iâve been thinking,â he started, voice softer than the TV hum filling the room. âThereâs something Iâve, uh⊠wanted to ask you. For a while.â
Your breath caught, your pulse fluttering. You met his eyes, and the look thereâhesitant, hopeful, warmâmade the room feel smaller. You felt him gather courage, felt something inside you answer it without needing words.
His knee bumped yours again, this time deliberate. âI justâ when itâs us, like this⊠I feelââ
The front door slammed open so hard the hinges squealed. âThere you are!â Maxâs voice echoed down the hallway.
Steveâs shoulders sagged with the kind of dramatic despair that wouldâve been funny if your heart hadnât been thumping so hard a moment before. You both sat up straighter as Max stormed in, Eleven close behind her, both flushed from the walk and carrying enough urgency to power the whole house.
âOkay,â Max announced breathlessly, hands on her hips, âwe need a ride.â
Eleven nodded with solemn intensity. âVery important.â
Steve blinked. âWhy⊠why do you need a ride?â
âBecause Robin said it was a good idea,â Max said, as if that answered everything.
You frowned. âWhere is Robin?â
A beat later, Robin burst in through the still-open door, out of breath and dramatically pointing at the girls like an indictment. âThey asked me first. But I donât drive. And I told them that. Repeatedly.â
Eleven stepped forward with wide, pleading eyes. âMall?â
Steve groaned into his hands. âRight now?â
Max crossed her arms, fully annoyed. âYes, right now. We need new tape for Elevenâs headphones, a book I have to return, and Robin wants pretzels. Also, Iâm bored.â
Robin raised a finger. âThe pretzels are a necessary part of this trip. Not optional.â
Steve exhaled, long and pained, rubbing his face like fate had personally wronged him. You watched him, and even though frustration drew tight lines around his mouth, you saw the faint flicker of something elseâdesperation. Not for escape, but for the moment heâd been trying so hard to build. Heâd almost done it this time. He had been right there, the words practically in the air between you when the cavalry burst in.
Max stepped closer. âCan you take us?â
You opened your mouth, but Steve sat up quickly, eyes wide. âWait, she doesnât have to. I canââ
âNope,â Max interrupted. âWe saw your car on the street. Thereâs a giant metal pipe sticking out the window and it looks like someone attacked your backseat with a screwdriver.â
Steve blanched. âThat was Dustinâs⊠whatever. I told him not toââ
Eleven nodded solemnly. âIt is broken.â
âItâs not broken,â Steve protested weakly, then looked at you with a kind of pleading horror. âPlease donât let them make you drive them. You donât have toââ
Robin clapped her hands together. âYouâre literally the only one here with a functioning car and a valid license.â
Max added, âalso the only one we trust with directions.â
Their combined staring was intense enough to melt steel. You sighed softly, looking at Steve with an apologetic tilt of your head. âItâs okay. I can take them.â
Steveâs mouth opened like he wanted to protest again, but something gentler ran through his expression. He softened, sitting back a little like he didnât want to push. âOnly if you want to,â he said quietly, voice low enough for just you.
âI donât mind,â you said, even though part of you didânot the drive itself, but the interruption, the way the moment had slipped through your fingers again just when it felt like it might finally settle.
Max grabbed your hand and tugged you toward the door. âYes! Thank you.â
Robin followed, muttering about soft pretzels and cinnamon sugar. Eleven smiled at you like you were the solution to every problem sheâd ever had. You moved toward the doorway, keys in hand, but paused when you felt a gentle touch on your wrist. Steve had stepped after you, stopping you with light fingers that traced warmth across your skin. âHey,â he murmured, eyes meeting yours with that same earnest something from earlier, âwhen you get back⊠can we finish that conversation?â
The question hit you softly, settling under your ribs in a place already warm for him. You nodded. âYeah. We can.â
A slow, relieved smile spread across his face, not the charming one he used to flirt or joke, but something smaller, realerâsomething just for you.
Robinâs voice echoed from outside. âLetâs go, Iâm starving!â
You stepped away from Steve and toward the chaos gathering around your car, but you looked back once. He stood in the doorway with his hands in his pockets, trying and failing to hide the way he was smiling. This time, you knew the moment wouldnât slip away forever. It was waiting for you. So was he.
---
The mall on a Saturday was a maze of sound â laughter echoing off tile, music thumping faintly from different stores, the squeak of sneakers on polished floors, the chatter of people weaving around one another like they were all part of some vast busy hive. The second you stepped inside with Max, Eleven, and Robin, it felt like stepping into a warm wave of noise and movement. Max immediately scanned the storefronts like a general surveying a battlefield, Eleven stayed close to your side with quiet determination, and Robin pointed at the pretzel shop with the single-minded hunger of someone who had already been thinking about it for hours.
The girls moved quickly, practically dragging you along, their energy sweeping you forward before you even realized you were fully inside. The light overhead was bright, reflecting off the glossy floor, and you adjusted to it slowly, breathing in the smell of cinnamon sugar and perfume samples drifting from the nearby department store. Even with the crowd, the moment felt surprisingly calmânothing like the monster-hunting days, nothing like the chaos of Dustinâs science experiments or the loud clusters of voices in the Wheeler basement. Just⊠the mall. Just a typical weekend afternoon.
Max took the lead, weaving down the walkway toward the bookstore. âThis wonât take long,â she promised, even though her tone strongly suggested she planned to browse. âI just need to drop off the return, maybe look at the new releases, maybe check the comicsâ"
Robin groaned dramatically. âIâm going to starve before the pretzels. And then whoâs gonna explain to Steve that you let me die of hunger in a suburban mall? Heâll never forgive you.â
Eleven blinked up at you. âShe needs pretzels first,â she said with the same seriousness she used when discussing mind flayers.
You smiled because you knew it was hopeless to try changing their priorities. âOkay. Pretzels first, then the bookstore.â
Robin fist-pumped like sheâd just won a war. âYes. Justice prevails.â
You led the way toward the food court, letting the steady hum of conversation settle around you. Eleven walked close enough that her sleeve brushed yours every few steps, her eyes darting between the crowds with a watchfulness that came from experience, not fear. Max strode ahead, confident and unbothered, her ponytail swinging behind her with each purposeful movement.
When you reached the pretzel stand, Robin stepped forward eagerly. âFour pretzels,â she told the teenager behind the counter. âOne cinnamon, one butter, one salted, and one mystery pick for Eleven.â
The kid blinked, confused. âMystery pick?â
Robin waved broadly. âDealerâs choice. Make it fun.â Max rolled her eyes but didnât argue. Eleven seemed excited by the idea, gaze fixed on the warming racks with awe.
You helped gather napkins and drinks while everyone else debated who got which pretzel, though Elevenâs mystery pretzel was so coated in cheese that Robin declared it a masterpiece of culinary chaos. You all found an empty table near the railing overlooking the lower floor, and the four of you sat down, the air filled with warmth and chatter that felt strangely comforting.
Max took a bite of her pretzel before pointing it at you. âSo what were you and Steve talking about before we barged in?â
Robin inhaled sharply and kicked Max lightly under the table. âWe donât ask those questions.â
âBut I just did,â Max said, completely unapologetic. âIâm curious.â
Eleven tilted her head. âYou and Steve were sitting very close.â
Heat crept up the back of your neck, and you tried to hide it by taking a long sip of your drink. âWe were just talking,â you said softly, though you felt the weight of the truth under your ribs. You were almost talking about something elseâsomething biggerâand that weight felt warm in a way that wasnât unpleasant at all.
Max watched you knowingly, like she was piecing together a puzzle sheâd already solved. âUh-huh. Sure. Talking.â
Robin sighed with the posture of someone carrying too much knowledge. âWeâre not interrogating her. Weâre here for snacks, not emotional espionage.â
You wanted to thank her, but before you could, Eleven leaned in with genuine curiosity. âDo you like him?â
Your breath caught, and the world seemed to softenânot collapse, not tighten, just⊠soften. The noise of the mall blurred into a distant hum, and your hands stilled around the napkin you were folding subconsciously.
Max kicked her under the table. âEl! You canât just ask!â
Eleven frowned. âWhy not? If she likes him, she should say.â Robin groaned but didnât disagree.
You set the napkin down slowly, heart thumping against your ribs in that quiet, fluttery way it always did whenever Steve said your name a little too gently or leaned just a little too close. âI⊠I donât know,â you said, though that wasnât the truth. You knew. You just werenât used to saying it out loud. âMaybe.â
Max raised an eyebrow. âMaybe yes?â
You exhaled, looking down at your hands. âMaybe⊠yes.â
Robin slapped her palms on the table and grinned like sheâd been waiting for this revelation for months. âFinally. Emotional progress. Steve is going to combust when he hears that.â
You stared at her. âRobin!â
âWhat? Heâs still alive. Mostly. Probably pacing in your living room right now practicing a speech.â
Eleven smiled brightly, lifting her pretzel. âI am happy,â she said, content and certain.
Max leaned back in her chair with smug satisfaction. âCalled it.â
Despite the embarrassing warmth on your face, you felt something untangle inside youâsomething quiet, hopeful, and strangely steady. Saying it aloud didnât feel as terrifying as youâd expected. If anything, it felt like youâd opened a small door that had been waiting for too long.
Robin nudged your foot under the table. âFinish your pretzel,â she said playfully. âWe should get back soon. Wouldnât want to keep loverboy waiting.â
You groaned, but a smile tugged at your lips anyway.
And across the mall, beyond the noise and the shining floors and the crowds moving in every direction, you found yourself thinking not about monsters or interruptions or whatever chaos awaited at homeâbut about Steve.
And the conversation heâd asked to finish.
---
Dustin had invited Lucas, Mike, and Will over with the promise of âthe most important campaign decision of their lives,â which meant the basement was already cluttered with graph paper, dice, snack wrappers, and an unnecessary number of pencils. They were mid-argument about whether the party should take the mountain pass or the hidden forest trail when Steve wandered down the stairs, hands shoved in his pockets, pacing with a restless energy that immediately caught Dustinâs attention.
âWhy are you down here?â Dustin asked, squinting at him suspiciously from behind his Dungeon Master screen. âArenât you supposed to be home? Or at work? Or not pacing around my basement like youâre trying to burn a hole into the carpet?â
Steve ignored him, and that alone was weird enough that Mike, Lucas, and Will exchanged glances. Steve never ignored Dustin. Not unless something had gone very, very wrong.
Steve raked a hand through his hair, tugging at the strands. He crossed the room, turned around, crossed it again, muttering under his breath. âShe said weâd talk later. Later. Which could mean anything. What if something happens? What if she changes her mind? What ifââ
Willâs pencil rolled off the table as he slowly lowered it. Mike froze mid-chew with a pretzel rod sticking out of his mouth. Lucas leaned back in his chair, eyebrows raised. Dustin set his pencil down slowly, staring at Steve with an expression that drew gradually from confusion into dawning horror. âWhy do you look like youâre waiting for the apocalypse?â
Steve stopped pacing. âI meanâit might be. For me.â
Mike slapped a hand over his mouth, trying not to laugh. Lucas elbowed him hard. Will quietly slid his chair just a few inches farther away from the table.
Dustin rose from his seat like someone being pulled upward by invisible strings. His voice dropped to a deadly calm. âSteve. What did you do.â
Steve swallowed. âOkay, so donât freak outââ
Instant freak-out. Dustin threw his hands up. âWhy would you say that? Why would you say that unless there is something to freak out about?â
Will stood. Mike stood. Lucas stood. It was like watching prey animals rise together, ready to bolt.
Steve ran both hands down his face and groaned. âI didnât do anything. I tried to do something. But, like⊠the universe hates me. Every time I get close, someone interrupts. Mostly you. Actually, almost always you.â
Dustin blinked twice. âInterrupts what?â
Steve held up a finger like he was about to explain something complicated. âOkay. Just listen. I wanted to talk to herââ
Will paled. Lucasâs eyes widened. Mike mouthed oh no under his breath.
ââbecause I really likeââ
âNo.â Dustin cut him off, both hands raised like he was physically blocking the words. âNo. No, no, no. Youâre notâyou canâtâthatâs my sister!â He said it like it was a curse, a prophecy, and a threat rolled into one.
Steve exhaled, bracing himself. âYeah. I know. Believe me, I know. But Iââ
Mike took a step toward the stairs. Lucas followed. Will whispered, âshould we⊠leave?â
Mike nodded slowly. âWe should leave.â
But Dustin wasnât paying attention to anything except the tidal wave of emotion crashing over him. He advanced on Steve like a general ready to declare war. âYou canât like her!â Dustin yelled, jabbing a finger into Steveâs chest. âSheâs my sister! There are rules!â
Steve threw up his hands. âWhat rules?â
âThe unwritten ones!â
Lucas tugged Will toward the stairs. âBack away slowly.â
âAlready doing that,â Will whispered, clutching his sketchbook to his chest.
Mike didnât even whisper. âSteve, this is gonna be bad. Good luck,â he said before sprinting up the stairs and abandoning him entirely.
Dustin kept going, and Steve kept retreating until his back hit the wall. âYou canâtâyou canât just date her! What if you break up? What if things get weird? What if she gets hurt? What if you hurt her? I can'tâI canât be stuck in the middle of that!â Steve opened his mouth to respond, but Dustin didnât give him a chance. âAnd I swearâI swearâ if you ever hurt her, I will kill you.â
Steve blinked. âDustin, you canât even reach my neck.â
âIâll use a ladder!â
Steve threw his hands up. âOh my godâlisten! I would never hurt her. Ever. I like her. Iâve liked her. For a long time. Okay? Thatâs why Iâm freaking out. Thatâs why Iâm pacing. Because Iâm terrified. Not of youââ
âOh really?â Dustin snapped, crossing his arms.
ââbut of her.â
Dustin paused. âHer?â
Steve nodded emphatically. âYes! Do you remember the demogorgon? Because I do. I watched your sister take a baseball bat with nails in it and swing so hard the thing went flying. I have nightmares about that moment sometimes. She was feral.â
Dustin hesitated. ââŠokay, yeah, that was cool.â
âIt was terrifying!â
âAlso cool,â Dustin corrected, but the fire behind his words had dimmed. He stopped pacing, shoulders dropping slightly as the panic drained from his face. âShe really was awesome that day.â
Steve softened, his voice calmer now. âI like her because sheâs⊠her. And she deserves someone who actually pays attention. Someone who cares about her, and wants to make her feel safe, and doesnât push her to be someone sheâs not. Iâm trying to be that person. But every time I try to tell her how I feel, you interrupt and drag me to test an antenna or fix a wire orââ
âThat was important,â Dustin muttered weakly.
âIt really wasnât!â
Dustin went quiet. He looked at Steve, really looked at him, as if seeing him differently for the first time. The frantic defensiveness slowly melted into something begrudging, conflicted, but not outright hostile. After a long silence, Dustin let out a tired breath. âYou really like her.â
Steve nodded. âYeah. I really do.â
âAnd youâre not gonna screw it up.â
Steve shook his head. âNot if I can help it.â
Dustin pressed his lips together, thinking hard, weighing his loyalty to you against his loyalty to Steve. Eventually he let out a groan loud enough to shake dust from the ceiling. âFine! Fine. But I swear, Harrington, if you hurt herââ
âI know,â Steve said quickly. âLadder. Got it.â
Dustin pointed at him one last time. âAnd my point still stands!â
âWhich point?â
âThat sheâs scarier than Iâll ever be.â
Steve actually laughed, shoulders relaxing for the first time in hours. âYeah. She is.â
Dustin huffed, then turned toward the stairs. âI need a snack. And time to emotionally process this.â
From the top of the stairs, Mikeâs voice drifted back down. âIs it safe to come back?â
âNo!â Dustin shouted, slamming the door behind him.
And Steve let out a long, relieved breathâbecause the hardest part was over. Now all he had to do was actually talk to you.
---
You returned home before sunset, the sky outside tinted gold and pink as the heat of the day finally began to fade. The girls piled out of your car with arms full of pretzels, shopping bags, and the chaotic energy of teenagers loose in a mall. Max jogged ahead toward the front door, Eleven lingered close to you with a quiet smile, and Robin walked backward while lecturing both of them about âthe importance of proper snack distribution in a household ecosystem.â
But the moment you stepped inside, the energy shifted. Something hung in the airânot tension, exactly, but a strange, anticipatory stillness. The lights in the living room were on. The TV was off. Steve was perched on the edge of the couch like heâd been waiting for hours and didnât know what to do with his hands, his posture, or his entire existence.
Dustin stood beside him, arms crossed, nodding solemnly like he had just finished delivering a very long speech. All three girls froze mid-step.
Steve shot to his feet the second he saw you. âHey. Youâre back.â
You blinked, half smiling. âYeah. Weâ"
âYou,â Dustin interrupted loudly, pointing at Steve with one hand and at you with the other, âneed to talk. Now. Immediately. Right now.â
You stared at him. âDustin?â
Dustin nodded with the seriousness of a courtroom judge. âIâve⊠reflected.â He placed a hand dramatically over his chest. âAnd I have decided that I am granting you two permission to have a conversation without interruptions.â
Robinâs eyebrows shot up to her hairline. âOh god. He found out, didnât he.â
Max elbowed Eleven and whispered, âtold you.â
Steveâs face turned the shade of someone who had been emotionally waterboarded all afternoon. âReflected,â he muttered. âHe screamed at me for twenty minutes.â
Dustin glared at him. âEmotional reflection is loud sometimes.â
Robin snorted. Max barely held in a laugh. Eleven leaned close and whispered, âhe mustâve been very loud.â
Dustin cleared his throat theatrically and stepped forward like he was taking center stage. âAnyway,â he said, arms spreading with dramatic flair, âI am officially leaving the premises. As are the rest of you.â He pointed toward the door like a tiny general evacuating troops. âGo. All of you. Get out. I need this to happen so my sister stops looking at Steve like a kicked puppy and Steve stops pacing grooves into our floor.â
Your face went hot. âDustin!â
âWhat?â he said. âItâs embarrassing. For both of you. Fix it.â
Steve groaned into his hands.
Max shrugged and headed for the hallway. âCome on. Letâs leave the awkward adults alone.â
Eleven nodded gravely. âImportant moment.â
Robin gave Steve a long, slow, knowing smirk. âDonât choke, dingus.â
And just like that, the girls disappeared down the hall. Dustin lingered one more second, squinting at Steve like a overprotective watchdog. âRemember,â he warned, âI will absolutely end you ifââ
âI know!â Steve snapped. âLadder. Got it.â
âGood.â Dustin huffed, then looked at you, softened, and squeezed your arm gently. âHeâs nervous. Be nice.â
âIâm always nice,â you murmured.
Steve made a strangled noise. Dustin pointed at him one more time, then marched off after the others. And then there was silence. The house felt suddenly huge. The space between you and Steve felt even bigger. He let out a long breath, rubbing the back of his neck as he looked at you with a dozen emotions flickering across his faceâfear, hope, determination, affection. âSo,â he said, voice rough but warm, âwe⊠finally have a minute.â
You stepped farther into the room, closing the door behind you. âWe do.â
He didnât sit. He didnât pace. He stayed exactly where he was, like moving even a step might break whatever fragile, shimmering moment had finally landed in his hands. âLook,â he started, letting his arms fall to his sides, âIâve been trying to tell you something forâactually, I donât even know how long anymore. Weeks? Months? A while. And I kept messing it up. Or people kept messing it up. Mostly Henderson.â
You breathed out a soft laugh. âHe does that.â
âHe does,â Steve agreed. Then his expression shiftedâsofter now, more sure. âBut Iâm glad heâs not here right now. Because I⊠I donât want to keep dancing around this.â
You looked up at him, and the way he stared back made your chest tighten with something warm and heavy and sweet.
He took a steady breath. âI like you,â he said simply, without theatrics or stumbling, every word shaped with sincerity. âI really, really like you. More than I meant to. More than I planned to. Definitely more than I told Dustin when he cornered me today.â
You blinked, startled. âHe cornered you?â
âOh yeah. Full interrogation mode. I thought he was gonna map out my emotional failings on a chalkboard.â He shook his head, then took another step toward you, closing the distance until he was right in front of youâclose enough to feel the quiet warmth radiating between you.
Your breath caught.
Steve swallowed, voice dropping softer. âAnd I know youâre⊠you. You get quiet. And nervous. And sometimes I canât tell what youâre thinking. But Iâve seen the way you look at me sometimes. The same way I probably look at you. And I justâI needed you to know. Even if it freaked you out. Even if it scared me to say it.â
Your heart fluttered in your chest, skipping unevenly as you tried to gather your voice. âIt doesnât freak me out.â
He smiledâsmall, startled, almost relieved. âNo?â
You shook your head, letting your eyes meet his without dropping away this time. âI⊠like you too.â
The warmth that spread across his face was immediateâbright, soft, disbelieving in a way that made something inside you loosen and settle all at once. He let out a breath he had clearly been holding for far too long, his shoulders dropping as tension melted from them.
He reached for your hand slowly, giving you room to pull back. You didnât. His fingers brushed yours, then curled around them gentlyâwarm and steady, not asking for anything more than the space you chose to give. âI was really scared youâd say no,â he admitted quietly.
âI was scared youâd get tired of trying,â you whispered.
He laughed under his breathâa soft, breathless soundâand shook his head. âNot a chance.â
The moment stretched comfortably, a soft glow settling between you both like something that had been waiting a long time to finally land. Then, from down the hall, âis it safe yet!?â Dustin shouted.
Steve groaned, squeezing your hand. âHeâs going to make this so complicated.â
You smiledâfull, warm, a little shy but no longer afraid of the feeling settling inside your chest. âWeâll handle him.â
Steve grinned. âYeah. We will.â
And this time, nothing interrupted the moment you sharedâwarm hands, quiet breath, and the certainty that this was only the beginning.
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