Tiger Club (complete version)
Steddie || 6k words || Modern AU single dad Steve and teacher Eddie || rated: M (for very very light d/s undertones at the end NO EXPLICIT CONTENT they don't even kiss you honor it's ok) fluff and humor
~~~
Eddieās not usually a teacher to bitch about his job. He loves getting his little kiddos excited about reading and story-telling, and surprisingly, teaching is just as fulfilling as heād hoped itād be.
This year, however, he drew the proverbial short straw for extracurricular activities. When he was asked to coach soccer he supposes he couldāve politely declined instead of gagging in the middle of the teacherās meeting, embarrassing the new Principal and causing the history teacher to actually vomit. Empathetic vomitingā Eddieās a teacher and heās still learning something new every day.
Does he really seem like the kind of guy who coaches sports? No, of course not. Heāll leave that to the gorgeous and talented math teacher Ms. Cunningham, and the unbearable meathead Phys. Ed. teacher Mr. Carver, who wonāt stop drooling over her like a jock peacocking for the head cheerleader. A relatively adept assessment since Chrissy coaches the Little Tumblers gymnastics team and Jason coaches Tiger Cubs basketball.
Regardless, because of Eddieās little stunt, heās been relegated to alternating his after school hours between Tiger Club, and detention. The two most boring extracurriculars for kiddos and teachers alike. All he does is wait for parents to pick their kids up, and theyāre either too busy demanding to know why theyāre child is in detention, or screaming for them to get in the car, to stop and say well hello Mr. Munson, thank you for watching little Joanie today. The small consolation to his predicament is he alternates each week with Ms. Cunningham.
When Chrissy started at Hawkins Middle last fall, Eddie knew exactly what to expect: an ex-high school jock turned girlās sportsball coach, hoping to relive the glory days. Someone whoād be cocky, self-righteous, and bitchy.
To his surprise, she turned out to be quiet and withdrawn, separating herself from the rest of the staff. Heād thought sheād warm up soon enough, but when she still hadnāt made any friends by winter break, Eddie decided to do something about it.
He adopted her as one of his sheepā a practice of gathering misfits heās continued into adulthood. She looked skeptical when he first invited her out for happy hour, wary after weeks of Jasonās obnoxious flirting.
Two margaritas later, heād learned Chrissy had come out to her family whoād then promptly disowned her for her sinful ways. She moved out, got her degree, and took the first job offered to her at Hawkins Middle.
Eddie couldnāt be more grateful for her presence in his life. Chrissy is his other half and she seems to feel the same. Sheās not cocky or arrogant, although sheās definitely bitchy, but in a way which perfectly matches him. Chris knows how to take him down a peg, and he knows how to lift her up. They balance each other inside and out.
The other staff, however, see them as an odd pair solely because of their severely opposing aesthetics. Where Eddieās etched in hard edges and dark colors, donning leather jackets and a myriad of old concert t-shirts, Chrissy flows in soft lines and pastels, garnered in sundresses and cardigans with the occasional jersey for game days.
Many of the staff also love to gossip about a possible secret relationship between the pairā opposites attract and all of that nonsenseā which actually works well for them. Better for everyone to think theyāre sleeping together rather than the rural people of Indiana discovering queers working around their young, impressionable children.
From their first happy hour, theyād started the Friday tradition of swiping dating apps and bitching about their love lives over margaritas and nachos. Itās one of the best parts of Eddieās week.
And itās Friday, which means they should be huddled in their corner booth right now, one shot of tequila each under their belts. But here he is, standing outside next to the jungle gym at 4pm waiting for the twins to be picked up by their dad.
Go figure the guyās late. Again.
According to Chrissy, this guy Steve has been late every day this weekā and itās only the first week of school. Heās probably one of those parents who thinks teachers work to serve them, like they donāt have their own lives outside of school. Itās Friday for shitās sake, heās hungry and he needs a smoke.
āChris, this is ridiculous. Detention ends at 3:30, same as Tiger Club. Are we just going to keep letting this guy get away with this?ā Eddieās fingers twitch towards the vape in his back pocket. Obviously he doesnāt smoke in front of the kids, but theyāre supposed to be gone by now.
āEddie, just relax, okay? Heās a nice guy, and it sounds like heās a single dad with a chaotic job. Try to cut him some slack.ā She gives him a reassuring smile, knocking her elbow into his side. āDonāt worry weāll get some salsa in you and youāll be good as new,ā she snarks.
He shoots her a seething glare but she just smiles at him and smoothes out her sundress against the summer breeze. As Eddie crafts the perfect retortā it was going to be a really good one tooā a maroon BMW SUV pulls up to the curb.
Fucking finally, Eddie thinks. If Chris isnāt going to say anything to this guy about his chronic tardiness, then he will.
They both start towards the car when a tall woman with a dark blonde bob and a pale freckled face steps out of the driverās seat. Sheās wearing a cropped Hozier t-shirt and oversized cotton overalls covered in pins. Eddie notices a small white, pink, and orange flag next to a pin of a cartoon ghost with boobs that just says āboooooobiesā. He likes her already.
Eddie turns to ask Chrissy who this mystery woman is, but it seems sheās also clocked the pins.
āYouāre not Steve,ā Chrissy shouts. She winces as the woman arches her brow at the abrupt outburst. āI just mean that Steve has been here every day, and thatās his car, but youāre not Steve. I mean, obviously youāre not Steve, youāre you. You know youāre not Steve, you donāt need me to tell you that.ā
The following silence is solid and impenetrable. Eddieās never seen Chrissy this flustered before. Her bambi eyes shine wide and bright, paired with a hot pink flush climbing up to her ears. Sheās fiddling with the buttons on her lavender cardigan and it seems like she canāt decide if she should stare directly at the woman in front of her, or very intensely in absolutely any other direction.
Not-Steveās growing smile and matching blush tells him maybe heās not the only one whoās noticed Chrissyās little crush.
Interesting.
Just as Eddie steps in to save his friend from mortal anguish, heās interrupted by high-pitched screeches from the playground.
āAuntie Robbie,ā the twins cry in unison. Itād be creepy if they werenāt so goddamned adorable.
āMy munchkins!ā The kids crash into her, the three of them falling to the ground in a heap of limbs. āOof okay letās make sure you donāt take me out before I can get you twerps home.ā
He only knows of the twins from what Chrissy has told him this week, since she gets to see all of the incoming sixth graders, whereas Eddie teaches seventh and eighth grade. Working with younger kids is great, donāt get him wrong, but the available reading material for his literature units only gets better with age.
The curly-haired boy scrambles up to collect his Minecraft hat from where itād fallen off in the scuffle. Heās small, hyperactive as all hell, and missing his front teeth, which Eddie can only tell because of the kidās unbridled megawatt smile.
While the boy raves about his school day, the young red headed girl rolls her eyes at his antics, but itās easy to spot the fondness underneath. Her two copper braids are adorned with small butterfly clips, matching the fake butterfly tattoos on her left wrist. In contrast to her more girlish accessories, sheās wearing a Hawkinās Hospital softball team shirt which has to be a menās medium, at least. Itās been tucked into her hot pink shorts, but it drowns her nonetheless.
In short, theyāre both absolutely adorable.
When Eddie turns his attention from the kids, Chrissyās finishing gently explaining the pick up times. Thank God.
āYeah, sorry about that,ā Robin sheepishly replies. āHis shifts have been really hectic this week and heās on call today soāā
āWait,ā the girl interrupts. āDoes that mean he wonāt be home for dinner?ā She moves to stand away from the mess of tangled limbs, scowling to hide the obvious hurt in her eyes.
āMax, honestly Iām not sure. I know heās trying really hard to change his shifts, so hopefully it wonāt be forever. Okay?ā The reassurance seems to ease a bit of the tension in Maxās shoulders and scrunched brow. āBut to make up for it, weāre going to have dinner at Aunt Nancy and Uncle Johnnyās house. I think the Sinclairs will be there too.ā
āOoooooo,ā the boy teases, a shit-eating grin on his face, āLucas will be there!ā
āShut up, Dustin!ā Her fingers reach up to fidget with the small heart pendant on her necklace, while a light blush coasts across her freckles.
āOkay kiddos thatās enough, letās get you out of here so your wonderfully patient teachers can actually start their weekend,ā Robin replies, smiling while coaxing the twins towards the car. āIām sorry again for being late, I swear it wonāt happen again.ā
āTotally cool, donāt worry about it,ā Chrissy replies, a little too casually. The scarlet that invaded her chest and ears has receded to a dusting of pale pink on her cheeks. Robinās smile grows wider as the two women stare at each other, cartoon hearts and flying babies in diapers wielding bow and arrows floating around their heads.
Eddie clears his throatā loudly.
āOH, right,ā Robin starts. She reaches up to fiddle one of her many pins as she finally notices Eddieās presence. āI should let you get back to your, to your uhh, him, I mean.ā
āMr. Munson! Heās just Mr. Munson.ā Eddie can actually see the wheels in her brain spinning faster than they can take off. Itās cute, heās just trying not to feel a little slighted. āHeās my coworker. My friend, actually, heās my best friend, Eddie.ā
āOh,ā Robin says again, more relaxed this time. āItās nice to meet you. Iām sorry if youāve had to wait for Steve too.ā
āNo, Iāve been doing detention, but Iām sure Iāll get to meet him next week. Iāve heard a bit about him from Chrissy. Chaotic work schedule, single dad, twins,ā Eddie says, gesturing to Max and Dustin talking amongst themselves.
āYeah,ā Robin absently draws the word out, eyes roaming over Eddie top to bottom.
Surprisingly, he feels himself blush. Heās not even into women but damn has it been awhile since heās been checked out so blatantly. One of the many queer struggles he and Chris have bonded over is how difficult dating is in Bumfuck Nowhere, USA. So other than the occasional weekend fling in the city for Eddie, and one five-month long-distance relationship for Chrissy, neither have seen any recent action.
Sue him for getting flustered at being so obviously ogled, even if she is clearly into Chrissy. That just leaves Eddie wondering why heās being visibly raked over by a random lesbian.
āSo, Eddie, you said youāll be here next week, yeah? When Steveās here for pick up,ā she asks, with innocent curiosity in her voice but a glint of something suspicious in her eyes.
āUmm yeah,ā he says, very eloquently, āI did just say that.ā
āGood! Iāll make sure Steveās definitely here next week to grab the kids. He should meet all of his kidsā teachers.ā
Before Eddie can correct herā heās not their teacherā Robin shoots him a coy smile and a wink while turning to leave. The kids say their goodbyes, scrambling into the car, and as it pulls away from the curb Dustin rolls down his window to wave as they drive off.
Eddie stands in stunned silence next to his unusually quiet best friend, the two slowly processing the whirlwind of whatever the fuck just happened.
āWell,ā Chrissy says, a shell-shocked smile on her face, āI guess we have something to talk about over margs.ā
āYeah,ā he agrees, still reeling after the odd interaction, āI guess we do.ā
~~~
Weeks go by, and Eddie always seems to miss Steveās pick up days. Chrissyās only seen him a few times, but both her and Eddie have been privileged with the presence of almost every other adult family member in the twinsā lives.
Aunt Robin picks them up most days. She always feigns exasperation at Dustinās boundless energy and Maxās sassy jokes, but laughs every time they tackle her to the ground. Eddie was surprised to find out she actually lives with the kids and their mysterious father. He considered asking her more about the situation, but decided it wasnāt his business.
However, he did find out from Chrissy that Robin and Steve went to the same high school but ran in different crowds. The two reconnected working at Hawkins Hospital, Robin as an interpreter and Steve as a paramedic. They bonded over a particularly difficult patient whoād come in through Emergency and didnāt want someone like Robin working with him, not realizingā as Robin had jokedā that Steve was someone like Robin too.
The more Eddie learns about the duo, the more it reminds him of his relationship with Chrissy. Itās at least a small comfort to know theyāre not alone in this backwards town.
Aunt Nancy and Uncle Jonathan are the next most frequent visitors. He learned Nancy is a journalist at the Hawkins Post, but is looking to get hired working remotely at a bigger paper like The Chicago Times or Indianapolis Journal. Jonathan is a free-lance photographer, sometimes working for Nancy or the Post, but mostly shoots weddings and family photos. They seem nice enough, although he once caught Jonathan checking him out in the same way Robin had, glancing between Eddie and his own wife with a smirk on his face.
The nerve of these people checking him out, leaving him flushed and spluttering when they arenāt even interested.
Hell, he even got to meet Dustin and Maxās grandparents before meeting their mysterious and elusive dad.
āMunson,ā Jim Hopper, Hawkins Chief of Police, the twinsā adopted grandfather, scowled at him. He looked about the same as the last time Eddie had seen him, maybe a few more greys in his mustache and lines around his eyes. Easier to see the fine details when Eddieās not cuffed in the backseat making faces at him in the rearview mirror.
Jesus Christ, is he lucky Hopper only ever brought him back home to Wayne for dealing instead of throwing him in a jail cell for the weekend. Eddie was twenty the last time the Chief picked him up, almost a decade ago now. He practically tossed Eddie in the backseat, drove them both out to the quarry, sat him down, handed him a beer, and explained in fine detail the differences between being a juvenile delinquent and an actual felon. Needless to say Eddie quit dealing and decided his calling was more educational.
āOh Hop, leave the poor boy alone.ā The small woman next to them playfully back-hands the Chiefās beer belly to get him to back off. āIām Joyce, the kidsā grandma. And you must be Mr. Munson! Weāve heard so much about you.ā
āNice to meet you, Mrs. Hopper,ā he says, unsure of how to navigate this extremely awkward interaction. The Chiefās stern glare hasnāt left Eddieās face since he stepped out of the car. āI, uhh, wasnāt aware that you had family, Chief?ā
The man grunts, but uncrosses his arms, shoving one hand in his front pocket and wrapping the other around his wife. āSteveās not my son, but Iāve been looking after that boy since I picked him up for his first speeding ticket. Just a few years before the kids, back when he was dating Nancy.ā
āWait, wait, wait a second,ā Eddie interrupts, shocked āNancy, as in Auntie Nancy and Uncle Jonathan?ā
āJonathanās my boy,ā Joyce answers Eddieās slack-jawed confusion. āNancy and Jonathan met just after her and Steve broke up, but theyāre all still good friends, obviously.ā
āYeah, obviously.ā Eddie zones out a bit, trying to connect the dots in the tangled web of Max and Dustin Harringtonās family life. āWait, wouldnāt that make Steve my age? And if you raised himāā he points to Hopper accusinglyā āthen that means he went to school here. With me. So why donāt I know him?ā
But Hopperās already shaking his head. āKid went to the private school two towns over. Parents have an estate on the opposite side of town from Forest Hills, just barely inside my jurisdiction. Iām not surprised you two didnāt cross paths, he was only ever here for sports, whichāā he gestures at Eddieās everything, and yeah, Eddie gets it. But an estate?
This is the most information heās been able to dig up so far. He looks back to the playground where Chrissy is still trying to rally the twinsā spilled bags. Itās an opportunity Eddie refuses to pass on.
āAnd the twins?ā He turns back and just catches the end of a silent conversation between the couple, eyeing each other while glancing at Eddie. They stop when they notice him watching, and Hop sighs.
āDustin and Max came around just after his senior year. The kid was set up for a full-ride to Indy on a swim scholarship his dad paid for. The mom was a girl he met at a party, and he didnāt see her again until she dropped them off on his doorstep. Parents kicked him out, then I took them in. Same week I picked you up for the last time,ā Hop adds on with a laugh, like this entire conversation is chock full of cosmic coincidence. āWhat a hell of a week.ā
Eddie tumbles the new information in his head over and over throughout the next few days. He feels himself growing bitter that someone like Steve Harrington exists. Someone who sounds too good to be true. Fake, like the many charming princes and noble knights heās woven into his campaigns over the years. Except itās hard to deny when itās not just the kids, and Auntie Robin, Uncle Jonathan and Aunt Nancy, or hell, even the grandparents.
Itās Chrissy. Every time Chrissy gets to talk to Steve, she raves about him until Eddie starts fake gagging just to get her to stop. She typically rolls her eyes, but heās sick of hearing about how great this guy is and at this point, heās not even sure if he wants to meet him. No oneās this great.
āDonāt you think itās weird,ā Eddie rants, like he has been for the past ten minutes, āthat he canāt even be bothered to pick up his own children? And itās like youāve said, Chris, even when he does pick them up heās always late! What kind of father is that, really?ā
Heās halfway through his second margarita, and heās lost track of the conversation entirely, not sure how they transitioned from Chrissyās hinge matches to Steve fucking Harrington. Again.
Chrissy frowns at him, and yeah, he mightāve went a bit too far there. Maybe heās a little sensitive about topics revolving around bad dads.
āJust because youāre hungry doesnāt mean you get to be a dick, Eddie,ā she shoots back, pushing the basket of chips closer to him as they wait for their food. āItās not my fault you decided to switch to detention yesterday and missed him because you were cold. I told you it was going to be chilly out and you still didnāt wear a jacket.ā
āI was wearing a jacket, Chris,ā he pouts.
āAn actual, warm jacket. Not that threadbare, leather monstrosity you got from Goodwill for ten dollars. Just because you cover the holes with patches doesnāt mean the holes arenāt there.ā
He lets out an undignified shriek, but she continues on to the actual conversation, used to ignoring his dramatics. āYou know itās not the same as with your dad, or mine. Steve really is a great guy, even if you refuse to admit it. I think youāre just jealous you havenāt met him yet.ā
āOf course I want to meet him,ā he snaps back, but Chrissy just grins in response. āI have to listen to everyone talk about how great he is, and Iām just supposed to believe it all on face-value? Honestly, Iām sick of hearing about him, and if we keep talking about this itās gonna ruin my buzz.ā
Eddie refuses to believe a former trust-fund kid who hosted parties at his estate just to act like a fuck-boy actually leveled up to become a loving single father whoās adored by his family and friends, saves literal lives every day, and is one of the only queer people in this god forsaken town.
Not that he spends his free time thinking about a random guy heās gathered enough general information on to build a well-rounded NPC. A disowned nobleman cast out from his kingdom into squalor. With the help of the lonely princeās new found family, he redeems himself by serving as Hawkinsā most beloved Paladin.
Again, not that heās actually building this character for next yearās campaign or anything, it just goes to show how much people wonāt stop bragging about this guy, and Eddieās over it.
āYouād really like him,ā Chrissy says, putting an end to his stewing. Sheās smiling like maybe she knows something he doesnāt, and it reminds him of the same smiles heās gotten from Robin and Nanna Joyce.
āYeah, well Iād actually have to meet him to like him.ā
~~~
Itās Eddieās week for Tiger Club and by Thursday he still hasnāt seen Steve once. Itās been Robin every day so far, but she promised yesterday that heād be doing pick ups today and tomorrow. Eddie hadnāt really believed her after so many previous missed connections, but when the kids ran out to the playground screaming about Dad bringing them for ice cream after school, he thinks maybe he shouldāve taken her seriously.
Because now here he is, fiddling with the sleeves of his leather jacket and smoothing a hand over his flyaways like heās about to meet the goddamned Pope. Heās not nervousā heās not. Itās just some guyā nay, an ex-trust fund kid. Sure he sounds amazing on paper, but Eddieāll decide that for himself.
āSo is he here yet?ā Jumping out of his skin, he turns to find Chrissy smirking at him. He checks his watch and sure enough, itās 3:45, and Max and Dustin are the last kids on the playground. God, he really shouldāve noticed all of the other kids leaving. āEddie, you seem nervous,ā she says, giggling as he scoffs at her implication.
He is not nervous.
āWhat would I have to be nervous about?ā He almost shouts it, gesturing wildly with his hands. āI donāt even know the guy. I just know heās late. Again!ā
Chris nods toward him, eyeing something over his shoulder and he turns in time to see a familiar maroon SUV pull up to the curb. But the man stepping out onto the sidewalk definitely isnāt Robin.
No, heās just the prettiest man Eddieās ever been lucky enough to set his gaze on.
Heās wearing tight, acid washed jeans and a navy henley thatās holding on for dear life across his broad chest. The aviator sunglasses should really make him look like a stereotypical douchebag, but of course it just makes him look hot, accentuating his full, pouty, pink lips. His thick, chestnut hair is feathered to appear casual. Even from across the playground it looks soft, and Eddieās desperate to touch, to hold and pull tight.
The fucking guy is effortlessly cool, and Eddie hates that cool ex-jock is a look thatās apparently his type.
The man scans the playground, a wide grin brightens his face when he catches sight of the twins. Eddie watches as the literal fallen angel pushes his fingers into his mouthā sending Eddieās thoughts careening dangerously off courseā and whistles loud enough that Dustin and Max pop up like adorable groundhogs.
āDaddy!ā Max yells, jumping up and running full speed towards him with Dustin hot on her heels.
Daddy? Eddieās never heard either of the twins call him thatā itās always been Dad. Although Eddieās also pretty sure heās never seen Max this excited before.
Steve drops to his kneesā Eddieās jaw hits the ground at the same timeā to catch his kids as they send him toppling over. The three are a pile of limbs and smiles, and itās melting Eddieās cold, grinch heart.
Chrissy nudges him. He can tell sheās already reading him like an open book, the same way he had when sheād first laid eyes on Robin. Instead of teasing, her smile is full of comfort and encouragement. She lightly tugs his arm, pulling his frozen legs behind her towards the chaos. As the kids disentangle themselves, he can hear them excitedly talking over one another.
āNo, Daddy listen, Lucas told the funniest joke at recessāā
āMax, oh my god, no one cares! I literally made a volcano in scienceāā
āShut up, Dustin, no one cares about your stupid science volcano!ā
āHey!ā Steveās up on his feet clapping loudly to get the kidsā attention. āLanguage, Max. How many times do I have to tell you that Dustinās science stuff isnāt stupid? And Dustin, donāt interrupt your sister when sheās talking. Just because youāre louder doesnāt mean you get to talk over her. Both of you apologize. Now.ā
The kids look equally cowed, and mutter their apologies before turning back to their dad with their proverbial tails between their legs.
āAnd?ā he prompts.
āSorry for arguing, Dad,ā they answer in unison.
āGood. Now, letās go find Miss Chrāā
The end of Steveās sentence is lost to the autumn wind as he catches Eddieās eye. He watches as Steve slowly pushes his sunglasses up onto his head and jesus christ those are the warmest honey hazel eyes Eddieās ever seen. Steveās mouth has dropped open, drawing Eddieās gaze to his plush lips.
Up close, Eddie can pick out the golden shine to his hair and the moles scattered across his skin. Two on the manās neck hold his attention, filling Eddie with the strong urge to bite. Steve pushes up his sleeves to reveal toned forearms. His hands are large with long fingers and Eddie needs them wrapped around him.
āDaddy, what are you looking at?ā
Both men jolt at the sound of Maxās voice. A heavy blush coats Steveās face, and Eddie wants to explore where else the man turns red and wanting. Mouth suddenly dry, he darts his tongue out to wet his lips, only for Steveās gaze to immediately track the movement.
āDaddy, oh my god why are you being so weird!ā
Steve tears his eyes from Eddieās mouth, briefly turning to face Max again.
āIām not being weird. You just havenāt introduced me to your teacher yet.ā
āOh, right Iām so sorry,ā Chrissy steps forward, not sounding sorry at all. āThis isāā
āMr. Munson, right?ā Steve says. āAnd Iāmāā
āDaddy,ā Eddie finishes.
Itās quiet. Too quiet, and Eddie realizes everyone is staring at him. Steveās eyes are wide, mouth open in shock. Heās flushing red down his neck and up to the tips of his ears, but his eyes never leave Eddieās.
āDid you just call our Dad, Daddy?ā Max asks, pointing and laughing.
And oh.
Oh god no.
He called him Daddy to his face in front of his children, and the universe, and everyone. A beautiful, gorgeous, perfect specimen of a man heās never met before, and he called him Daddy like Eddie was cursed in a past life to make a total ass of himself. Heās on the verge of melting into the ground when Dustinās shrill voice cuts through the fog to come to his aid.
āDonāt worry, Mr. Munson. Last week I accidentally called Mrs. Click, Mom, but it was an accident,ā the boy reasons. āIt happens to everyone, itās okay.ā
Except itās very much not okay, and Eddie thinks nothing will be okay ever again.
He chances a look and sees Steveās finally closed his mouth, though heās chewing on his bottom lip and still blushed up to his ears. Eddie can only imagine how red his own face is.
āWell,ā Chrissy clears her throatā loudly. āEddie, this is Steve. And Steve, this is Mr. Munson, but you can call him Eddie.ā She looks a little too pleased with herself, but Eddie doesnāt know whether to thank her or remember this for next time Robin comes around.
āHi,ā Steve says, dazed, absently reaching out for a handshake because of course Steveās the kind of man to shake a guyās hand whoās just accidentally called him Daddy. The nerve of some people.
āUmm, hi,ā Eddie responds while he grabs Steveās hand. Itās not a firm handshake between two people meeting for the first time. Itās gentle, Steve practically cradling Eddieās hand in his and he was right. Steveās hand is bigger, softer than his own, but Eddieās fingers are thicker.
Over far too soonā but maybe too long if Chrissyās scrunched expression is anything to go byā Steve lets go. Eddieās forced to stand and watch Steve flex his fingers, stretching until theyāre white, before balling them into a fist and shoving his hand into his back pocket. His other hand rakes through his auburn hair, andā for absolutely no reason whatsoeverā Eddie considers including a Jane Austin unit next semester for his eighth graders.
āIāve heard a lot about you from the kids. And Robin. Oh and Jonathan and Joyce,ā Steve rambles. If Eddie didnāt know better, heād say the man sounds flustered. It helps him relax a bit.
āAll good things?ā Eddie teases, twirling a strand of hair between his fingers before pulling it in front of his face.
āYeah, they just failed to mention,ā Steve gestures vaguely to all of Eddie, much the same way as Hopper had but also very, very different. He looks down at himself to make sure he didnāt wear anything especially heinous today, but all he finds are his typical combat boots, black jeans, and his gray t-shirt underneath his leather jacket.
He steps a little closer to Eddie, putting them within middle school slow-dancing distance from each other. Eddie canāt look away from his eyes, warm and golden, just like everything else about him.
āKids,ā Chrissy cuts in, āwhy donāt we go get your stuff together while your Daddy talks with Mr. Munson a bit?ā Eddie could kiss her for being such a saint, and the three of them wander off while Eddie remains a captive to the intensity crawling around in Steveās stare.
āSo,ā Steve sighs, voice low and smooth. Chills spread down Eddieās spine, and he knows heās done for. āDaddy, huh?ā
Heat scorches Eddieās face as white hot embarrassment spreads to his core. Steve smiles like heās successfully cornered his prey, and Eddie canāt figure out what to do with his hands. He stands frozen as Steve takes another step forward, now toe to toe.
āYeah,ā Eddie drags the word out, not quite sure of what heās agreeing to. Heās only sure of Steveās breath mixing with his and Steveās eyes roaming his face and Steveās everything.
He clears his throat, smoothes his clammy hands over his jeans, and tries again.
āYeah, Iām sorry about that.ā He chuckles, hoping to play it off as casual. āIt really was just an accident like Dustin was saying, you know? An awkward slip of the tongue. See, the thing is that Max was calling you Daddy, right? Which is totally weird because she always calls you Dad. So I was just kind of surprised and confused and I couldnāt stop thinking about youā I mean Daddy! The word Daddy, not you as a Daddy.ā Eddie groans scrubbing his hands over his face, hiding behind his fingers. āFuck, god, Iām so sorry, this is so unprofāā
āI donāt think youāre sorry,ā Steve interrupts. āIn fact, I think you liked it. And if I had to guess, I think you want to do it again.ā
This isnāt happening. This is not real life.
Things like this donāt just happen to people like him, to the Eddie Munsonās of the world, and certainly not with men like the golden god leaning into his space. Except here he finds himself, trapped in a real-life porn intro with a man heās never met yet has been crushing on for over a month. The tightness of Eddieās black skinny jeans is becoming an increasing problem and he reminds himself this is a school and there are children here.
Before he can recover enough to save himself, Steveās cooing at him, pulling at the edge of his leather sleeves and asking āwould you like to do it again?ā
Eddie nods, dumbstruck and inappropriately turned on.
āGood,ā Steve praises, saccharine, āall you have to do is ask for my number and Iāll give it to you.ā
Eddie looks around the playground and sees Chrissy with the kids well on the opposite side. Theyāre playing on the swingset, thoroughly distracted.
āI know theyāre there. Itās okay, they canāt hear us,ā Steve says and grabs Eddieās hand. He tangles their fingers together, goosebumps shiver up Eddieās arm. āNow, ask me.ā
āUmm, can I have your number?ā he mumbles.
Steve shakes his head and gives Eddie's hand a firm squeeze. āNo Eddie, you need to ask nicely. Go on now, I wonāt say it again.ā
Eddie swallows against the dryness in his mouth and Steveās darkened eyes flit down to catch his neck flex around his empty throat.
āPlease, Daddy, may I have your number?ā Delicious shame coils through his chest while heat curls lower in his core. Heās not used to such brazen affection, nor so immediately trusting to reciprocate. And fuck, normally Eddieās the Daddy. But from everything heās heardā all of the kind and caring people who talk about how amazing Steve isā he thinks this might be okay. Hopes and wants and craves it all to be okay.
Steveās answering smile is surprisingly gentle. He rubs his thumb against the back of Eddieās knuckles before taking a step back, not far enough to leave him self-conscious, but Eddie feels like he can breathe for the first time since Steve stepped out of the car.
āOf course you can have my number, Baby, thank you for asking so nicely.ā
Eddie unlocks his phone and hands it over just as Chris makes her way back with the kids. They all say their goodbyes, and much to Eddieās delight, Steve texts him before the SUV even pulls away from the curb. To top it off, Steve waves as they drive by, a dorky spirit-finger wave that sends Eddie into a fit of giggles, like heās a school boy with his first crush.
Chris elbows him in the side, a smirk on her face and her eyebrow arched.
Eddie sighs in faux-defeat. āHeās alright, I guess,ā he answers her unasked question with a giant, smitten, shit-eating grin plastered on his face.
He loves the twins, has met basically Steveās entire family, and is almost positive Chris and Robin have hit it off. Eddieās hopes are already too high up to pull back down to earth, excited to see where this journey will take him. Heās loath to admit it after weeks of petulant moping and pining, but Steve Harrington does, in fact, live up to the hype.















