Day four of the Horror on Cherry Lane Challenge! Todayâs prompt was Sunglasses!
Steve has a lot of secrets. Too many probably.
Most teenagersâ secrets are things like sleeping with the wrong people, smoking the cheap shit the jocks pass out, broken curfews and failing grades. Heâs got all of those too, but Steve's secret runs much deeper than that.
His is the kind of secret thatâd have men in black suits coming to take him away, or at this point, more than a decade after letting him go in the first place, putting a bullet in the back of his skull and calling it a day before any trouble comes up.
Heâs been stuck in Hawkins all his life. Been fed the knowledge about the world off a silver spoon he didnât ask for. His first five years of life are well forgotten to shock therapy and to the lab, where they intended to use him and the rest of the kids like him as weapons. Pawns in their big game of life.
But Steve was different. He could turn his powers off, make them undetectable by the machines they hooked him up to. They thought he was just a failure, so after so long, they wiped his brain with their very own cocktail of drugs and just let him go. Adopted him out to a middle aged dink couple who wouldnât run their mouths about where their little bundle of joy came from as long as their pockets were lined with enough hush money, and that was that.
It didnât take long for them to realize though, that he wasnât as normal as they had been convinced he was. Not even knowing he was doing anything wrong, little Stevie would have outbursts, or small tantrums as momma always tried to convince everyone who told her Steve was too much for her to handle.
These werenât just normal crying fits though. Anyone who got near him would be just as sad or scared or frustrated as he was. A single sob from that boy had enough power to crack the foundations of the family home.
Most kids when they have a cranky morning will get on the nerves of their parents, but Steve could disrupt the whole neighborhood without even realizing it. And that was his power.
They didnât have a name for it, really. The range of what he can do is too broad, too undefined by anything else. There was a telekinetic girl, a pyrokinetic heâs pretty sure is dead now. But Steve was just special. Part of what made it so easy to go under their radar was this, but it also made him a risk.
The only reason he wasnât immediately reported and given back to the bad men was the power this frail boy carried. It scared Ruthie and John, and they decided that theyâd rather face the men at that lab again than a seven year old who could accidentally destroy them with his emotions.
So they kept him, and certainly kept their distance. They forced him into a little mold of how to behave properly and made him take pills to weaken his powers. They send him to behavioral therapy and make him act like heâs not a failed government experiment. A fact which he only learned a couple of years ago after his pills worked a little too well at messing with his memory that he forgot to take them, and memories came flooding back.
For the same reasons, Steveâs bored of being careful. Bored of following all the rules and being passive, just pretending heâs like everyone else so mommy and daddy dearest are safe. He starts getting a little riskier, testing what he can do, since this is the first time heâs ever really had control over his ability. He finds a link with other people and their emotions, something of an empathy power, but he doesnât get far in his research, because his plan very quickly goes to shit when Billy Hargrove rolls into town.
Where to begin with Billy. That boy makes him feel all sorts of things he never even considered. The very first day he showed his unimpressed (but very impressive) face at Hawkins high, Steve cracks his windshield. Oops.
He was able to tap into that control and tone it down, but that reserve dwindled the more heâs around Billy, and from there it just spirals. Bending the basketball hoop on accident, exploding light fixtures, giving everyone in the school headaches. It gets to the point where Steve has to come to terms with the fact that he had a crush on Billy, and that he has to do something to get it back under his control before somebody gets hurt.
That and he doesnât want to get caught now. He just got back into the swing of using his powers before Billy interrupted his calm. Going back there, or whatever else might happen, is the last thing he wants for himself.
He settles for a pair of ray bans.
Itâs stupid, but when Steve was still young and all but popping his mommas brains every single time he cried, she was desperate to find a way to get him to stop. She started to notice heâd concentrate hard on one thing and another would happen, staring at a lamp until it shattered, looking into her face until her ears started to ring and pop. So she does what she can to break that subconscious focus. Puts a barrier between him and all that heâs hurting. A plastic, race car themed barrier, but it does its job, and it worked every time until they got him on meds. So now that heâs old enough not to just tear the damn things right off his face, he figures itâs worth a shot.
Because nothing had made him this emotional, this out of control since the day he found out the truth about his past. Billy is special, and the very last thing he wants is to lose control and hurt him.
He still feels like a dope walking into the school with a pair of shades on. Everyone starts to stare in that way he tries not to let remind him of the lab and the doctors standing in circles around him, prodding and waiting for a reaction. Steve thinks wearing sunglass inside is the least weird thing to happen in the halls of a highschool if Tina can come in with a perm high enough to touch the ceiling, but whatever. Heâll get over it.
The fact that nothingâs exploded from how on edge he is, mostly from wondering if his mommaâs trick will work and not because of their judgement, is a very good sign.
Boldly, he decides to put it to the ultimate test, and approaches Billy.
In his head, heâs so focused on just going to talk to Billy, he has nothing planned to say to him, but he thinks he wouldâve forgotten anyways, what with the lazy smile Billy flashes him when he notices him approaching.
Steveâs gaze quickly darts past Billy to check for damage to anything, the racing in his chest from just a look like that typically enough to at least crack a window. Maybe heâs not as confident about this as he thought, or maybe Billyâs just really good at making him flustered.
Doesnât matter, because heâs at the other boys locker before he has time to process what heâs doing, âLookinâ for somethinâ Harrington?â
âOh, yeah, I was just checking for uh, my fans. Yeah, they follow me around everywhere, you know?â Itâs bullshit, and it sounds more than dumb coming out of Steveâs mouth, but it makes Billy laugh, real low and raspy and thatâs a win in his book.
âThat what the little disguise is for?â Billy hums and taps his temple, clearly referring to the sun glasses perched on Steveâs nose.
âOh these? No, I uh, wear these âcause of the uh.. because I wanna sleep in class and down want the teachers to know?â His answer comes as more of a question than anything, so heâs grateful when Billy seems to be more interested in his excuse than the subject at hand.
âPfft, yeah right. Iâve heard you sleepinâ on the basketball bus. Ainât no way your snoring doesnât get you caught before your eyes do.â
Steve just waves him off, laughs with Billy even if his heart isnât in it.
Billy closes his locker door, switching the subject as the scenery switches. Itâs all a distraction to Steve, but he forces himself to look Billy in the face as the other boy asks him, âSeriously though dude, you okay? It ainât like you to switch up your look. Youâre not hiding anythinâ under the shades are you?â
âNah. Just been thinking, Iâm not the King because Iâm not cool anymore, right? So Iâm tryinâ to look a little more.. interesting.â Steveâs not a very quick or good liar, despite the military guarded secret that is himself and the little black number seven carved into his arm, and he can tell Billy doesnât buy it.
Heâs a good sport though, throwing an arm around Steveâs shoulders and assuring him with a little jostle, âAw, Stevie, you're cool in my book. At least as long as you quit cominâ up with reasons not to hang with me, yeah?â
âYeah, I- alright. I can do that. Sorry for flaking so much though. Didnât realize until you said something.â
âSâCool. Just meet me at the quarry after dark and itâll make up for it.â Billy offers, obviously trying to play up the coolness neither of them apparently actually have, and Steve canât help but call him on it. âIt gets dark at like, four-thirty, five oâclock anymore?â
âFine. Meet me at nine, pretty boy.â Billy smirks, dropping his voice to add knowingly, âAnd lose the shades. I think youâre much more interesting without âem.â
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Day five of Horror on Cherry Lane Challenge! Todayâs prompt was monsters!
Little bratâs been in the school ten minutes after the bell.
After they both broke curfew, Max staying out late trick-or-treating and going to one of her little friendsâ house to trade candy, and Billy crashing at the lingering party until he was sober enough to come home and not get his ass kicked, they were supposed to be straight home today. Used up all their free time for the week apparently.
Max knew that this morning, he already told her to forget about the damn AV club. If he had to cancel on whatever chick he was going to take out (was it Carol? No, Carol is Tommyâs girl. Fuck he doesnât know anybody yet) Max had to give her shit up to.
He gets bored of waiting for the little twerp and tosses his cigarette to the ground, marching in there his damn self.
Only time heâs ever been in this building was to pick Max up from AV. His dad made him come all the way inside and give his assessment on the teacher. Asked (slapped him and demanded it) that he do so to check on Max. Just to be sure. Like he cares.
But it works out anyways that he knows the way now that Max has decided to disappear and itâs up to him to track her down. Only problem is he gets there, and the room is empty. Not even just that Max isnât in there, thereâs no damn kids or teacher or nothing. Just a knocked over lamp and some shit on the floor.
He ainât trying to hunt her down, but he has to get her back home in like, the next half-hour, and sheâs somewhere she ainât supposed to be. The school isnât very big, half the damn building is closed off for the school board to use, so there isnât much ground to cover.
Heâs not trying to get himself arrested either, so he makes quick work of the school, checking all the places Max might be. Still, he comes up empty, and heâs about to just give up and let whoever she was with keep her when he sees something scurrying across the floor out of the corner of his eye.
Itâs not really any of his business whether or not the middle school is infested, but it catches his eye for the wrong reasons.
Itâs a gnarly little thing, a cross between a frog and rat or some shit, but Billyâd recognize that thing anywhere. Itâs a fucking monster, crawling around the halls of his sisters school.
Purely on instinct, he tracks the thing to where it cornered itself, taking advantage of the fact that itâs still small and growing into its demon teeth to stomp on the gross monster. He stops once heâs positive itâs dead and not just faking him out like they do sometimes, heâs not gross or something, but he nearly jumps out of his skin when behind him, Max shouts, âBilly!â
He turns, ignoring the pile of goop that was one of those things to face his, apparently, from the flush on her cheeks and the bitterness in her tone, âJesus, shitbird. What is wrong with you?â
Heâs hardly even got the question out before Max snaps at him, âWhy would you kill it!â
âDo you even know what that thing is?â Billy raises eyebrows, no patience for Max telling him what to do, but she counters with something that surprises him, âIt was Dustins, he discovered it, you jerk!â
âYeah, no. These thingsâve been around longerân any of us have been alive. And I don't care who found it first. Theyâre fucking monsters.â
âHow do you even know what he was? You killed him.â
âIt. Not him. Donât humanize them.â Billy hisses, warning Max, âAnd anyways, I seen some shit kid. Donât ask. And donât play around with anymore of these little fuckers. Give âim a day or two ân heâll be the size of a gray wolf. Another month or so and heâs seven feet tall.â
âBut what is he?â Max demands stubbornly.
Billy answers simply, âSomething you donât want anything to do with.â
By now, the rest of Maxâs friends have followed the sound of her yelling to their little showdown, and itâs Dustin, the owner of this thing, that chimes in, âBut wait, does that mean you know?â
âKnow what?â Max huffs, but she gets ignored, Billy firing back at Dustin, âDo you?â
All four of the kids nod at once. Billy sighs deeply, âJesus, how the fuck did a bunch of little kids get caught up in this bullshit?â
âHow did you?â These kids arenât very original coming back at him with his own questions like this.
Again Max interjects, being left out of the questioning just making her more confused. âExcuse me, but what exactly are we talking about?â
But again nobody acknowledges her, Billy busy answering the boysâ questions.
âHad a friend came from that lab. You know about that part too?â He clarifies, getting three attentive nods, and this time one disapproving scowl, as he explains, âWell the monsters followed âim. Through their portals and his head and shit, they were out in California too. Thatâs how I know I was right to kill that thing.â
Thereâs a moment of stunned silence before Mike insists, âI donât believe you.â
âI donât know, man. How else would he know about everything?â Lucas shrugs, exciting Dustin and promoting him to ask, âDo you think he knows about Eleven too?â
âIâm still here too you guys. What is going on?â Max interrupts, serving only as a reminder, Lucas turning the conversation back to Billy as he asks, âWhy havenât you told Max?â
Billy smugly tries their little deflecting shtick on them, âCould ask you the same. Why are you showing her the monsters if you ainât gonna tell her jack about âem either? I was keeping her safe. You assholes were keeping her stupid.â
Max interjects, âHey!â
âNo, thatâs not fair. We had to sign an NDA.â Dustin corrects, very matter of fact for a kid who doesnât know what heâs talking about.
âYeah, me too kid. It wasnât any secret that number six escaped. Iâve had those assholes watchinâ over my shoulder for years and I didnât even do anythinâ.â Billy feels like heâs having a trauma competition with a bunch of middle schoolers, and he hates it. His tone is harsh as he demands, âWhich brings us into, what the hell did you do to get caught up in all this?â
âNone of your business.â Mike spits, but for the first time in the conversation, Will chimes in, âI got taken. By the demogorgon.â
âOkay. Whatâs that got to do with this, kid?â
âThe demogorgon is what we called the big one. Before El killed it.â Lucas explains.
âLook, I donât know who El is, but believe me when I tell you, you brats donât know nothing. There ainât just one of those, you know. Every last one of those annoying little fuckers like the one I just squishedâll turned into a âbig oneâ.â They all look collectively defeated by that, maybe because he knows more than they do, or maybe just because they didnât want to admit it was that bad.
But none look more ghastly than Will, who barely manages to inform them, âThatâs bad. Last night, I heard them while we were trick-or-treating. They were everywhere.â
âThen weâre gonna have to do something.â Dustin declares determinedly, but Billy shuts it down right away, âNo. Seriously, what the hell? All you sorry little punks are going right the fuck back home and pretending none of this never happened. If you donât provoke âem, theyâll stop.â
âBut they werenât provoked when they took Will.â One of then argues, but Billys ignoring them now, turning back to a no less calm Max, âI donât care. I ainât doing this shit all over again. Come on, Maxine. Gotta leave your little friends to their baby âdemogorgonâ and their world saving bullshit.â
Max scrunches her face up and argues, âUm, did you forget that I still have no idea what the hell is going on?!â
âHonestly, yeah.â Billy admits, âBut sâbetter if you donât ask questions. Now if you please, we gotta go.â
âNo. Youâre being a jerk.â Max crosses her arms and glares at him, a clear sign shes refusing to leave with him.
Billy just shrugs, âMâalways a jerk. Thought youâd know that by now.â
âI do. And thatâs exactly why Iâm not listening to you. If my friends are going to do something, I want in on it.â
âLook what you little fuckers did.â Billy grumbles at the boys before trying to reason with his sister again, âMax. We only got fifteen minutes out of an almost half hour drive to get home. Come on.â
âThis is so much bigger than that! I donât care what your stupid dad says, I want to do something!â Her attitude gets on Billyâs nerves. Thatâs definitely deliberate if the spite gleaming in her cold eyes is any indication.
âYou donât even know what it is!â
âThen I deserve to find out!â
Billy sighs deeply, done doing this with a bunch of little kids in over their heads, âYou know what, fine, but weâre stoppinâ at a payphone and youâre gonna be the one to tell my old man Iâm takinâ you out for.. I donât know, fucking ice cream or some shit. And if we get in trouble, Iâm blaming you. Deal?â
Max smiles to herself at having gotten one over on him, âDeal. Where are we going though?â
âI dunno. Ask your nerds. Sâtheir big fucking idea.â Billy grumbles, matching Maxâs bitterness.
âWeâll have to call a meeting.â
âWill my basement work?â
âNo offense, but I donât think heâs getting past your mom.â Dustin nods towards Billy, the older boy rolling his eyes even though heâs not wrong, then offers, âMy mom doesnât like visitors. Maybe Willâs?â
âYeah, Mrs. Byers will let anybody come over.â
âAnd she already knows whatâs going on.â
They all nod again, and Billy rolls his eyes at them again while Lucas relays their decision to Max, âAlright, meet us at Willâs in an hour.â
âWhy that long though? Weâre all here right now.â
âGives us time to cover our tracks, shitbird.â Billy hums in response to Max, stepping forward and asking, âWhatâs the damn address?â
This âmeetingâ the twerps called was pretty much everyone in this hick town that knows the same dirty little secret as he does getting together in a tiny house and panicking. Billy and Max get fully interrogated like, a dozen times, once by the damned chief of police himself, all the while everyone is coming up with theories and plots and arguing. So much fucking arguing among this lot.
It gets to be too much pretty quickly, day five in this place and heâs already having to jump back into some of the worst things that ever happened to him. None of these people realize how big this is. Especially not the kids who just think itâs badass to fight monsters.
He leaves without telling anyone, or without anyone noticing among the chaos, to the back porch to light one up. Thereâre ashtrays all over the house he could use, but looming smoke in that cramped little kitchen wasnât going to be any better than watching it curl upwards to the stars. So outside it was.
He leans against the wall, gaze fixing straight to whatâs above him. He doesnât notice the presence of another person until he hears them speak, startling slightly at the sound of a voice breaking the calm silence of a humid November night.
Itâs Steve, sitting on a rusty and banged up glider at the opposite end on the porch, lit up just like he is. âSo, uh. I guess youâre a part of this now?â
âI guess I am.â
Steve just nods and responds simply, effectively ending the conversation, âRight.â
But thatâs not satisfying to Billy. He might appreciate peace more than whatâs going on in that house, but he doesnât like empty silence either. âWhatâre we all awkward like this for, Harrington? Spit out what youâre thinkinâ.â
âI dunno, man.â
Billy frowns, prompting, âCome on. I know them gears are turninâ over there. You've been quiet since we all got here.â
Steve looks away from him, but he does answer, âI dunno itâs just.. Weâve lost so much. People died because of this. People I knew. And I donât like that anyone else is involved I guess.â
Billy scoffs, âEven me? You donât even know me other than the asshole you met at the party last night.â
âSo? What do you mean even you? I donât want anyone anywhere near those fucking monsters. Could be my worst enemy and Iâd still save them. Iâd protect anyone from those things.â The haunted look behind his eyes, which seem so tired the longer Billy looks, tells Billy everything he needs to know.
He doesnât mean to sound so soft when he asks, âWhat makes you so confident you can? Save âem I mean.â
âI fought a demogorgon myself. Well, not really by myself. Nancy and Jonathan were there. But I took a nail bat to its fucking face. Like hell Iâd just let one of those things get anyone. Even you.â Steve
Billy flicks away his burnt out cigarette, sitting next to Steve on the old glider. âThatâs real touching H, but I ainât letting nobody sacrifice themselves for me. Need I remind you Iâve fought these assholes too.â
âBut you told the kids you didnât. Said it was all your friend.â Steve looks at him, sort of doubtful, but Billy blows off the remark, âNo shit Sherlock. I ainât airing all my business to any nosy brats like them.â
âI get that, but.. â Hesitantly, he clarifies, âIs.. your friend, you know, even real?â
Billy must look at him like he grew a second head, âShit, man, you think Iâm one of those freaky experiments? No way. âCourse he was real.â
âOh. You said âwas.â Does that mean...â Steveâs voice trails off, sparing him hearing the words out loud.
âDonât know. He got caught about two years back. Havenât heard from him since. They mightâa brought âim back here, they mightâa killed him. I dunno.â Billy shrugs, picking at his nails while he talks so he doesnât have to acknowledge Steve, or the fact that heâs even admitting this shit to him, âThatâs why weâre here in Hawkins though. Susanâs got family over in Hope and a little ways up by Indie, so I suggested Hawkins. Just to come see where he came from. Get some closure I guess.â
âGuess he was really important to you then?â Steve smiles softly, but Billy only sighs through his nose, âYou got no idea, Harrington.â
âWell, for what itâs worth, Iâm sorry. Iâm sure youâll meet someone like him again.â He offers.
Somehow that sentiment immediately sets Billy on edge though, something about his tone implying that he knows, knows him and six were more than just friends, and Billy really doesnât want to face that kind of monster tonight. He snaps, suddenly defensive, âWhat the hellâs that sâposed to mean?â
Steveâs face falls a little, evidently surprised by how upset Billy is, and he tries to fix it, âOh I just thought that, the way you talked about him- and you look so sad when you do- that he was, you know, special to you.â
âSo what? You gonna leave me to the monsters or some shit for that?â Billy growls, quickly warranting more defense from Steve, âWhat? No way. No I.. I get it, Billy. I do. More than you probably think I do.â
Billy half nods, his shoulders untensing as he slowly recognizes Steveâs genuinity. He mumbles eventually, working through what he needs to in his head to be comfortable talking openly with him again, âDidnât expect to be getting relationship counseling too. That your assignment on the team, mister romance expert?â
âShut up. Youâve never seen me swing a bat before.â
âOh believe me, I cannot wait to.â
Steveâs smile returns, something Billy is personally glad for, though he might not be ready for that realization yet. He bumps their shoulders together, to hold Billy's attention and let him know heâs genuine, âStill, in all seriousness man, I hope you can find someone else like that for you. I know itâs not really easy pickings around here.â
This time, Billyâs tone is light, his features soft and vulnerable for the boy next to him, for the way he makes him feel less weighed down, less alone in this, âYou got no idea, Harrington.â