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at least in my thoughts I havenât abandoned this blog. should I start writing for jopper again? If you send me prompts I might write them tomorrow, in a year or never but I feel like Iâd love to rekindle the light of this little corner of my tumblr
An Archive of Our Own, a project of the
Organization for Transformative Works
Rating: T
Relationships: Joyce Byers/Jim "Chief" Hopper, Joyce Byers & Jim "Chief Hopper, Joyce Byers & Eleven | Jane Hopper
Characters: Joyce Byers, Jim "Chief" Hopper, Eleven | Jane Hopper, Jonathan Byers, Will Byers, Lonnie Byers, Original Characters
Other Tags: Post-Episode s03e08 The Battle of Starcourt (Stranger Things), Flashbacks, Grief/Mourning, High School, Angst, Hurt/Comfort, Alcohol Abuse/Alcoholism, Minor Character Death, Mental Health Issues, Suicidal Thoughts, Tragic Romance, Sad Ending, Epistolary, Character Study
Summary:
The night after the funeral, Joyce tells El the story how she met Hopper.
In the months leading up to their move out of Hawkins, painful memories and long-held secrets find their way to surface of Joyce's grieving mind to make her see almost everything about her old friendship in a new light, including the way it came to an end.
My new Jopper fic is finally here.
Itâs been a long journey. Canât wait to tell you about it.
Desc: Hop realizes that Billy is a lot like him when he was a teen- based on the song Thirteen by Big Star (bc thatâs a Jopper AND a Harringrove anthem, tell me iâm wrong)
TW: referenced past child abuse, referenced homophobia, every dad in Hawkins sounds like an abusive asshole in this fic i didnât mean it đ
you can also read this on AO3 right here!! âĽ
~*~
James Hopper hated his father more than anyone else hated the man. More than his uncle who had to grow up with the jerk. More than his mother who threatened to divorce the deadbeat seven times. More than anyone.
Hopperâs father was abrasive and loud. He joined the army because he wanted to. He gave up his individuality willingly. He shaved his head and licked the boot of The Man and acted superior for it. He looked down on a young Jimmy Hopper and barked in his face and ordered that he become a man. Quicker. Jim was only 7. He had just broken an arm at football practice. He needed reassurance and comfort. He got condescension and a mother threatening to leave. Loudly.
James Hopper was sure he was the only son in the world who hated his own father. He felt sure as hell about it when he stuck his jaw out and looked past his nose at his father who always seemed to tower over him. Even when the man only had an inch on him, he was larger- always looming. He felt sure as hell about it when heâd narrow his eyes and refuse to listen. He felt sure as hell about it when he talked back to him, and got into yelling matches with him, and slammed the door on him.
He felt even more sure the one night he got hit.
He was more than certain he was the only one. Standing there, staring this horrible bulk of a man down, Jimmy knew no one else had ever felt such a thing before. This wasnât TV or the movies. This wasnât a family love you cherish by the fire on a cold Christmas night. This wasnât a father with kind eyes and a stern voice who comes into the house in the evening with his suit on and his briefcase in hand, kissing his kids and smiling brightly. This was different and he knew it.
And all of that anger and stress and feeling of certainty made him take too long to realize something crucial. Because he didnât realize you can know something and yet still be so wrong.
That is, until Phil didnât come to school one day.
Jimmy figured he was sick. A couple days later he figured it was that nasty stomach bug. A week later and he figured his family took a trip. A week and a few days had him itching with worry. He asked his best friend as calmly as he could. That friend looked at him like he was nuts.
âYou didnât hear?â
âHear what?â
âHe moved away. His mom took him out of the state last weekend. They just left.â
Jim couldnât understand the words for a second.
âWhy?â
âYou didnât know? His dad has been roughing him up for years now. He got the mom too, I think. Why do you think he was always wearing sweaters all year long?â
Jimâs heart stopped.
âHis mom finally got him out. They left.â
âWhy did no one say anything about it?â
âBecause you donât talk about that stuff.â Jimâs friend said, hushed and knowing, eyes turned solemn and hiding a world Jim didnât know lived in there. In his most outspoken, lively friend. In his friend heâd known since they were toddlers.
You donât talk about that stuff he said like he had a whole world of pain to tell. Jim knew his friends were like him- dads who were tough as nails and grunted more than spoke. It was why they all got along so well. But they never mentioned their fathers being⌠Jim was so sure he was the only one. Everyone else did things with their family. Everyone else seemed so perfect. At the very least they seemed better. Jim was sure.
Why did no one say anything about it? quickly morphed into Why did I never even ask?
Starting there, Jim kept a critical eye out. He watched his friends and what they were wearing. The way they moved and the changes in those movements. The words they spoke about their parents. He noticed differences and fluctuating emotions. But stil, he was only a young teenager- he never knew what to do. His mouth couldnât form around the words he felt he should say. His brain could barely provide them. So he did for them what he would have liked- just took them out to empty fields and deep into the woods. He provided them beer and music. Sometimes, when they were splitting at the seams, heâd fight them a bit. Heâd egg them on so they could fight it out. Get the anger out. Help, somehow. Inadvertently. Lord knew Jimmy sometimes just needed to punch shit. Turns out, his friends felt the same way, and often.
When his daughter Sarah came, he handled her gently and spoke to her even softer. He got into fights with his now ex-wife over his not being strict enough but Hop couldnât find it in himself to have any kind of gruffness toward someone so soft and so innocent and so pure. She was the light of his life. She left so quickly. Even his softness and kindness couldnât save her, and he couldnât very well beat the shit out of her enemies like he had wished to.
And when he met Billy Hargrove on the side of the road that one dark night, having pulled him over for speeding drunkenly down the lonely streets on the outskirts of town, every red flag flew up. Every worry and fear he found within himself when he was a teen found its place once again inside of him for this boy. For his bruised face and exhausted eyes. For his lightly cut chin and short breath. Hop became young Jimmy yet again, analyzing and fearing for a world of pain he couldnât see and couldnât ask about. He searched hard for words this time and found all the wrong ones. He exhausted the poor boy with his inability to articulate his fears and was successful in taking him in only because he had worn him out so badly.
Still, since then, heâs been here. Heâs family now. Heâs out of there. In all his fumbling Hop did something right.
And yet, things still feel wrong. Billy still walks tentatively around him, like the cabin is going to crash down above him and any relationship theyâve built up is going to shatter.
Hop thinks about it so often. He thinks about Billy and sees his own friends from high school. He sees parts of himself, but sadder, angrier⌠more helpless. He thinks endlessly on what he can do to fix it.
~Wonât you let me walk you home from school~
A song starts playing through his record player and heâs lost again in the world of Jimmy vs. Billy. He thinks of how life used to feel simple.
This song always whisks him away to high school. The early days when life was confused and wandering and he was just coming into his own with football, not nearly a âstarâ yet and Joyce⌠Joyce was young and wide eyed and wandering just the same. By that point she hadnât even met Lonnie yet. She was awkward and yet still so beautiful. So quiet and so stunning. Her laughter rang through the hallways and he swears he can still hear it.
This song feels like itâs for them. When he first heard it, he saw her face back when they were freshmen and then sophomores, when he used to walk her home. He always used to walk her home, before he got his car and before she got Lonnie. Theyâd walk so slow, wandering through the streets, lazily strolling past stores and getting slightly distracted by the people zooming past on their bikes.
He sits forward on the couch and he looks down at the tattered carpet and he hears himself as Jimmy.
âCâmon Joyce⌠we can hit the pool this weekend.â
âIâm busy.â
âThen⌠then maybe Friday I can get a couple tickets for that dance.â
âWhat?â
He gave her his biggest, brightest grin, knowing he caught her off guard. He smiles a little now at the thought.
âYeah, câmon, Joyce. Iâll take ya. Iâll get a monkey suit and you can wear a dress-â
She had laughed that bright, ringing laugh. It made him smile every time.
âYeah, I think Iâll pass.â
âYouâre gonna pass up a chance to dance with me?â
âDonât tell me, youâre the best dancer in Hawkins?â
âYouâll never know if you donât come find out.â
âYouâre really full of yourself, arenât you?â
Hop has a hard time thinking of himself back then. He felt so sure of everything. Of himself and what he was doing, even if he knew he didnât know anything at all. Still, he chuckles now as he sits here, thinking about Joyceâs smile and her little nod. Thinking about him buying those tickets. Thinking about the night they had together, awkward and fumbling but bright still. His first real kiss that had real feelings to go along with it. The way Joyce walked so quickly as they headed to her home because she was so nervous. The way she never let him walk her up to her house because she was so scared her parents would ground her.
Lord does he remember the fights. The stress and the struggle of dealing with Joyceâs parents. When they came to an after-school event and Jimmy said hi to her and her dad gave her hell for it and her mom worried herself sick for a bit. She got grounded and started avoiding him. He got angry and figured fine because Gloria from his History class had been eyeing him up lately and helping him with a pretty friendly smile so it didnât even matter.
It wasnât more than a week that had passed before he cornered her after school and convinced her to let him walk her home again.
They wandered downtown and he guided her behind a store building, the store she now works for if he remembers correctly, and asked about that night. Asked about what he said wrong. Asked about what he did wrong.
She shook her head, said it was just her parents being âcrazy, I donât knowâ. He couldnât find it in him to worry that much. When they kissed, it was still with so many feelings attached. Hop canât remember when those feelings faded.
It wasnât until a couple years later when a rumor started going around about Joyceâs dad being a grade A asshole like Philâs was all those years ago that made Jim take her aside very seriously and ask her if she was okay- those couple of years ago and that day. By that point she was with Lonnie and he was getting serious about Diane. He and Joyce hadnât talked for over a year. Still, he was worried. She insisted that her dad just liked to huff and puff and yell enough to shake her ears, but he never touched her. It wasnât until years and years later that Hop realized that really isnât any better. Nowadays she insists she was and is fine and heâs just found it in himself to believe her.
When Hop finally got a car, they would sit in it and listen to the radio and talk music. She was the only person whoâd sit with him and actually think about lyrics and feelings and words. She was always so headstrong about⌠well everything but especially human rights. She wanted equal rights for everyone. She fought so hard it made Jim tired. Maybe it started with her father but it truly never seemed to end. They used to sit and theorize about meanings behind words and the messages of songs.
âTell your old man what we say about Paint It, Black. Thatâll mess him up.â
Joyce hit him with a chuckle. That was the last time in high school they really laughed together. He can still remember her laugh back then- light and free from any weight these years have brought to it.
But now Jimmy is Hopper, and life isnât the same. It doesnât wander and linger and hide behind stores for extra kisses that feel electric. He knows life just doesnât work that way anymore. He feels like life has only continued with all of the bad parts and none of the good.
In the slow guitar interlude of the song, he hears voices where they shouldnât be- distant and slightly muffled and outside the window thatâs opened a bit to let some air in.
âYeah, heâs home. The cruiser is there.â
âThen I should go-â
âNo, wait-â
Itâs Billy and another voice Hop thinks he can recognize. Sounds like the same cocky, lilted tone of Steve Harrington. He knows theyâve been fighting for months now. They always seem to be fighting. Hop used to get called into the school because Billy was always shoving him around that one year. Since then thereâs been whispers of them causing a ruckus all over the place but Hop never gets called to check it out. He doesnât like to ask too much about it. Heâs still trying to handle Billy gently and thereâs so many more things to worry about. He doesnât have the words to ask about that.
He doesnât have the words to explain why theyâd be here, together and clearly not at each otherâs throats. Why bring a fight all the way back home?
âYou uh⌠got anything planned this weekend?â
âNope, nothing planned.â
A pause.
âThereâs uh⌠a stupid dance or something-â
âBilly-â
âLook I just⌠we canât go, obviously but maybe⌠we can do something on our own?â
Thereâs another pause. Longer this time. Hop used to be so sure and suddenly heâs realizing yet again maybe things are the same as they were when he was young- because yet again, he doesnât know anything.
~Wonât you tell me what youâre thinking of~
âCâmon HarringtonâŚ.â thereâs the confirmation Hop didnât need. âSay something at least. Donât just stand there thinking.â
âBilly we canât keep running around and hiding.â
âWhy not?â
~Would you be an outlaw for my love?~
âWhat if people find out, thatâs why not! What if my dad-â
âTell your dad to fuck off.â
âAnd Hop?â
Hopâs heart stops. Everything comes crashing to a halt because suddenly heâs being made to face the very harsh fact that heâs not Jimmy anymore. He hasnât been for a long while. Heâs Chief Hopper and Chief Hopper belongs to the âotherâ part of these young kidsâ minds. Billyâs and Steveâs and Elâs and Mikeâs. Heâs the man theyâre meant to rebel against. Heâs the one that doesnât âget itâ like they do.
And apparently heâs the one that Steve is worried about.
He doesnât blame him. He doesnât even know what to think. He knows people like that exist. He thinks he used to go to school with a few guys who were⌠well, into other things. He never had much to say or even think about it. Joyce was friends with them. She went out to a protest or something once in their senior year. He saw her in a car with them while he was taking Diane to the movies.
Itâs not the fact that they like each other or that they want to spend time together. Thatâs better than them beating the snot out of each other and getting his guys called on them. Itâs the fact that theyâre worried about him and the fact that they have every reason to be. Hop is part of âThe Manâ now, and people around here donât exactly like differences.
âIâll figure it out.â Billy says, but Hop almost misses it, itâs so quiet.
âBilly-â
âAre you gonna fight for this, or what? Or is this just a one time thing for you to find yourself or some bullshit?â
Hop hears Jimmy in Billyâs words
âAre you not gonna fight for me?â
âFight for you?!â Joyce had yelled. Oh, how she yelled. âAre you serious? I⌠I pick and choose my fights Jim, okay? I have to.â
âThatâs not very fair to me.â
âNot fair? No shit itâs not fair, itâs not fair for me either! And you⌠youâre not being fair to me, yâknow!â
And that was it. They went separate ways. Itâs so vivid in Jimâs mind- the way she stormed away and Jim drove himself home. He doesnât remember how long it took until Lonnie joined Joyceâs picture, but it felt too soon in Hopâs ever bitter mind. He couldnât look at her for weeks. He shoved Lonnie in the hallway any chance he got. The kid would snarl and sneer at him, but he was as scrappy as a dog and scrawnier than a toothpick- no way did he ever pick a fight. He spat words and Jimmy lunged and that was that. Hop doesnât remember when the feelings faded, but he knows he never stopped hating Lonnieâs stupid face.
Then he started to date Diane and things were just⌠over.
âAlright Steve, I see-â
âItâs not that easy for me, Billy.â
âAnd you think this shit is easy for me?â
Hop feels bad for sitting here, still listening, but he canât get his muscles or limbs to move him. He feels stuck, somewhere between here and the past, picturing all the ways heâs still the same and yet so wildly different.
âWell it is different for you.â
âJust because my shitâs different doesnât mean my shitâs better. Shit is still shit, Steve.â
All the times Hop thought he had it the worst anyone could ever possibly have it.
âYou donât know what itâs like.â
âTry me, Harrington! Just try me.â
All the times Hop thought maybe his friends were exaggerating about Philâs past. Maybe Joyce was being dramatic about things at home. There was no way a kid could feel so threatened. Not a kid as big as Phil. Not a kid as headstrong as Joyce.
Thereâs a longer pause from the two outside the window. The voice that comes is quieter now.
âItâs scary Billy.â
âI know it is! I⌠fuck I know it is.â
Not a kid as big and headstrong as Billy. It took years for Hop to believe it could happen and still, with an example living in his own house, itâs still hard to understand.
âDonât you think it could be worth it?â Thatâs Billyâs voice. Hop feels his heart sink even deeper. Theyâre talking like theyâre going to die if theyâre caught. How many more times can he tell this boy heâs safe here? What does he have to do to convince him? To convince them both?
âMaybe⌠I think so.â
âLook, I canât make you do anything, Steve. But if you wanna try⌠then let me know, alright?â
Billy sounds so tired. Hop wants to tell him to lay down and take a nap. Thereâs such a long pause that follows and fills the space between them.
And then suddenly thereâs something blocking the sun from the window. Jim gets the wherewithal to turn and see that the two boys have got their hands tangled in the front of each otherâs shirts, just like they would if they were gearing for a fight, but instead of fists flying itâs their lips locked- worlds of frustration still heavy on their brows.
Jim wants to protect these kids until the day he dies. Theyâre here and theyâre wandering too, but their walk home is covered in speed bumps and potholes and hell maybe even spikes that he and Joyce never knew. Whatever he can do to give these kids the time and place to wander like the kids they are, heâll do it.
Then they separate, their breathing clearly labored and mingling. Then they turn and see Jim in the window, caught like two deer in big bright headlights.
A split second later, Steve is running for the hills and Billy is left with his fists grasping at the air. Hop canât help but laugh.
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