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Can somebody, anybody, heck everybody please write some stack x reader or stack x oc angst where she doesnât take stack back. I need something to put me in my feelings one good time.
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Imma only be reading Sinner fanfics from black people, cos I just saw a remmick fanfic where it's an x reader, but the reader is the daughter of a plantation owner. WTF. This is the straw that broke the camel's back. Between ignoring the black characters of sinners, centring the white ones, unironically making stereotypes of the black characters and misunderstanding the movie entirely, I've just seen so much trifling behaviour from non black sinners fans. This goes without saying, this is obviously not all white white people or non black people.
Here is where you can find the links to all my work. It will be updated when needed. Titles marked with đ mean smut and nsfw content.
Series
âSo youâre the babysitter, huh?â - Completed, Babysitting should have been easy money, but Itâs hard to pay attention to the baby. When his older brother is paying way more attention to you.
âSheâs an angelâ, đ - Completed, The thought of being a virgin in college is terrifying, lucky reuniting with your childhood best friend means he wonât let that happen. Friends with benefits never works in the movies or books or on tv, but itâll be different this time, right ? Right.
Moodboards
Snowball fights with Rodrick âď¸đ
Date night with Rodrick means getting high and doing arts and crafts
Oneshots
Makeup sex, đ
Something new, đ
Stage five clinger
Drum Lesson, đ
She keeps to herself
The freak and his cheerleader
Traces of you on my pillowcase, đ
Sunday skincare
Burr basket season
Series
âGreyâ, đ - Completed, There were many reasons for you to love Fezco. Built trust, a strong connection and a long history. But is all that enough for you to forgive him and start over ?
Oneshots
Growin up - Throwing a birthday party for Ash
Period care - Ash helping on the first day of your period
Swimming lessons
Messy, đ
Two green thumbs
Headcanons
Having a baby with Fez
Drabbles
Angels like you
Moodboards
Christmas with the Harringtonâs đ¸âď¸
Oneshots
No more Farrah Fawcett
Basketball practice, đ
Oneshots
Late night smoke, đ
Tame that mane
While the conditioner sits, đ
Oneshots
Sweet and Sour
Silky Smooth, đ
Snapshop, đ
Oneshots
âSnip, snipâ
Oneshots
Just a bet, đ
Series
âFlashing Lightsâ, đ - Ongoing, The story of how you and Spencer Reid fell for each other is a rocky one. From the sweet beginnings of an odd pair to the tough obstacles the two of you face. Your relationship was a roller coaster of emotions. Determined to make it work despite the strong disapproval of your best friend Sydney. You were ready to ride through the highs and lows. But dark secrets lie beneath the surface of your relationships. Ones that Spencer and Sydney have been keeping from you. Will you and Spencer be able to make it work despite the circumstances and find a way back to each other? Or will your love story end in tragedy?
Moodboards
Been thinking about sugar daddy Spencer đ¤đ¤
Holiday shopping with sugar daddy Spencer đď¸đł
Oneshots
Illicit affairs
Being with Spencer means getting lover letters on the regular
Hey, Iâm Bug đ¤đź just a hippie chick with an embarrassing crush on Eddie Munson.Â
I write blurbs about our favorite Stranger Things boys to make the world a little brighter for us all.
I write fluff, smut, and angst. I do not feel comfortable writing about: incest (stepdad/stepbro included), non-consensual acts, or minors. You can request anything else, even other (adult) Stranger Things characters, and Iâll do my best.
Header + icon credit to @lofaewrites đ
**IMPORTANT UPDATE**
All smut requests must be sent off-anon and you must have your age in your bio.
I will not accept smut requests from anons, blogs with no age, or anyone under the age of 18. If you do not want your URL associated with your request, let me know and I will post your request as part of a text post and exclude your name.
Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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Summary: A disastrous PTA meeting and an unfortunate grocery store encounter have you and Eddie questioning whether or not you deserve each other.
Warnings: a bit of dirty talk (18+ just in case), feelings of unworthiness, Carol Perkins and Billy Hargrove make appearances, mentions of bullying, small allusion to drug use and poverty, arrest, tiny allusion to Eddie's breeding kink
WC: 7.1k
Chapter 13/?
Divider credit to @saradika
Special thanks to @girlwiththerubyslippers & @corroded-hellfire for helping with this chapter!
Your Thursday mornings at Hawkins Preschool usually involve a light tap on the door and a blink-and-you-missed-it wave from Eddie; maybe a wink if no oneâs looking. Today, heâs stopped by the classroom with a steaming styrofoam cup in hand.
âI thought you only brought me coffee on Mondays,â you laugh appreciatively. You take the still-hot beverage from him, folding back the plastic tab and blowing on it lightly before taking a sip. Itâs made just as you like it and warms you from the inside out.
Eddie smiles, crossing his arms over his chest an leaning in closer so his leather-clad shoulder grazes sweater-covered one. âAh, but the PTA meeting is after school today.â As if you could forget forty minutes of unpaid work that could be spent reading, resting, snuggling up to your thoughtful metalhead boyfriend⌠âFigured you could use an extra boost of caffeine to help you power through.â He lowers his voice to add, âIâm sorry I wonât be able to make it. But Wayneâll be there.â He squeezes your hand quickly just as Abby Carver approaches you.Â
You pull away so fast that you bang your elbow against the side of the desk, biting the inside of your cheek to suppress a yelp. âWhat can I do for ya, Abby?â you ask, smiling through the throbbing pain.
âJoshua said that heâs taller than me!â she whines, messily swiping at her ruddy tear-stained cheeks. Her dad only dropped her off five minutes ago, and sheâs already conjured up a crisis. Unsurprising, but exasperating nonetheless.
You peer over at Joshua Harrington, who is currently constructing a racetrack, unbothered by Abbyâs distressed state. Your gaze flits back over to the little girl in front of you. âHoney, he is taller than you,â you gently explain, watching as her bright blue eyes begin to well up again.
âYeah, but he doesnât havta say it!â she protests, stamping her sneaker on the speckled tile floor. Itâs one that lights up, little red and blue and green twinkles dashing along the side.
You nod, sucking in your lips in a feeble attempt to keep a straight face. âWell, you can just play somewhere else. And weâre gonna get started with circle time in a few minutes.â Time to sing the Good Morning songâagain. If the kids didnât beg for it every day, you wouldâve scrapped it months ago, but it keeps them entertained.
Once she scampers off, already zeroing in on a group of girls dressing up some time-battered Barbie dolls, you turn your attention back to Eddie.Â
âWeâre still on for Saturday?â you ask, a subtle reminder of your upcoming date at Enzoâs. Itâs a fancier restaurant than either of you are used to, but Eddie had insisted on it.
He nods quickly, scratching at the back of his neck like he does when heâs nervous, though youâre not quite sure whatâs on his mind. âY-Yeah, Iâll pick you up at 7?â
âI canât wait.â
At 3:15, you and Will trudge into the classroom thatâs serving as the meeting venue. It only takes a moment for you to remember that itâs Ms. Marionâs room, and your eyes scan the walls for Harrisâs artwork. You find it easily; itâs the best in the class. Itâs a drawing based on the saying, âMarch is in like a lion and out like a lamb,â and each kid drew a picture of the two animals. Harris has meticulously added details to his. Heâs drawn a zig-zag line under the lionâs pink nose to represent his aggression and given the lamb a puffy coat of wool, while the other kids just drew smiling lions and a circle to represent their lambsâ bodies. Heâs also included a speech bubble hovering above each of their heads; the lionâs says âROR!!!â and the lamb bleats âBAAA.âÂ
Willâs gaze follows yours, and his lips turn up into a smile when he sees what youâre staring at. âHeâs a talented kid,â he remarks. âWe gotta have him sign something now so we can say âwe knew him when.ââÂ
You nod your head in agreement and return his grin. Youâll have to tell Eddie to have Harris swing by your classroom after school tomorrow so Harris can autograph some drawings.
Wayne comes in a few minutes later, taking a seat behind you and Will.
âHowâs your day going, Wayne?â You turn around in your chair and greet him. Seeing the older Munson always lifts your spirits. Heâs wearing a flannel, checks of olive green and white, over a white t-shirt that proudly proclaims: My Favorite Person Calls Me Grampa.
Wayne gives a little shrug; for him, itâs the equivalent of a beaming smile. âCanât complain. Didnât get too much pushback from Harris when I dropped him at the baby-sitterâs.â He explains that Claudia Henderson still has a bunch of the games her son had played with, and Harris loves going through the toy bin and finding something new. âWell, new to him. That stuffâs gotta be nearly twenty years old by now.â He scratches the white-gray whiskers on his cheek and chuckles. âJeez, âm old. I remember buyinâ those kinda games for Eddie when he was a kid.â
More parents and teachers file in and, eventually, the PTA president stands at the front of the classroom and calls the meeting to order. The idle conversation gradually ceases, and Linda Wright presses her lips into a thin smile and smooths nonexistent creases in her khaki slacks.
âWelcome, everyone,â she begins, clasping her hands together in front of her. âThank you all for being here. We have quite a few items to cover today, so letâs get to it!â Sheâs far too chipper for your liking, and you wince involuntarily as she excitedly announces the upcoming parent-child talent show. Itâs an annual school-hosted fundraiser, and apparently a popular one; thereâs a soft roar of discussion before Linda wrinkles her nose in irritation and shushes the group.
âOh, Edâs gonna love that,â Wayne leans in and whispers to you. âHeâll probably be more excited than Harris.â He sits up straight when Linda clears her throat and glares in his direction.
The president launches into a tirade about kindergarten readiness strategies, handing out little pamphlets to the parents and guardians. The cover displays an overly-enthusiastic teacher surrounded by a small group of students who are closely attending to a fake lesson.
You hear Wayne grumble under his breath: âWhat is there to be ready for? Itâs kindergarten, Jesus Christ.â and you have to stifle a laugh.
Linda luckily doesnât hear his lament. âIâm opening up the floor to any questions or concerns.â Now is the time that people typically start gathering their belongings and resume unfinished conversations. Itâs precisely what you plan to do until you hear an all-too familiar snide voice from across the room.Â
âYes, I have a question.â Carol Perkins stands up. She places her hands on her hips and pulls her lips into a smirk. âWhat is the schoolâs policy on parent-teacher relationships? Romantic andâŚotherwise?â Her gaze sweeps over to you, hovering there for a bit, and you realize with a sense of dread that sheâs enjoying this. âBecause, to me,â she splays her manicured fingers over the center of her chest, âit just seems completely unprofessional.â
The PTA members start whispering amongst themselves, eyebrows raised in excitement as they try to determine the culprit amongst themselves.
You want to crawl into a hole and die. You can feel Wayneâs eyes on the back of your head, as though heâs silently willing you to remain composed. The only other person who knows of your relationship with Eddie is Will, and you can tell that heâs doing everything in his power not to wrap his arms around you in a hug.
At the very least, the principal is not tolerating the dissolution of the meeting into a gossip session. âMs. Perkins, we can discuss this at a later time. Privately.â Sue Sinclairâs expression is stoic, unreadable, and youâre not sure whether sheâs angry at you or Carol. How would she know itâs me? But logic has no reason with emotion taking center stage, and youâre all too grateful when Chrissy Carver shifts the conversation to organize a ticket sale committee. For the most part, it seems like Carolâs little outburst has been swept under the rug. The meeting concludes as some parents leave while others stick around to schedule playdates, but you remain seated.
A hand on your shoulder startles you from your humiliated stupor, and you look up to see Will looking at you. Sympathy radiates from his eyes.
âItâs okay,â he softly reassures you. âI donât think anyone knows, and even if they do, who cares? Harris isnât in your class anymore.â
âI-I know.â But Frankie is, which means Iâll have to face Carol every day, Iâll have to deal with her smarmy expressions and backhanded comments. The blood drains in your face when you think about her spreading rumors to the other parents, their amused stares as they drop their children off to be in your care.
Wayne speaks up as he stands, leaning his gnarled knuckles on the seat of the folding chair for support. âDarlinâ, youâve got nothinâ to worry about. Itâs no oneâs business who youâre with.â He brushes some dust off of his dungarees and walks with a slight limp towards the door, the remnants of an old injury that flares up in the colder weather. âI gotta go get Harris, but you keep your chin up.â He gives Will a quick head bob that the younger man returns, having developed somewhat of a camaraderie with the elder Munson during the various post-graduation Hellfire sessions held at the trailer.
Carol says nothing as she leaves the room, deep in conversation with Steve Harrington and his wife. If they donât know about you and Eddie yet, youâre confident that Carol will ensure they do soon. Dread pools in your stomach at the thought of small-town gossip flying, your professionalism being called into question, the possibility of you losing your job. And everyone will know why.Â
Eddieâs hands tremor with excitement; his whole body buzzes with energy as he grabs the receiver off of the glass countertop. He dials your numberâhis favorite seven digit combination in the worldâand beams the entire time. As soon as he hears your, âhello?â, heâs practically shouting into the phone. Volume control has never been his forte, especially after years of blowing out his eardrums with loud music.
âBabe, guess what?â He drums his left hand fingertips on the counter, a rhythmic pum-pum-pum to keep his breath steady.
âWhatâs up?âÂ
He notes hesitance in your tone, but chalks it up to exhaustion from your extended workday. âI applied for that manager position? The one I told you about on our first date?â He hears your soft âmhm,â before proceeding. âAnd I got it! Ash just told me now!â He smiles, pressing the receiver to his ear with his shoulder as he organizes paperwork into a pile. âEddie Munson, getting the girl and the job? Never in Hawkinsâ wildest dreams!â
Thereâs a pause on your end of the line before you reply. âIâm so proud of you, Eds. No one deserves this more than you do.âÂ
Though thereâs still an air of something Eddie canât quite identify, itâs woven with genuine pride for his accomplishment. His fingertips keep busy as they graze up and down the phone cord. âNow we, uh, really have something to celebrate at Enzoâs.â
Another pause; this one is so long that he wonders if the line disconnected. âUm, about thatâŚâ you finally speak up, and Eddie hopes you donât hear the gigantic sigh of relief that escapes his lips, âmaybe we could just do something at my place? Grab takeout, watch a movie or something?â
His relief evaporates almost as quickly as it came, and he puts his weight on his forearms and lowers his voice. âEverything okay?â
âYeah, just been a long week.â
It sounds too automatic, too rehearsed to be true. Eddie doesnât believe you, but he needs to get to Wayneâs and pick up Harris before his uncle leaves for work. âI really wanted to take you out, show you off, yâknow?â He clears his throat, scrambling for words. âWe can talk more about it later. Try to get some rest, Sweetheart.â
âMmkay,â you mumble, and Eddie hopes heâs not just imagining the smile in your voice. âIâll try. Say hi to Harris and Wayne for me.â
He ends the phone call promising that he will, hanging up hesitantly. What happened between this morning and this evening that had you backing out of the date and retreating into your home?Â
I shouldnât have tried to hold her hand, he grimaces, pulling out of the parking lot and onto the main road towards Forest Hills. That was so stupid; she was at work, and the kids were right there. Way to go, Munson.Â
Eddie continues to brood about his faux pas all the way until he gets to Wayneâs, slapping a smile on his face as he relays the news about his promotion. The smile becomes less forced the more he talks. Heâs suddenly consumed with thoughts of buying a house with a yard, a poolâwell, maybe not a pool; heâs not making that much moneyâbut definitely space for Harris to run around and play.
And in this fantasy world heâs created, youâre standing on the front porch, sipping coffee out of a Worldâs Best Mom mugâpossibly the only mug Wayne doesnât already have nailed to the trailer wallâmade just the way you like it. Youâre laughing as you watch Harris sprint back and forth across the grass. Eddie imagines it neatly cut, but the reality is that it would probably be more than a bit overgrown.
Heâd sneak up behind you, snaking arms around your waist and resting his head on your shoulder, pressing soft kisses onto the back of your neckâ
âThatâs amazing, Ed!â Wayne claps a hand on his nephewâs back, drawing him out of his daydream and thrusting him back into reality. He pulls him into a quick hug, not overabundant in affection, but his delight seeps through. âYou talk to your girl yet?âÂ
âFirst person I called.â My girl. The first person I called was my girl. Sheâs my girl and Iâm her manâ
âGood.â Wayne responds pensively, smoothing down his unruly mustache whiskers and reaching for his pack of Camels. He shoves them into his side pocket, right on top of the lighter. âShe could use some good news after that shitshow of a PTA meeting.â
Eddieâs brows crinkle, pinched together in non-understanding. âWhat are you talking about?â he asks before calling out his sonâs name to bring him from the bedroom. He can hear the bed springs creaking, which can only mean that Harris is jumping on the old mattress. Apparently, breaking his wrist didnât result in a lesson learned.
âShe didnât tell you?âÂ
âTell me what?â He slams his palm onto the countertop as confusion melts into frustration. Werenât you past this? Past keeping secrets and masking emotions?
Wayne sighs, weighing his options. Ultimately, his allegiance is to his nephew, so he divulges what happened that afternoon, heart sinking as Eddieâs face falls with each word. âShe seemed real shook up,â he concludes the story, digging out the pack of cigarettes. Delivering news that devastates his nephew has him urgently craving a smoke. âI wanted to stay and talk to her, but Claudia had somewhere to be at five.â
Eddie chews on his lower lip, pulling off a bit of dry skin with his front teeth. âYeah, no, âs fine.â He calls Harris out of the bedroom again, patience sufficiently thinned. Of course Carol Perkins would shoot off her big mouth about your personal life. Itâs not like she had anything better to do. None of that is surprising.Â
What worries Eddie is why you didnât tell him about it. Were you embarrassed that people knew you were together? Is that why you didnât want to be seen at Enzoâs with him? Would you agree to a restaurant far outside the bounds of Hawkins, or was this shame rooted deeper than small-town gossip?
Wayne can sense his anxiety, and he scrambles to dam up Eddieâs flooding thoughts as he fumbles to put the cigarette between his lips. âItâs pretty damn obvious that you two care for each other. Dare I say, you loââ
âWayne!â
âFine, fine,â Wayne chuckles and grabs his lunch pack. The ceasing of the bed springs indicates that Harris has stopped jumping, and Eddie can hear toy cars clattering into a bag. âBut you should just talk to her. Make sure sheâs okay.â He lowers his voice as Harris finally emerges. âI know it ainât been easy to hear rumors your whole life, but this is new to her. Cut her a little slack.â
Eddie looks around the trailer at what was his first real home. Heâd bounced from place to place with his parents, dodging angry landlords and their threats of eviction. From a young age, heâd learned to dread the end of the month, knowing that conflict was inevitable. Screaming voices, accusations of hiding money, when anyone with working eyes could see that theyâd all but stuffed it in a pipe and smoked it. There was no love; only survival. Wayne was never the cookies and milk, family dinner, Leave it to Beaver type, but he offered Eddie something heâd never had before: safety.
Now, Eddie scoops Harris into his arms and follows Wayne out of the trailer as he locks up. Thereâs not too much of great value; possibly just the TV, but even thatâs on the fritz. And unless a thief had a hankering for hokey mugs and baseball caps, theyâd probably leave without taking a thing. âThanks, Old Man.â
ââS what Iâm here for,â Wayne says, pressing a kiss to Harrisâs mop of curls. He pauses, and then does something he hasnât done in years: he kisses the top of Eddieâs head, too. âNot just a pretty face, yâknow.â
On Saturday evening, Eddie finds himself at Bradleyâs Big Buy, scouring the aisles until he locates the small refrigerator holding various flower bouquets. The chill hits him in the chest as he opens the door, crouching down to get a better look at the offerings through their tissue-paper wraps. Heâs determined to take you to Enzoâs, and heâd hoping this small gesture will show you that he can be the man you deserve.
He finds a bouquet of pink peonies and grabs them from the display case, clutching them proudly. Theyâre delicate and beautiful, just like you. He raises them up, the petals tickling his nose when he inhales the fresh scent, when he overhears Billy Hargrove speaking in a hushed tone:
âThought you were stopping by after that parent meeting thing.â
âMy idiot husband came home early,â a womanâCarol Perkins, Eddie realizesâpunctuates her lament with an irritated sigh. âBut speaking of that meetingâIâve been meaning to tell you: guess whoâs also hooking up?â She doesnât wait for him to answer before divulging the gossip, âFrankieâs teacher and Eddie Munson.â
âThe teacher and the Freak? No way.â He sticks his tongue in his cheek and chuckles maliciously. âDidnât know she was down for that kind of stuff.â
âKeep it in your pants,â Carol huffs, as though sheâs not stepping out on her own husband. âBut Iâm serious! He brings her coffee and leaves her stupid love notes.â
Eddie squeezes his eyes together as he cringes. Billyâs second round of mean laughter transports him back to the time the jock grabbed his brand-new D20 off of the lunch table and used his basketball skills to chuck it into a far-off trash can. The ruby red die sunk into the mountain of discarded lumps resembling mashed potatoes and half-eaten meatloaf, forcing Eddie to trek across the cafeteria and fish it out of the pile of old food. âLove notes? What, is he in high school or something?â
Carol snickers. âGuess heâs making up for all the times he didnât bother, since he knew no girl in this town would go for him.â
âLooks like he had to go for an import,â Billy jokes, drawing a hideous cackle from his friend. Eddie can practically hear the manâs ego inflating at the way Carol fawns over him.
âAnd a desperate one at that,â she snorts. âI mean, can you imagine lowering your standards enough to be with Eddie Munson?â
âLetâs hope she comes to her senses eventually,â he agrees. âSo, is your husband home nowâŚ?â
All Eddie can think is to run, to get the hell out of there before anyone spots him and notices the pink tinging his cheeks and the tears welling in his eyes. Heâs so focused on leaving and getting past the two bullies that he forgets about the flowers in his hand, until an infuriated voice calls after him.
âHey! Get back here!â The manager rolls his eyes when he recognizes the culprit. âEddie Munson. Of course. I shouldâve known that shoplifting isn't too juvenile a crime for you.âÂ
Eddie can hear Billy and Carol poorly stifling their amusement at his misfortune. He struggles to find the proper words to explain himself as his entire body is engulfed in the flames of embarrassment, burning him from the inside out. âNoâŚI didnât meanâŚit was an accidentâŚâ
The manager shakes his head with a biting laugh. Heâs a graying man who should have been retired fifteen years ago when Eddie was actually shoplifting. The liver-spotted creases around his eyes are particularly visible when he sneers, âHeard that one before. Probâly from you.â
Anger burns in Eddieâs throat, but he swallows it. âLook, let me just pay for these, and Iâll get outta here.â He starts to fumble for his wallet, but the old man shakes his head.
âNice try. I let you off easy too many times when you were a kid, and look where it got ya.â His cold hand clasps Eddieâs bicep as tightly as his feebleness allows. âIâm calling the sheriff. He can decide what to do with you.â
âShit-shit-shit,â Eddie mumbles, yanking himself from the manâs grip. âYâdonât have to hold me; Iâm not gonna run away.â
To his surprise, the manager lets him go, though itâs likely due to his advanced age rather than trusting Eddie to do the right thing.
Heâs taken to the back room, anxiously tapping his foot against the floor and biting his thumbnail. A quick glance at his watch tells him that heâs supposed to pick you up in 15 minutes. He breathes out a long sigh, scanning the bulletin board hastily fastened to the wall with a lone flyer advertising medical benefit sign-up. Upon closer inspection, he reads that itâs for the 1990 fiscal year, and he canât help but wonder if thatâs the last time the stodgy old Bradley ever offered insurance to his overworked, underpaid employees.Â
He says a silent prayer to whatever gods are listening that Hopper is the one who answers the call. The chief will give him the benefit of the doubt and probably tear the old fart a new one for wasting his time.
Purse, keys, lipstick, condoms.
You have everything you need for your date, save for one minor detailâEddie.
Youâd expected him to stop by your classroom yesterday to say good morning like he normally does, but he didnât show. He wouldâve called you if Harris was staying home sick; a brief peek out your window during recess confirmed that the littlest Munson was present. He ran around the playground with one of his friends from the birthday party, blissfully unaware of the turmoil churning within you.
Eddie definitely heard what happened at the meeting, you realize miserably, and he doesnât want to deal with the backlash heâll get from dating his kidâs former teacher. From anxiety blooms visions of the convoluted game of telephone perpetuated by Carol, the story getting more absurd with each retelling.Â
At 7:30, Eddie still hasnât shown. Heâs not exactly Mr. Punctuality, but thirty minutes is pushing it, even for him. His tardiness does nothing to ameliorate your fears. This was clearly too much for himâyou were too much for him.Â
Youâre about to wipe the makeup off of your face and change into your coziest pair of pajamas when the phone rings, startling you slightly.
âH-Hello?â
âThis is a collect call from the Hawkins County Jail. Do you accept the charges?â an automated voice bleats, too chipper for the circumstances itâs reporting.
Youâre caught off-guard by the question and the tone, and you choke out a strangled, âyesâ and the line rings twice.
âSweetheart? You there?â Eddie. Eddie, Eddie, Eddie. Relief floods your body until you remember where heâs calling from.
âY-Yeah, Iâm here,â you say, and itâs only when your fingers start to cramp that you recognize how tightly youâre gripping the receiver. âWhy are you inââ
He sighs into the phone, and static briefly clouds his voice. âLong story,â he mumbles. âCan you just come and get me? Thereâs, uh, no bail or anything.â
âIâll be right there.â You waste no time in grabbing your keys off of their hook, nearly forgetting to shove your feet into shoes in your scramble out the door. Youâre ashamed to admit that for a millisecond, you consider the possibility that heâs been busted for dealing, but you shake it off lest it further infiltrate your psyche.
You pull up to the jail exactly twenty-eight minutes later, the fastest you can get there without flying down side streets; the irony of being pulled over for speeding on your way to the police station was not lost on you. Flinging the car into park and killing the engine, you fast-walk through the entrance and hope your nervousness is hidden by the air of confidence youâre faking.Â
âIâm here to pick up Eddieâer, Edward Munson?â His legal name is clunky on your tongue, like it doesnât quite belong to him.Â
The officer behind the desk wears a name badge that reads âP. Callahan.â He puts down his copy of the Hawkins Post and presses his lips into a thin line as he reaches for the walkie attached to his shirt pocket.Â
âHop, is Munson ready to be released?â Released. Like a wild animal who needs to be kept away from the general public for their own safety.Â
The officer on the other endâChief Hopper, you presumeâconfirms that Eddie is good to go, and a door opens shortly after that. Eddie trudges out, shame and frustration marring his beautiful face.Â
You sign whatever paperwork is required before silently taking Eddieâs hand and leading him to the car. He holds it tight, a shiver of a tremor rocking through it.
âBabe, what happened?â you ask once youâre safely outside, away from where the officers can hear you.
Eddie lets go of your hand to throw his arm around you dramatically, leaning with his whole body weight. The sudden force of it has you stumbling, but he catches your fall.Â
âItâs awful being on the inside,â he whines, trying to lay on an exaggerated pout, but his smile pokes through. âYouâve made me too soft for prison, baby. Couldnât stop thinkinâ about you and almost got shanked.â
His joke subtly informs you that heâs not ready to actually discuss it yet, and so you roll your eyes and play along for now. âPoor thing. Locked up for a whole forty minutes.â
âIt was more like forty-five,â he protests, âand every second counts when itâs spent missing my girl.â
âYouâre so full of it, Munson.â My girl. If he never calls you anything else but his girl for the rest of your lives, you wouldnât complain.
He wraps his arms around your waist from behind, pulling you in so your back is pressed against his chest. âFull of longing and devotion!â
âSshh!â you chastise him lightly through your giggling. âGet in the car, crazy man.â
âCrazy âbout you!â Eddie says, booping your nose. As soon as your fingers wrap around the gearshift, heâs resting his hand atop yours. It trembles slightly.
Tell me what happened. Donât keep any more secrets from me. I wonât judge you or leave you. Iâm your girl, remember?
It takes a few blocks before you finally work up the courage to ask, âIs everything okay?â Itâs a stupid question; you donât get arrested if everythingâs okay, but the alternative is a more straightforward, Why the hell did I have to pick you up from jail?, so you acquiesce.Â
ââM good.â He gives your hand another tiny squeeze and attempts a smile, but it doesnât quite reach his eyes.Â
You sigh, poorly hiding your impatience for answers you need to know. âCan we talk about what happened?âÂ
His slow release of breath is in sync with your foot pressing on the brake pedal as you approach a stop sign. âNot a big deal. Just a misunderstanding.â
âA misunderstanding that led to you getting arrested?â Stop hiding. Stop pretending. Stop acting like this is fine when it clearly isnât. Stop making me feel like you donât trust me. The words get caught behind clenched teeth, threatening to ooze through the gaps.
âYup.â He leans back in his seat and closes his eyes as though giving a sufficient response to end the conversation.
You drive another few minutes before you spot the sign for Lovers Lake in the distance. Thereâs only one surefire way to calm his nerves; whatever it is heâs keeping from you, thereâs a reason he hasnât worked up the courage to say it.Â
Eddie sits up and peers out the window in confusion when you veer to the exit. âWhere are weââ
âYouâll see.â
Parking in a spot secluded by trees and the dark of night, you turn to him and stroke his cheek with your thumb. âCan I make my man feel good?â you coo, taking his earlobe between your teeth and tugging lightly. You can feel the small bump where his piercings used to be.
âShit, baby,â he breathily groans, adjusting the seat so you have ample space to straddle his lap. His hands fly to his belt buckle, undoing it and pulling the leather strip from its loops. Though his pants arenât as tight around him now, you can still see the outline of his now half-hard cock beginning to press against his fly. ââS exactly what I need.â
But it isnât solely the act of sex that he needs, although it would be a farce to imply that he didnât crave the feeling of you wrapped around him. It was the public nature of it; the way that anyone could walk by and see you on top of him. Could see you choosing him. The teacher choosing the Freak.Â
You roll your hips, denim-on-denim creating a delicious friction that draws moans from both you and Eddie. Your lips chastely graze his neck, trailing kisses upwards until you reach the prickly stubble along his jawline.Â
Eddieâs hands grab your ass, claiming it as his. âFeelsâmmfâfeels good,â he grunts, letting out a soft chuckle when he adds, âgonna make me cream my jeans if you keep grinding on me like that.â
âSâokay,â you shrug, maintaining your tempo. You press your lips to his and he whines into your mouth. âJust wanna ease your mind tonight, Eds.â
âYeah, but the face you make when you cum? Christ, babe. Makes it even better for me.â He scoots you off of him for a moment, laughing again when he sees your lower lip jut out. âLet me just grab a condom, you needy little thing.â
You bury your head in the crook of his neck and begin sucking on its supple skin as he fumbles for his wallet. âFine, fine,â you grumble, a teasing lilt in your tone. âThe last thing we need is for people seeing that you knocked me up.â
Eddie freezes beneath you, his wallet falling to the weather-mat with a thud. âWhâŚwhat?â His voice is below a whisper, volume compressed by emotion.Â
âWeâve only been together, like, a month.â Itâs too obvious a point to confuse him. Thereâs no way he really wants a kid with you right now. âWe canât have a babyââ
Eddie vehemently shakes his head, effectively cutting you off. âBut thatâs not what you said.â You see hurt in his eyes as you try to piece together the puzzle. The fact that you canât immediately identify the source adds another element of frustration for both of you. âYou said that we canât have people seeing that I knocked you up. WhyâŚwhy wouldnât you want people knowing that IâŚ?â
The imagined swell of your belly that heâd hoped you proudly show off, mindlessly caressing it as you walk hand-in-hand with him, is now covered with layers of clothing, even in summerâs heat. Youâre tugging a cardigan closed, determined not to let anyone see the shame youâre carrying along with Eddie Munsonâs child.
âI just figured you wouldnât want people talking about you,â you manage, thinking of the rumor that had spread after Harrisâs injury. You bring yourself back to the driverâs seat, and it takes another moment before something else dawns on you. âYou wouldnât be upset by people knowing? I mean, not that weâd, yâknow, have a kid right nowâŚbecause you already have one, and this is all so newâŚâ You clamp your lips together to shut yourself up, having already blabbered on for too long.
Eddie shakes his head, tousling his frizzy curls. âWhy would I be upset? Youâre my girl.â Worry ripples through him, evident through his expression. His doe eyes grow even wider, and he spins his rings around his fingers. One slips and bounces off of the passenger seat, but he doesnât move to retrieve it. âYou still want to be my girl, right?â
âI still want to be your girl,â you confirm, watching his body decompress with relief. âI just donât want to make things even worse than they are. I mean, you canât even tell me why you were in jail tonight. Thatâs a pretty big deal, Eds.â Thereâs a lump in your throat as you force out your feelings. You hate confronting people, hate drawing information from an unwilling party. But Eddie is your boyfriend, and this is serious. âWhy wonât you tell me?â
âI could ask you the same thing,â he mutters, keeping his head on the headrest and eyes trained on in front of him; his unwillingness to look at you serves as an act of defiance. âI had to hear about the PTA meeting from Wayne.â
The contents of your stomach curdle like milk in the sun. âYouâd just told me about your promotion,â you stumble, unable to find footing in your meek protest, âI didnât want toââ
âSo, yesterday? Or today?â he pushes, a tango of anger and hurt dancing in his darkened pupils. âYou couldâve called me.â
You could have; youâd certainly considered it more than once, but you didnât want to bother him. It seemed like such an asinine complaint: Oh, Eddie, a grown adult bullied me, another grown adult, at the PTA meeting. Did I stand up for myself? Nope. Just sat there and tried not to sob like one of the kids I teach. âI thought if you knew what people were saying, you wouldnât want to be with me anymore. Youâd think I was too much of a burden.â
âYou?â Eddie gawps, nearly choking on the word. âYou think that youâre the burden? That youâre the reason why people are talking about this?â People. Not just Carol. The information slips from his lips, but he doesnât catch it. âNah, Sweetheart. In the equation of âTeacherâ plus âFreak,â youâre hardly the problematic variable.â
ââTeacher plus Freak?ââÂ
âTeacher,â he says slowly, pointing to you, âFreak.â He brings his forefinger to his own chest. âIâm kinda used to it; just sucks when it affects other people.â He looks at you through his soft brown eyes. âPeople I care about.â
Youâre unsure how to respond, so you say nothing. You vaguely recall Jess telling you about his high school nickname, but you had no idea it had stuck after all these years.Â
Eddie sighs, shifting his position to get slightly more comfortable. âTonight, I was at the store getting some flowers for you. And, um, I heard Carol and Billy Hargrove talking about how you had to be desperate to be with me. That youâd realize youâre too good for me and leave.â His teeth dig into his bottom lip and he lowers his head. You watch a tear slide down his cheek, and he sucks in a messy breath as he tries to control the dam of emotions threatening to burst.
âToo good for you?â The notion is almost comical, and you have to hold back an incredulous laugh. âToo good for the man who rescued Grandma after she locked herself in her room? Who came to her funeral? Who gave me another chance after I made an ass out of myself?â You use your pointer and middle fingers to tilt his chin upwards until his gaze meets yours. âToo good for the man who would do anything for his son?â
âNo,â Eddie shoots back, âtoo good for the guy who grew up being taunted because he played Dungeons & Dragons instead of basketball. The guy who abandoned his pregnant girlfriend to go on tour. Who treated you like shit just to avoid getting close to you. WhoâŚwho got arrested for accidentally taking flowers from Bradleyâs because heâd stolen from them so much that no one believed him when he said it wasnât on purpose.â He recalls swiping candy bars, jars of peanut butter, and the occasional six-pack of Pabst during his rebellious teenage years. After heâd schlepped back to Hawkins, proverbial tail tucked between his legs, there was more than one occasion where heâd ripped diapers from their boxes and tucked them into his jacket pocket, walking as casually as he could until he was a safe enough distance to exhale and run.
You take a sharp breath in. âThatâs what happened tonight?â
âYeah,â he says; the admission is a sack of bricks being lifted from his chest. âThose schmucks got in my head, and I walked out the store with the flowers like a fuckinâ idiot.â He replays the scene in his head, inwardly cringing at his desperation to flee the premises and inadvertently drawing everyoneâs attention to him. He starts to laugh, but anger, sadness, and relief all brew together and the dam bursts completely. One tear multiples to two, four, eight, until heâs simultaneously choking on sobs and laughter, the overlapping emotions wreaking havoc on his nervous system.
âFuck, âm sorry,â he manages through another half-laugh half-sob. He swipes at his cheeks with open palms, and you reach for the travel box of Kleenex you keep in the glove compartment and hand him a tissue. âThanks.â
âYou donât ever need to apologize to me for crying,â you murmur, barely audible as you press a kiss into his mess of curls just behind his left ear. âI wantâI need you to be able to show me what youâre feeling.â Eddie blows his nose, loud and honking, and your lips turn up into a small smile. âWhy do we let them get to us?â you wonder aloud, a question more for you than for him.
âI was thinking about that,â Eddie muses, stuffing the used tissue into his jacket pocket. Heâll try and remember to toss it later, but part of him knows heâll find it there tomorrow. âLike, I didnât give a damn what they said about me back in high school, but now, as an adult, I do?â He takes a deep breath through his mouth. âAnd I realizedâŚitâs because I never cared about what they thought of me. Not really. But, fuck, I care about what you think of me.â He swallows before stroking your cheek. âI want to be enough for you.â
You kiss the tip of his nose, letting your lips linger there longer than necessary to ensure the feeling of belonging becomes entrenched in his pores. âYouâre enough, Eddie. Youâve always been enough.â Your hands find his, and you lace your fingers together. âI have an idea. Why donât we grab some takeout, maybe pick up a bottle of wine, and bring it back to my place.â You immediately worry that youâve proven his point of not wanting to be seen with him, so you quickly backtrack. âWe can still go out to dinner; I just figuredâŚafter the night you hadâŚâ
He silences you with a kiss of his own, nose nudging the side of yours. âIâd love that.â Before you can start the car again, he says, âwhat Carol said at the meetingâŚdid it really make you think I wouldnât want to be with you?â
You nod solemnly, breaking his heart all over again. âYou already have so much on your plate. I didnât want to be another problem to deal with.â
Eddieâs expression hardens, but his frustration isnât directed towards you. Itâs for anyone who has ever made you feel like loving you is a chore. He does the only thing he can think of doing: he takes your face in his hands, fingers tucked behind the smooth skin of your ears, and peppers your face in a flurry of kisses.
âEddie!â you cry out through a fit of giggles. Your eyes squeeze together as his lips tickle your forehead, your cheeks, your nose, your lips, your chin.Â
He only pulls away to take a breath, and when he does, heâs smiling through shiny eyes as he continues holding your face. âYou are not a problem. Never.â He pauses, collecting his thoughts. âWe make each other happy. And if anyone tries to fuck with that, weâll justâŚsic Harris on them.â
The gray clouds that were scattered across your brain dissipate at the mere idea of the boy charging at Billy and Carol like a miniature rhinoceros. Insecurity still hovers over you, waiting for the perfect blend of sadness and vulnerability to strike, but itâs not quite as heavy as it was before.Â
You arenât too much for Eddie, and Eddie is enough for you.
[3.7K] Eddie Munson x shy fem!reader: a line cook au.
Jimâs Midnight Grill wasnât the magical place the name made it sound like.
In fact, it was worse at night. Hawkins' only diner sat on the outskirts of town, just before the road that took you out alongside the cornfields. In the height of a sunny day, the water tower cast a shadow over the old building and the gas station next door only had one working pump.
The leather booths were constantly sticky, the table tops grainy with spilled salt, but if you made your visit on a Thursday night after nine, milkshakes were two for one. The back alley was littered with cigarette butts, graffiti on the walls telling you who to call for a good timeâ and someone called King Steve used Farah Fawcett hairspray? The regulars were permanent fixtures on the bar stools, coffee stains on the counter in front of them, stolen sugar packets in their pockets, frowns on their faces.
The staff didnât want to be there, the owner refused to replace the flickering lights and the cook had a bad attitude and liked to communicate with heavy sighs and eye rolls. But he made a mean grilled cheese. The walk in freezer was reserved for the pitiful weekly deliveries and breakdowns, a stolen kiss or two. Or three, or four. But no one liked to tackle the clogged sink and god forbid anyone change the TV channelâ Mr Creel always had something to say about it.
âââââ
Honestly, Hawkins wasnât your first choice when you decided to move to a smaller place. The idea of a big city was all fine and well until you lived a year in Chicago, the dream of a brownstone apartment quickly disappearing when you realised jobs were hard to come by and finding friends was even harder. Living alone wasnât all that fun, especially when your landlord hinted at sexual favours to justify late payments and he didnât care to fix the leaking radiator in your bedroom. The nights were never quiet and the city hardly slept, but instead of neon lights and late night bodega runs, you lay awake on the broken spring in your bed and flinched at the sound of backfiring cars and people arguing on the street below.
It was lonely, living somewhere so big and busy and always eating dinner by yourself. So you sold the old car you didnât really use and cried enough that your landlord eventually gave in and ripped up your lease that still had four months to go. Packing your stuff was an easy enough job, hardly enough belongings to fill the duffel bag youâd dragged with you. You dug into the back of your freezer for the wad of cash your grandma gave you, threw it into the bag and grabbed your greyhound ticket and decided youâd get off the bus when the skyline turned a little more green. When the buildings shrunk, when the smog lifted and when wildflowers sprouted from between the cracks in the sidewalk.
So you rolled into Hawkins before the day broke, way before the sun crept up over the quarry, before the small town came alive. The apartment youâd found was the same tiny size as the one youâd had in Chicago but it was cleaner and the carpet was new. Nothing leaked. Nothing smelled weird. The parking lot was filled with cars and none of them had bullet holes in the side, your trash can wasnât on fire and god, god, the first neighbour you saw - an elderly woman who was walking with a yorkie on a leash - smiled at you.
She smiled at you.
So despite the lack of twenty four hour stores and pizza parlours, Hawkins was already looking up. There wasnât much on the Main Street, a library, a tiny bakery run by a couple who offered you a free croissant as a welcome to town gift. There was an outdoor pool with sun bleached bunting across its chain link fence, an arcade next to a video store, a high school that was derelict due to the summer months. The larger houses across from the park were lined with cherry trees, neat lawns with white mailboxes and flowers under the windows and suddenly Hawkins was a million miles away from Chicago and the buzz of traffic and car horns.
The librarian let you print out some resumes the day after youâd settled in, and you found your way around town by asking kind strangers, buying a coffee and a breakfast sandwich in exchange for directions out of your neighbourhood. It was easy to stroll along the sidewalk with an iced latte and your headphones around your neck, blue skies above you and the sound of sprinklers in their yards, breathing in air that didnât smell like diesel. You found a man by a rundown garage, white haired and tired looking, mechanic scrubs tied around his waist as he smoked a cigarette.
You took a deep breath, and then another one, smiling politely - warily - as you approached. The man lifted a brow at you, a little suspicious, but he held the burning stub away from you, smoke billowing in the opposite direction.
âYou lost, kid?â
You were. Just a little.
âIâm looking for Jimâs, uh,â you glanced down at the pink flyer that had been pinned on the library's notice board. âJimâs Midnight Grill? I got told it was out this way, butââ
You looked around, noting that there wasnât much out this way. The busiest part of Hawkins was behind you, tidy sidewalks giving way to long roads out of town, a lone bus stop by the garage, a farm in the distance across the street. You squinted against the sun and shrugged.
âYou wanna keep going for ânother mile or so, itâs just before the town sign,â the man pointed further out where the cornfields were overgrown and the sun faded billboard told everyone âthanks for visiting Hawkins!â You werenât sure the bus ran that far out. âJim should be there, but if heâs not, jusâ ask for Eddie, heâll sort you out.â
âEddie,â you nodded, peering into the distance. You couldnât see another building, but this man didnât seem like he was lying. âRight, okay. Just keep to the road?â
The man nodded and he cracked a smile, small but soft. He stubbed out the end of his cigarette and gestured to an old pick up that looked like it had seen better days. âYou needinâ a ride?â
The urge to say yes was strong, especially after walking all the way from your apartment as the heat soared. It snuck up on you like a slow roll, going from pleasant to warm to too hot, far too quickly. Beads of sweat clung to your skin underneath your sundress but you shook your head, shyness crawling up the back of your neck. Accepting a ride from a stranger didnât seem the wisest idea, no matter how kind he seemed.
âItâs okay,â you told him. âThank you, though. I appreciate the help.â
The man smiled again, a little bigger this time, crows feet crinkling, the sunlight catching the white of his five oâclock shadow. âThatâs alright, kid. Jusâ tell âem Wayne sent you, yeah? Follow the road, youâll see Forest Hills - the trailer park - keep going a lilâ ways and itâs right across the road.â
It turned out Wayne was right.
You kept walking, the heat soaring, the fields on either side of you growing taller but you bit back a smile at the sight of the wildflowers that snuck through the cracks in the concrete. Eventually they gave way to a trailer park, just as Wayne side, a quaint place that hummed with generators and had lines of laundry between each mobile home. Across the road sat a sandy lot, a diner in the middle, a neon sign letting passer-bys know theyâd arrived at Jimâs Midnight Grill. Except the ârâ was loose, hanging from its wire and buzzing blue and purple.
Cats patrolled along the roadside, going from trailer doorsteps to the back alley of the diner, hoping and waiting for a free meal that they all knew would eventually come. You stopped to pet an orange kitten, a little scruffy looking thing but cute all the same, your CV clutched in one hand as you peered suspiciously at the front of the restaurant. It looked too quiet, like it wasnât open yet. But there was a black van parked along the side of the building and some steam leaked from a vent on the roof, so you opened the front door.
The bell jingled but the patrons at the dining bar who sat on their stools didnât move, didnât turn to look. The place was nearly empty, some people nursing a coffee, some staring blankly at the buzzing television screen that was mounted in the corner. No one stood at the host desk, the menus stacked messily, the phone off the hook. In fact, there wasnât a server to be seen as you made your way to the counter. You grimaced as you leaned on the surface, elbows sticky, avoiding spilled coffee the best you could. You waited, resume still in your hand, patience on your features.
No one came.
So you rang the bell that was on the bar top for the very purpose of gaining attention, but the man beside you glared at the noise. Still, no one came. The fans overhead squeaked and whirred, the TV fizzed with bad signal and from somewhere behind the open serving hatch, you heard the clatter of pots and pans. You tried to crane your neck to see through the window, steam and smoke billowing from it, the slight shadow of maybe a person moving through it.
The person swore, dropped a skillet and swore again.
You leaned in further, elbows on spilled salt grains and drops of ketchup, trying to gain a better view into the kitchen from the bar top. âHey, âscuse me? Can Iâ can someoneââ
You huffed as the figure moved out of sight, falling back onto the stool that squeaked and the man next to you snorted into his coffee cup. You frowned and took further action, sundress falling back around your thighs as you hopped off the chair and made your way to the side of the counter that lifted up. No one paid you any mind, no one at all, but you still hesitated before ducking under the bar and hovering by the hatch. You could smell garlic and sage and something a little sweet now you were closer, the scents of the kitchen winning over the stale coffee, cigarette smoke and engine oil that clung to the patrons clothes behind you.
You peered into the kitchen, your paperwork still clutched to your chest. It wasnât much cooler in here than it was outside, the AC unit broken and the fans working overtime to combat the heat. The kitchen seemed empty now, a stovetop still on despite no one to supervise it, flames licking high up the sides of a steel pot, big enough for you to fit both feet in. There was something inside bubbling, foam rising to the top and chopped courgette and red onions sat on the workbench beside it, abandoned. A radio played, staticky and fuzzy, an old sixties tune floating out to mix with the smoke.
âCome a little bit closer, youâre my kind of man. So big and so strong, come a little bit closer, Iâm all alone.â
âH-hello?â You cleared your throat and braced yourself to speak a little louder. Stronger. Braver. âHello?â
No one answered. In fact, it seemed like the entire diner was run by ghosts, no waiting staff, hosts or cooks to be seen. Maybe youâd imagined the silhouette in the smoke, maybe the heat was finally getting to you.
âNo customers back here, what dâyou think youâre doinâ?â
You startled, jumping back a little only to knock an elbow into a half filled coffee pot, the brown liquid thankfully lukewarm but it still spilled across the countertop, soaking into stray packets of sugar and scattered napkins.
âOh, fuck, uhââ you grabbed at whatever dry napkins were left, hurriedly mopping up the spill before it dripped to the floor. Old coffee dotted the red and cream tiles, into the gaps between your sandals. You grimaced and looked up, only half paying attention. âShit, Iâm really sorry, I justâ there was no one there andââ
You stopped, swallowing hard, cheeks hot, eyes wide. The person in front of you was half hidden behind the serving hatch, but he was scowling through the window with a ladle in his hand. Big brown eyes, unnervingly expressive and dark hair to match, unruly looking curls that were pulled back with an elastic band in a bun that wouldnât have passed a health inspection.
A boy, unfairly pretty, and annoyed looking with tattoos peeking out from his chef whites, a black paisley printed bandana knotted around his neck. There was a furrow between his brow, lines etched there so deep that it made you think they were a permanent fixture on his handsome face.
ââno customers behind the cash desk, sweetheart, you look bright enough to understand that.â
Your mouth fell open, a burn creeping across your cheeks. Annoyance settled in your chest but you realised you werenât quite brave enough to do anything about it. So you lifted your resume and slapped it on the hot steel ledge that separated the kitchen from the coffee bar. âNo oneâs working,â you tried to explain, gesturing with one hand to the empty diner behind you. âI rang the bellââ
âWhat does it look like Iâm doing?â The boy scoffed, raising a tattooed forearm to wipe away the sheer layer of sweat from his brow. âHavinâ a spa day? Shit, no one rings the damn bell, donât you know that?â
You scrambled for a response, the burn on your face growing hotter, an awful clawing feeling coming across your chest. You swallowed, your throat tight, but you pointed at your CV once more. âIâm here for the job opening. I need to speak to Jim? About the kitchen porter role?â
The stranger laughed, a breathy thing that you didnât think was supposed to come across as mean as it did, but it stung all the same. You shrunk a little, a hardly seen thing as the boy turned his head to check on whatever was bubbling in the big pot. âLook, sweetheart, I donât wanna be a dick about it, but uh, I donât think youâre cut out for the kitchen - sorry.â He turned back to you, a slightly more apologetic look on his face instead of the frown. âYou understand, right?â
You were speechless, just for a second. Blinking away the confusion, you made noise of protest as the boy started to move away. Your hand touched his bicep and he swivelled back, scowling once more. You snatched your hand away, glancing at your fingertips as if the ink from his tattoos would have stained them black.
âSorryâ itâs just, I, I need a job.â You swallowed, hoping none of the customers could hear your desperate plea. âI just moved into town and honestly, Iâll take anything, like anything. Iâm supposed to talk to Jimâ or Eddie?â
The boy seemed to mull over your words for a second or two, a passing of sympathy or something just as kind coming over his features. He sighed and shrugged, turning away to stir the pot before it boiled over and he shouted at you through the smoke and steam. Not meanly, just enough for his voice to be heard over the music, the hissing of the stove, the hum of the freezer. âI dunno where Jim is, sorry.â
You deflated, sliding your stack of papers off of the ledge and back to your chest. You tried not to appear too frustrated as you asked, âwhat about Eddie? Someone - a guy, at the garage - he told me to ask for Eddie.â
The ladle clanged against the pot, some soup - or maybe stew - spilling out the sides. The boy frowned at the mess, dragging a rag over the spots before he glanced up at you. You tried to smile, tried to tamp down the watery doe eyes you knew you couldnât help but have on show, but you felt desperate. Leaving Chicago with nothing more than the bag on your back and no plans was suddenly seeming like an awful idea.
âSorry,â the stranger said again. âI dunno an Eddie.â
âââââ
Sitting in a sticky leather booth in the corner of Jimâs Midnight Grill for another hour turned out to be worth it.
Just before two oâclock, a man walked in, greeting the same customers who were still nursing their coffees with a muttered âhello,â a familiar thing that everyone grunted back at. He was a tall man, broad shouldered with a moustache and a shaved head that was covered with a battered wide brimmed hat. He looked more cowboy than business owner, checked shirt dirt covered boots and all, but you heard someone call him Jim and you were up and running after him.
Your sneakers stuck to the linoleum tiles, the âshtick shtick shtickâ of your soles pattering between the aisles of empty tables until you caught up with the man just before he disappeared into the kitchen. He raised his brows at your sudden appearance at his elbow, wide eyed and hopeful as you clutched the same resume youâd tried to hand the cook, the pieces of paper stained with coffee now.
The man lifted his chin to a small table before you could speak, gesturing to two chairs by the window. You startled, wondering what was happening as he pulled out a seat and pointed at you to sit in the other one.
âYouâre new, right?â The man - Jim - fumbled with a packet of cigarettes, most of them crushed and bent, but he found a good one to lift to his lips. He lit it and blew smoke upwards, staining the already yellowing ceiling. âHere, in town?â
You nodded, unsure how he knew that. You guessed that news travelled fast in a place as small as Hawkins, so you decided to elaborate for the sake of talking. âUh, yeah. From Chicago. Iâm inquiring about the, um, the porter job?â
âWhatâs your name?â Jim leaned forward in his chair and poked gently at your forearms. âYou donât got a lot of scars, you done soft jobs? No kitchen stuff before?â
The AC unit kicked in and rattled a vent above you as you stared at the man, trying to work out what he meant. Stammering, you told him your name and passed over a resume, pointing out your last few jobs, doing your best to try and make them sound more professional than they actually were.
Librarian's assistant.
Barista. For two weeks.
Cashier at a knock off Chuck E. Cheese.
âI guess theyâre what you could call, uh,â you squinted Jim, floundering for the word heâd used, âsoft jobs. But Iâve got a scar on my knee from pulling a kid out of the ball pit. Heâd come straight from little league, he still had his spikes on and there was a considerable amount of blood even thââ
Jim stopped your spiel by jamming a thumb back towards the kitchen hatch. You could still see the boy there, pretty and scowling all the same, a dark curl falling from his hair band to fall over his cheek. You watched him blow it away and flip something in a skillet, the sizzle of it just heard over the music, the bad TV in the corner of the bar.
âYou ever worked a kitchen?â
You shook your head, stomach sinking. âFake it tilâ you make it,â failed you once before, and the owner of the coffee shop in Lincoln Park quickly realised you were wasting both your times when she discovered you didnât know the difference between a mocha and a latte. âNo, sir.â
âOur line cook is real particular âbout who we put in his kitchen with him,â Jim pointed to the boy, whoâd now been joined by someone else. Another male, one with even longer hair, sleek and dark and they seemed to be arguing over blocks of cheese. âNow I donât think itâs a good idea to throw you in thereââ
Dread bubbled in your stomach. If you didnât manage to land this job, you werenât sure where else to look. A small town brought on few opportunities, and youâd already exhausted most of the businesses on Main Street. âSir, please, Iââ
ââbut there is a waitressing gig available.â Jim frowned as he tried to remember the details. âFull time, forty odd hours if you donât mind doing lates.â
âYes!â You blurted out the answer too loud, loud enough for the customers to turn away from the TV screen for a second or two. The boys in the kitchen peered out the hatch, one curious, one annoyed. âYes, sorry, yes. Iâll take it, thank you.â
Jim nodded and stubbed out the amber end of his cigarette in an ashtray beside the sauce bottles. âEasy enough job, minimum wage, you keep any tips you make.â He listed off each point on his fingers. âYou start tomorrow.â
You could only nod back, eager and grateful. âOf course, yeah, sure. Uhâ do I needâ?â
Jim waved you off, already standing as he lit up another cigarette. âJust come by for eight, Eddieâll sort you out with a uniform, locker, that kinda stuff.â
You frowned, confused. Looking around the quiet diner, you wondered if there was someone you hadnât noticed before, but the number of visible staff members remained the same. The two boys in the kitchen, the pretty cool who youâd spoken to back at the stove, tasting its contents with a teaspoon.
âUh,â you coughed awkwardly, feeling stupid. âI thoughtâ I thought there wasnât an Eddie who worked here?â You pointed warily to the boy with the messy curls, the black tattoos across his exposed forearms, he was staring at you, like he knew you were talking about him. He was scowling. âHe said there wasnât.â
The noise and heat of the diner and the summer outside didnât do anything to diminish the embarrassment you felt at Jimâs next words. His gaze followed to where you were pointing and snorted. âKid, that is Eddie.â
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