This is just soooo sweet đ„°
When you and Eddie are 9, he falls off the monkey bars at school and breaks his arm. You sit with him and hold his good hand while the teachers call an ambulance. He looks up at you with big brown tearful eyes and a sniffle and says âDonât leave me.â You hold his hand tighter and shake your head, âI wonât.â You say.
When Eddie gets his cast on youâre the first person to sign it. You write your name with a little heart next to it in red marker. âDo you think I can get Stacey Carmichael to sign it?â Eddie asks. You frown a little and your tummy feels weird at the thought. Stacey is in the grade above you and sheâs the coolest girl in school. âDunnoâ you shrug before Mr. Munson calls from the living room to tell you your parents are here to take you home.
When Eddie is 11 he starts a band called Corroded Coffin. You think itâs a funny name but Eddie tells you that itâs really metal. You tell the boys they should enter the middle school talent show and they do. They come 4th but Eddie is so happy that he picks you up and spins you around even though youâre taller than him. âYou didnât even win!â You laugh as he spins you, âI donât care, that was so fun!â
When you and Eddie are 12, you fall off your bike riding down the big hill near the trailer park. You scrap your knees and chin and youâre crying all messily. âEddie! It hurts!â You sob as Eddie holds your face in his little hands to look at your chin. âI know. Let me go get Uncle Wayne!â And then Eddie runs as fast as youâve ever seen back to the trailer to get Mr. Munson who comes speeding down with Eddie and a first aid kit in hand. âOkay, little miss, what have you done to yourself, hmm?â Eddie holds your hand while Mr. Munson patches you up.
When youâre 13, John Baker kisses you at the snowball dance while youâre slow dancing to a song you donât know. It was okay but your momâs lipstick you stole gets on his lips and he has to go to the bathroom to clean it off. âI kissed John!â You tell Eddie who is sitting on the bleachers looking bored. Eddie screws up his face âYuck.â You frown, âI didnât say it was yuck when you kissed Jessica Thompson!â You argue. âDid you use tongue?â Eddie asks. This time you screw up your face. âGross! No!â Eddie shrugs, âThen it wasnât a real kiss.â You donât think thatâs true.
When you and Eddie become freshmanâs he joins a club called Hellfire and itâs all he talks about. âOur DM is so cool! He listens to Judas Priest just like me!â âThe campaign is so fun!â âLook at the shirt that they gave us! Iâm never taking it off.â He canât hang out at lunch anymore because he sits with the Hellfire club and that makes you sad but you donât tell him that. Youâre just happy heâs happy.
When you reach sophomore year, you and Eddie agree that Friday nights are your dedicated nights to hang out. Eddie came to you at the end of freshman year saying he missed you and you were so happy you almost cried. You barely saw him anymore so now that you have a night just for you, you couldnât be happier.
When Eddie turns 16 you surprise him with an audition at the hideout for Corroded Coffin to play every Tuesday night. It might just be a few drunks that heckle at them every gig, but Eddie literally tackles you onto his bed and almost squishes you in thanks. Heâs bigger than you now.
When you and Eddie are 17, youâve become somewhat of the band manager. You help them unpack and pack every night and Eddie usually drops you home after. The rest of the band have left and itâs just you and Eddie hauling the last of the equipment in the back when you almost fall out the back of the van. Eddie is underneath you in an instant, catching you bridal style. âYou saved me.â You laugh as you hop down to your feet. Eddie doesnât laugh, he just looks down at you ââCourse I did. I always will.â He says. It makes your stomach flutter and before you know it youâre leaning up and pressing a chaste kiss to his lips. You pull away and stare up at him nervously watching as Eddieâs face breaks into a smile. âYâknow, itâs not a real kiss unless thereâs tongue.â He says. You slap at his shoulder.
When youâre 17 and 6 months, youâre at Eddieâs trailer and Mr. Munson isnât home. Youâre in Eddieâs bed and youâre both in your underwear and under the covers. Eddie is kissing all over your face, âYou sure you wanna? We donât have to.â He asks for the millionth time. âYeah, Iâm sure.â You reassure him.
When you turn 18, Eddie gives you a little box. You open it and find his guitar pick necklace curled up in the soft velvet. âEddie,â you gasp, âI canât accept this. This is the most important thing to you.â Eddie pushes a piece of hair behind you ear and leans in close, âYouâre the most important thing to me.â
When you and Eddie are 20, Eddie finally graduates high school. He runs up to you and Mr. Munson (âCall me Uncle Wayneâ he told you a million times before) and picks you up and spins you around in his cap and gown. âYou did it!â You cheer, giving him a loving kiss. He holds your face in his hands âI fucking did it.â
34k celebration ⥠Ⳡ@stars-bean requested: ronance or steddie?
singledad!mechanic!eddie x fem!reader
â¶On Monday, he was a ghost. By Friday, he was a man. Saturday night? He was the unintentional third wheel to your and Adrie's Trick-or-Treating antics.â¶
NSFW â slow burn, fluff, flirting, mutual pining, reader wears eddie's jacket, light angst, 18+ overall for eventual smut, drug/alcohol mention/use
chapter: 4/? [wc: 10.8k]
âł part 01 / 02 / 03 / 04 / 05 / 06 / 07 / 08 / 09
AO3
Chapter 4: Ghost Days
Eddie went through Monday like a ghost.
A spectacle in his youth, now a specter. A phantasm phasing through walls. Not a hello, nor a goodbye. Existing in the corners of the room, watching. No attention on him, just working, and thinking. Tending to his dying garden of thoughts when the sun didnât shine. Moving around you, and the tug of your gravitational pull, with your gaze firm on the desk in front of you, not on the haunt who brought this upon himself, and hurt you in the process.
âYou okay, Eddie?â his uncle asked, running a hand up and down his back. âYouâve been staring at that pot of boiling water for ten minutes.â
Eddie fluttered his lashes at the bubbles bursting on the surface. âSorry, got a lot on my mind.â
ââââ
Tuesday, Wednesday he was a full-body apparition.
No morning smiles, no afternoon laughter, but a single sentence.
âOh!â You hugged the files to your chest, not knowing Eddie was passing in the hallway to break room right as you were leaving Mr. Mooreâs office. Several of the papers crinkled from running into him. Your eyes were screwed shut, expecting an impact. All signs Eddie was real; a thing of worth, a precious brick wall who cupped your arm when you stumbled, who slotted his thumb in the crease of your inner elbow. A chest to brace your hand against. Fingers grasping his dirty coveralls. He was there. He caught you.
And the next dayâ
âEddie?â
Your sudden presence scared him. He slammed his black spiral-bound notebook shut and kept his palm over the devil-horned skull he drew on the front.
Sat alone at the table to eat his lunch, the low drone of the vending machines camouflaged the sound of you approaching, and he was too absorbed bin what he was writing down to notice you had entered the break room. Did not realize how close you had gotten until the heel of your palm pressed into a particularly sore muscle in his back from how you steadied yourself on his chair as you bent over.
You picked your gaze up from the notebook, and landed on his eyes. Even if you didnât mean to, the knot between your brows relaxed the smallest degreeâa nearly imperceptible amountâbut with how he drank in your appearance, he detected it.
âYou wrote O2 for this part here, did you mean X2?â you asked, referring to the invoice in your hand. He watched you bring the question to life. Voice and lips working together to create a lullaby for the unrest in his head. Breath cooling the wet trace of his tongue on his lips.
He was desperate for interaction. He knew. You were too. You just hid it better.
âEddie,â you reminded him, keen on the five-oâclock-shadow peppering his cheek from neglecting a shave.
If things were different, would you have caressed your thumb along the grain? Would you have pushed his bangs off his forehead, run your fingers through his hair, and pressed your lips to the delicate curve of his temple? Would you tell him he was a good dad for fixing the water heater again, and getting his daughter to school on time, even when he wanted to do nothing more than lay on the couch and cry?
âX2,â he confirmed, âYeah, I meant X2. Sorry.â
ââââ
Thursday? He was corporeal.
Carl returned from his stay-cation. Stay-at-home-vacation, also known as his wifeâs birthday.
He was taking a break in his story to microwave his lasagna when the fading voice of a customer went out the front door, ringing its chime. There was shuffling in the lobby. A backpack being unzipped.
The microwave beeped, and Carl picked up his container with the tips of his fingers, bringing it over to the table, where he sat in the chair facing the hallway.
You walked in with your lunch container, saw the back of Eddieâs head, and walked out.
Carl watched Eddieâs demeanor wilt at the swift exit, gaze falling to the corner of his eyes in acknowledgement of where you were just standing. Face blank, except for the heavy depression drifting his eyelids half-closed. Posture sagged more than normal.
âIs Adrie excited for Saturday?â Carl asked, keeping the conversation light, because boy, did he know that heartbroken look.
âMm?â Eddie jerked his head up, attentive. He processed the question, and crowded his packed mish-mash of leftovers to his chest, chewing his horrible attempt at replicating Wayneâs pork chop supper as he talked, âOh, yeah, yeah. Free candy and seeing her friends? Sheâs been bouncing off the walls all week.â He stabbed an undercooked carrot and brandished it with the same motion he rolled his eyes. âBut,â he drew out for comedic effect, âShe wanted to dress up as a bat again. Great! Same as last year. No problem, right? So, I take out her costume from the closet, have her try it on, and you know what she says?â
Carl shook his head with a slow grin stretching across his face.
âItâs not pretty enough!â Eddie ate the carrot. âShe never wants to be a princess, but all her friends do, and now sheâs gotten it in her head that if her costume doesnât have the same glitter and pizzazz theirs does, itâs not good enough.â
He laughed, âMy boys were easier. When they fought over who got to be Donatello, and who got to be Michaelangelo, all we had to do was switch mask colors and weapons.â
âSee, they knew what they were doing with the Ninja Turtles, man. Easiest costumes to reuse.â
âExactly.â
âNow I gotta figure out how to navigate telling her most of the stores are sold out of everything.â
âItâs a toughie, thatâs for sure.â
The conversation ended with two knowing nods, sharing the same shallow gripes about parenthood. Carl finished his meal first, and left the table to return to work, while Eddie picked away at his, submerging himself in his thoughts.
A recent drizzle cast Hawkins in a misty haze. The drink machine clicked, and the steady hum rose to a higher frequency. Footsteps squeaked down the hallway. The nervous hand of a once confident woman gripped the doorframe, and she leaned into the room, speaking in a small voice, âI can help.â
Eddie perked up. Head visibly lifting, shoulders drawn back and down. He didnât respond. Not until he turned around in his chair, and you persevered through the awkward amount of eye contact; wide and unblinking.
You reiterated, âI can help fix up Adrieâs costume so itâs glittery.. Or whatever you said.â Totally not eavesdropping. You waited for a response. âMore her style,â you mumbled, filling the void when he forgot what words were.
âY-Yeah! ThatâUhm.. Yeah, you have that kind of stuff?â He clutched onto the back of his chair, knuckles white, bending the plastic from the weight he leaned on it. His face was of equal intrigue, eyes pleading for more interaction, lips parted for more questions, eyebrows pinched in and upwards to show his humility. His thanks.
In a valiant effort for normalcy, you started with a self-deprecating comment, âI mean, itâs not like I was performing on Broadway with a whole costuming departmentâs worth of tailors, you know. Bobbie and I had to pull all-nighters to finish our own shitty ensembles, so Iâm pretty handy with a glue gun, and my sewing skills are serviceable, if I do say so myself.â You stepped further into the break room to put your unfinished lunch in the fridge. âI have tons of fabric and crafting supplies left over. Seriously, I donât mind spicing up her costume if you wanna bring it by tomorrow. I think I can make something she likes.â
âAre you sure? You donât have toââ
His mouth sealed itself shut at the incremental smirk sneaking its way across your face.
âWell, you see,â you said, exuding pure charisma, âNow youâve gone and phrased it in a way which enacts my policy. I have to say âyes.ââ
Given his current state, Eddie was little more than a mess of nerves; sleeping in uncomfortable positions that had his bones aching due to Adrieâs fear of monsters under her bed sending her to sleep with him on the couch; along with the general up-and-down rush of stress when he passed by your desk, and nothing came of his sad glance in your direction.
Unfiltered relief slipped past his chapped lips as he looked up at you, âThank you.â
ââââ
By Friday, he was a man.
Eddie skipped his morning cigarette. He wore his lucky Metallica t-shirt under his coveralls. Adrie had to beg him to release her from his powerful hug this morning, flailing her arms and pretending to choke, until the other parents in the carpool lane stared, and he relented.
He walked into the garageâs lobby with sure steps, making a quick stop behind the receptionist desk to drop off a neatly folded pile of black fabric. Then, he looked down the shadowed hallway leading to the lively break room, and he breathed deep.
You were framed by the doorway. Your back was to him, bent over the sink, just beginning to wash the coffee pot.
One thing was for certain.
If anything ever happened between you two and it didnât pan out, work would be weird. That much he learned this week. And that was just another reason to keep his boundaries up. Another good fucking reason to apologize, turn around, and go back to being cordial work buddies, and have that be the extent of your relationship.
And yet, here he was, flirting with the ring of fire he lit himself.
Crossing his arms, he squeezed his biceps, and leaned his shoulder on the wall outside the room, mind racing as he organized the same speech he rehearsed hundreds of times this morning. âCan we talk?â
Now, the unfortunate thing about rehearsing one-sided speeches was the unpredictability of which youâd follow the script.
âIf youâre here to apologizeâagainâfor spending a runtime of 83 minutes with me because it was just that awful, Iâll scream.â
Eddie had to manually force himself to relax out of his wince. âI deserved that,â he exhaled, speaking to himself only. He deserved your stern tone, your angry way of scrubbing the pot. The stiffness between your bunched shoulders. The tight annoyance in your throat from the way he treated you.
Yesterday was a nice break from the tension, but he hadnât yet made amends, despite the olive branch you extended to him in the form of fixing up his daughterâs costume. âWhat if I apologized for something else?â
âThe juryâs still out on that one.â
âGood enough,â he said. âListen, ah, Iâve been reflecting on what happened Friday, and I realized I came across like an asshole,â âHe shut his eyes, and shook his headâ âI was an asshole, whether I meant to be, or not. I mean, yeah, I had a lot on my mind, but that doesnât justify my behavior in blowing you off like that, especially when you were nothing but nice to me when you saw they set us up together, and you just wanted us to have a good time.. I can tell I hurt your feelings. Iâm sorry.â
You rinsed out the soap suds and filled the pot with water, turning off the sink.
There, he apologized, now he should turn around, and go back to being cordial work buddies.
But he was so fucking stupid.
Committing to something he may come to regret, he entered the break room and stopped when he came to the counter beside the sink, bending sideways to rest his arm there, and kicking out his hip. âI didnât even get to tell you how pretty you were.â
Immediately, you angled yourself away to pull the coffee machine towards you, and poured water into the reservoir.
Eddie let out a groan as his brain caught up with his mouth. âI meant are. How pretty you are..â he spoke at your back while you still refused to acknowledge him. âI meant to say how pretty you are.â
His stomach seized. None of this was going how he planned, so.. fuck it. âI think youâre really pretty right now, actually.â
Nothing seemed louder than his quick breaths, and heart beating in his throat.
The longer you went silent, he considered getting a new job bagging groceries for the supermarket they built on Cherry Street last year.
You slotted the pot onto the hot plate, and opened the cabinet in front of you, blocking his view of you as you reached for the coffee container. But when you closed the door, he had to clench the tremble of annoyance out of his hands.
Try as you mightâlips scrunched to the side, cheeks sucked in, making a big production of counting the spoonfuls of grounds you scooped into the filter basketâyour smile was obvious. Obvious, and irritating; leading him on as if his advances were a worse offense than his attitude after your date.
âFine, fine,â you sighed like you were doing him a favor. âI guess youâve appealed to my ego enough for me to forgive you.â
âYouâre the absolute worst person Iâve everââ
âYeah. But you think Iâm pretty.â
âWhatever,â Eddie grunted, tugging a strand of hair over his mouth, embarrassed to hear his own honesty repeated back at him. âSo weâre good?â
You had a sarcastic statement ready on your tongueâhe saw it in how you narrowed your eyes, and tipped your head. A loftiness to the way you regarded him; all pompous and teasing and so sure he was being silly and asking questions for the sake of bothering you.
Then, you witnessed his shy quirk, and were instantly disarmed.
âYes, Eddie, weâre good. The best of friends.. And are you sure you werenât disappointââ
âIf youâre about to ask me if I was disappointed that you were my date for the third time, Iâll scream.â
You laughed. You tore your gaze from his fingers playing with his curls, and closed the lid of the coffee machine, but in doing so, you turned away, and you both discovered a subtle truth about him.
Eddie was the type who wanted to witness the full scope of the joy he brought on others. When he made someone laugh, he wanted to drink it all in. He wanted to observe the exact way they smiled, how far back they threw their head, if their eyes closed with mirth, if tears sprang, if they giggled to appease him, or if they were expelling a cathartic release. When he made someone happy, he leaned in to hoard the revelry, collect it, and share it. Seeking out their gaze, mirroring them to experience their pleasure first-hand. Itâs what made him happy.
It caused him to encroach on their personal space subconsciously, pursuing the pride, and sense of achievement he felt when he accomplished making someone else feel good.
He stood close to you. Very close to you, studying you unabashedly, basking the pure unadulterated validation of making you smile.
You idly scratched your thumbnail over a stain on the counter. âPretty, huh?â you mused quietly. âIs the hoodie really doinâ it for ya?â It was once black, now sun-faded and overwashed. There was a logo on the front for a random high school. Your high school, Eddie assumed. Clearly, a beloved item, and one you wore when doing craft projects, as indicated by the layers of glitter, dried paint, and burn marks from a hot glue gun marring the sleeves.
Still leaned over, he dropped his hand from his mouth, and swept his hair to one side, exposing the length of his throat. âMaybe it is.â
âShut up,â you snorted.
âThe frumpy âjust rolled out of bed at noon and forgot to get milk at the grocery storeâ look really gets me going.â
âFrumpyâ?â In the middle of pressing the ON button and shoving the coffee machine into its place on the counter, you went to pin Eddie with a glare for laying the teasing remarks on thick today, but your attention drifted. Your focus found his eyes shining with slyness, and dropped your gaze to the crook of his neck, where you spied something dastardly. âHow does this keep happening? Do you not look in a mirror?â
As you nagged him, you reached for his coveralls. Somehow, the collar kept managing to tuck itself on the inside, and you were at its beck and call, slipping two fingers underneath to unfurl it, coaxing it out in a long stroke over the peak of his collarbone, and down the slope of his chest, over his heart. Longer than two beats worth. The fabric was quite rolled up today. You had to slide along his lucky shirt to find the pointed end, and pull it out, laying it flat. Smoothing down the edges, and securing his tan work jacket over it. Patting them both to seal the kind gesture.
From his periphery, he watched you tend to him, and his smirk grew.
Fell for it hook, line, and sinker.
âGuess I donât look at myself too often,â he said, eyeing your hands lingering on his personâflattening your palms over his pec for a prolonged moment before retreatingâand he nodded for you to follow him out of the room to your desk. He needed the extra seconds away from you to rid himself of his smugness.
Talking about the costume, he rounded to the taller side of your desk, while you sat opposite him in your chair, âLuckily it was big on her last year, so it still fits. Itâs just a little short in the legs.â
âGotcha.â You shook out the bat wings and rubbed the fuzzy material of the suit between your fingers. âDoes she have room for another layer underneath? Warm pajamas, or something? The temperatureâs supposed to drop tonight. I think a cold front is coming in.â
âYeah, thereâs room.â
âOkie dokie.â You cracked your knuckles and looked at him expectantly. He raised his eyebrows. You raised yours higher. You made a more obvious face. He made a confused one back at you. âDude, leave. I canât work with you watching me.â
He curled his lip in a mocking sneer, and went to work in the garage, whereâironicallyâyou could watch him.
~~~
Turns out, you were serious about the double standards of your relationship.
Eddie caught you sneaking glances in his direction whenever heâd wheel out from underneath a car, or when he was bent over the engine of a truck, but as soon as he took his sweet time locating his favorite socket wrench from the tool cabinet (that most definitely wasnât already in his back pocket), you blocked your project with your body and moved your lips like you were telling him off.
And when he knocked on the glass to gesture for more clean rags from the supply closet, you scrambled to hide the felt shapes you were cutting out, and sent a tube of glitter paint rolling across the lobby.
Even as he relaxed into the plush seat of his car after a long day of work, and the rumble of the engine soothed his mind from exterior worries, his eyes traveled from the bright red stop light swaying in the wind, to the custom crimson interior of his Dodge Omni Shelby, to the pile of black fabric next to him.
He drove with one hand on the wheel. He could just.. take a peek at what the hell you were doing all day.
âDonât even think about peeking! Itâs a surprise. I want Adrie to see it first, and then you can look when sheâs trying it on.â
He snatched his wandering fingers away from the bat wing and cupped them around his inner thighâhis usual place for resting them.
~~~
When he opened the door to his trailer, the little lady of the hour came running at him full-speed.
âThereâs my facehugger!â Eddie announced through his laugh, stepping backwards to soften the blow of her enthusiasm. And yeah, maybe he shouldnât refer to his daughter as a parasitic alien from a horror franchise, but the clinginess comparison was accurate.
Adrienne made her immediate attempt to climb him knownâclutching onto the hem of his work jacket, and shaking it. âDaddy!â she demanded, making grabby hands at him.
âHold on, hold on.â He knelt to her level, and promised to pick her up in a few minutes if she exhibited an ounce of patience. âYou remember that nice lady from work you drew pictures with?â Thinking about it, she twisted back and forth with excess energy, and gave a big nod, pressing her fingers along her smile. âWell, she heard your costume wasnât up to your standards, so she wanted to make your Halloween extra special this year. She worked on this all day..â he said slowly, drawing out the grand reveal.
True to his word, Eddie unfolded the outfit he had clutched under his arm, and held it out in front of him, showing it to her first and watching her reaction.
Uncle Wayne opened the bathroom door in the midst of tidying up his beard, dragging a towel around his neck to wipe away the excess shaving cream. Interested in the commotion, and especially curious as to why the person he referred to as his own granddaughter was currently running around the coffee table screaming at the top of her lungs, he questioned anyone who could hear him, âWhatâs all this goinâ on?â
âThe lady at work made my bat costume prettyâLook!â Adrie tugged on the bottom of Wayneâs flannel.
âI see,â he said, vaguely recalling the young receptionist she was referring to. He raised his eyebrows at Eddie. âShe did all that?â
He shrugged. âSheâs nice.â
Too excited, Adrie unzipped the back of the jumpsuit and climbed in while Eddie held it open. Still, he did not peep at the finished product. Not until every foot wiggled out of the appropriate amount of leg holes, and every sleeve found a hand.
Adrienne walked backwards into the living room and struck a pose with her arms out, flapping them.
Wayne âawwâd and clapped.
Eddie sat back on his calves, mouth slightly agape.
You really were nice.
The costume was magnificent. The black fleece was painted with thin strokes of white paint to give the illusion of hair, with special attention around the turtleneck collar where you glued white faux fur into a short mane. Cleverly, the pants were extended with layers of iridescent tulle that caught the light in shimmery rainbows, disguising how short they were on her.
The wings themselves were works of art. Showstoppers. Instead of hanging limp from under her arms, you had used flexible plastic to create bones, giving them some structure.
They were exactly what Adrie wanted. Silver glitter served as a mere backdrop to the myriad of foil stars glued to the fabric. As oneâs attention panned downwards, they grew in size and frequency, until there was a disco ball amount of flash and pizzazz. To top it all off, there were felt clouds and crescent moons dangling on strings from the bottom. The stuffed and stitched celestial motifs swung with Adrieâs grand gestures.
And as if that wasnât enough, Wayne picked up two little black triangles that bounced onto the carpet when Eddie revealed the costume. âCâmere, Adrie,â he said, holding them up to her head. âYouâve got two little ears on barrettes, too.â
âJesus,â Eddie exhaled.
His next breath caught in his throat. He discovered why you snipped the fabric where it was previously attached to the suit, and gave it an extra bone structure to wrap around.
It was so he could slip his arms around his daughter, and hug her tight without any impediments. âYou like it, yeah?â
She threw her arms around his neck, and imbued all her surprise into her little voice, âAre you kidding me? Itâs my favoriteâthe best costume ever! I love it.â
âWeâll have to find a way to thank her when I see her on Monday.â
The hug lasted until Eddieâs knees ached. Still, he clung to her as one clung to a lifesaver. He passed his palm over her hair. He stroked his thumb on the back of her head. He pressed her into the darkness against his throat. He squeezed her to conceal the way he shook. If anyone were to notice the secret of his actions, it would be the person who raised him as one would raise their own son.
Wayne walked over and ruffled his nephewâs hair.
~~~
Later, after Adrie had gone to bed, Eddie confessed, âThat took me so off guard, I almost cried. Thatâs the nicest thing anyoneâs done for me, or Adrie, in years.. I mean, outside of everything you do for us. And Steve, too. I just didnât expect her to put that much effort into a costume.. Or to care that much.â
âI know, son,â Wayne said, patting him on the knee as they sat on the couch, lit by the muted earthy tones of the local news channel. âShe seems real nice.â
ââââ
It was a howling Halloween night.
Eddie pulled off the main road into the nice neighborhood on the west side of Hawkins. Everyone knew you went to the rich houses on Halloween, as evident by the agonizing minutes it took to find a place to park, while Adrie was oblivious and just wanted out of her car seat.
Crowds swarmed the doors handing out the best candy. Groups of friends gathered in the streets. Kids ran down the sidewalk to ogle the elaborate decorations. âIs the entire population here, or somethinâ?â Eddie grumbled, shifting the gear stick into park.
Once Adrie was out, he asked her, âDo you wanna stop by a few houses on the way to Steveâs?â She eyed the rowdy bigger kids pushing each other on their way up the driveway next to her, and she held out her hand for Eddie to take as a silent answer.
When she was with her friends, she was outgoing, but in this unfamiliar place, surrounded by strangers in the dark, she needed her dad to guide her.
âYouâll feel better once we have some candy in your bucket,â he promised, swinging the orange jack-o-lantern pail back and forth.
In reality, Eddie dreaded this part. Hated it. Going up to houses, knocking on doors, glancing away the second they were answered. He dressed differently. Tried to blend into the back of a big group. Kept his gaze on his daughter shying behind his legs, speaking for her, and hoping her cuteness distracted the adults from taking too close of a look at him. Shuffling away before they could recognize him, remember his last name, and make that same face they always did:
Barely concealed disgust.
Eddie held her hand for several streets until she felt comfortable going up to doors without him, thanks to finding a friend or two from preschool. Those parents were easier. Some heâd gotten to know over the last two years due to birthday parties and school events. Yet, they returned his greeting out of politeness. Waited on the sidewalk like him, but at a distance; in a circle, not inviting him to their grown-up talk.
Thatâs okay. He felt less alone when Adrie came jogging back to show him her candy. And although she insisted she was a big girl and didnât need to hold his hand anymore, she walked as if she were glued to his side, three steps to his one stride.
âI donât need you, Daddy.â
âYeah, you do.â
On and on, they made their way up the streets, and came upon a white-picket fence dwelling sat modestly between two larger statements, right as the porch light turned off and a group of people left the home.
Fate was a funny thing.
Steve held the gate open for Nancy and whispered something in her ear as she passed, earning a withered glare before she turned and the moon caught the smile flitting across her lips. Behind her, dashing from the shadows, was their son. He held his plastic sword high above his head, and gave a brave battle cry against the person who emerged next.
Robin, also dressed as a pirate, jumped from the top of the stairs and clashed her sword with his. They tussled on their way to the fence, stopping when she feigned a dramatic death, and had to chase down her tricorn hat from rolling into the street.
Eddieâs hand was sweatingâAdrie said so with a yuckiness to her words as she ran to join Steveâs son and their group of trick-or-treaters, leaving him behind to stare. And stare. And stare. And try not to burst into a grin.
He wouldnât have to wait âtil Monday to thank you.
Step by step, you helped their daughter teeter down the stairs. Patiently holding her hand, encouraging her to the bottom, and brought her to Steve, who was getting out the stroller from the trunk of his car.
âNo! IâmâI.. Will walk,â their little girl finished in a disjointed manner, engrossed by the array of bedsheet ghosts, lispy vampires, and corn-syrup-blood-covered werewolves moving around her.
âYeah, okay, kid,â Steve said sarcastically. âYou wanna be a big girl and walk on your own, but we both know after two houses youâre gonna be begging for the stroller.â
Like most girls, she brushed him off, and turned to you for assistance with her jacket. The puffy orange snow suit hindered her movements; her walk was a waddle, and her arms stuck out from her sides helplessly. She was warm, though.
You, on the other hand, were dressed in what Eddie could only call an adult onesie. A fitted one; hugging you in places he shouldnât notice it hugging you while you were squatting down to zip up her jacket, but a onesie, nonetheless.
âThere we go.â He heard you say from where he stood, roughly a car-length away, lurking in the darkness like a creep.
But heâd have to find a way to repent later. His fate tapped you on the shoulder, and his heart set the tempo for his plucky courageâs passion.
âAdrie!â you squealed at her. She greeted you with equal fervor. âYour costume is so, so pretty!â Without a second thought, you bent over, put your hands on your thighs, and asked while waggling your eyebrows, âWanna fly?â
âYeah!â
Adrie unveiled her full glittery wingspan, and you clasped her under her arms, instructing her to jump. Up she went. You raised her above you to your full extent and spun in circles. Giggly, messy circles. Showing her off for everyone to see. Parading her for the slew of compliments coming from onlookers. And when your strength tired, you brought her to your hip, and held her tight, still spinning. Dizzy, silly twirls. Savoring the closeness of your foreheads almost touching.
You slowed to stop to scan the scene around you, searching the shapeless night. âWhereâs your dad, hmm?â
She pointed behind you.
Over your shoulder, your gazes connected in between a family dressed as Peanuts characters.
Eddie raised his hand, but forgot to move it back and forth.
Your face brightened. The love you showed Adrie reflected in your eyes when you found him. Smiling bigger, somehow, at his stupid wave when he remembered how to perform one.
âNice costume,â you teased, sauntering up to him with a swagger. âLight-wash blue jeans instead of black. How different.â
âYeah, and what are you? A cat? So creative.â He meant it as an insult to your gray onesie with a tan belly, but he was the one who followed your quick glance at his stupid hand still waving like an utter moron, and he stuffed his fists in his pockets, wondering if heâd ever recover his dignity after this encounter.
âUh, Iâm clearly a mouse,â you drawled, inclining your head to show off your rounded mouse ears on your headband.
Adrie copied your exact tone and inflection to serve as a gut punch, âYeah, Daddy, sheâs clearly a mouse.â
His greatest fear mocked him. With Adrie on your hip, and your two matching smirks taunting him with your cheeks pressed to one another, he shook his head, and pinched his eyebrows up in worried exasperation. âI donât need two of you.â A revelation he should take more seriously as you looked at Adrie, and you both giggled. Tips of your noses grazing. Hugging you around your neck. Touching your animal ears and calling you âMiss Mouse.â Thanking you for her costume, and you asked, seeking her genuine approval as you fitted one of her tiny hands in yours to stretch a wing out.
âYou like it?â
âI love it!â
You swayed with her in the new position, resembling two people slow dancing despite there being no background music other than shrieks of laughter, and a chorus of âtrick-or-treat!â
Yeah, this feeling in his chest was evolving past the boundaries.
Shit.
Eventually you had to support her with two arms again, thus ending your waltz, and you remembered Eddie was there, and Eddie remembered to direct his tender expression at his daughter.
âSo, really,â you said, nudging his white tennis shoes and giving him a once-over, âWhoâre you supposed to be? A grumpy guy who couldnât be bothered? A wet blanket?â You leaned in. âDonât tell me youâre dressed as a stick in the mud for the second week in a row. Thatâs just gauche, Eddie.â
Adrie latched onto one word specifically. She pointed at him with all her might, and declared, âGrumpy! Youâre Grumpy.â
âGreat,â he groaned. Yet, there was not a trace of annoyance tugging at his lipsâjust his tongue poking through as his daughter reduced him to an unpleasant character. âTell her what movie you watched this morning.â
âI watched Snow White with grandpa,â she said. You gave an understanding âahh.â âGrandpa is Sneezy. Daddy is Grumpy. You can be..â
âIâll be Dopey.â
Eddie snorted, âFitting.â You cut him a soft frown, and he shifted his focus back to his daughter. Eye contact with you was too difficult. He felt exposed. Vulnerable. A single longing look gave away too much, he had to put an end to them. âYou think Iâm Grumpy, huh?â
She jabbed her finger at him again. âYou! Most definitely are.â
The immediate flash of devilry in his eyes was her only warning. âWhatâd I tell you about pointing at people?â He snatched her wrist in a weak grasp, and lunged at her, snapping his teeth, pretending to bite her finger off with a smile. She scream-laughed and buried her face in your shoulder.
âAw, itâs okay, Adrie,â you consoled her, âI always knew he was a biter. Lemme count your fingers, ând make sure you have all six.â
âSix?â she cried.
Besotted by your willingness to indulge his humor, Eddie lost track of his inhibitions, and acted on a deep-rooted impulse from his youth, when he was more expressive of his urges. He crept in close while you were busy doting over Adrie, and lowered his face to where he was allowed to whisper in a deeper register, âHey, no picking on my kid. Thatâs my job.â To make matters worse, he reached for your side, aimed for your ribs through the single layer of fleece, and prodded. It was a success. You yelped. You were ticklish. Another trait to add to the list of things he shouldnât know about you.
Steveâs bafflement pierced the rambunctious Jedi fight happening in the middle of the road, âAre you three gonna catch up, or do I need to make you get in the wagon?â he threatened. Sure enough, he was hauling a red wagon of someone elseâs kids behind him dressed as various dinosaurs, complete with masks.
More parents had joined the trick-or-treat cavalry, milling about on the sidewalk, waiting for Adrie before they knocked on the next house. You recognized this quicker than Eddie, and offered to take her by, well, simply walking off with her in your arms.
For the first block he was alone with his thoughts. Watching you go from house to house holding his daughterâs hand. Sitting back while you took over for him, and lessened his burdens. When it was you crouched next to Adrie, smiling up at the adults with buckets of candy, they didnât see Munson. They saw a cute little girl and her supposed mom participating in innocent fun.
âHey, bud,â Steve said, swinging around to his side, tossing an arm around his shoulders, and shaking him. Eddie could sense the subject he was about to bring up from his consoling squeeze alone. âSo, how goes the whole ânot falling in loveâ thing?â
Eddie had his correction at the ready, âI said âattached,â not âfall in love.ââ
Steve gave him a long, hard stare.
âAnd I said it was Adrie I was worried about getting attached.â
Steve deepened his stare.
Eddie looked away, then back, then away again. He was quiet for a few strained moments, shuffling his feet while the kids thanked a woman dressed as a witch for her cauldron of candy, and his passing gaze lingered on the Mouse holding his daughterâs hand.
You glanced in his direction, where he stayed on the outskirts of the group, and suppressed a giggle. You were listening to Adrie and her friendâs story about mermaids with full interest, asking questions, and gasping at the information they were disclosing, acting as if they knew the worldâs secrets and deemed you worthy of its knowledge.
It was sweet. Endearing, adorable, attractive in the worst ways, and exactly the sort of fun Adrie craved that he couldnât provide when he was overworked, tired, and stressed to the point of crying frustrated tears.
Except, of course, those bad days had become less and less since you started working at the auto shop..
Eddie surrendered. âHow does it look like itâs going?â
âLike you're happier when sheâs around,â Steve replied.
âReal good thatâs doinâ me.â
They had reached the end of the street, and waited to cross at the stop sign.
Steve shrugged, and said, âI think itâs cute you finally found someone to have a crush onâOw!â He clutched his side where Eddie elbowed him.
He hissed, âNot so loud,â even though you were several feet away, and talking animatedly with Robin.
âOh, câmon, itâs precious.â Lifting his chin, Steve alluded to the way you picked up Adrie and herded the other children across the road like sheep. âYâknow, you were right about her saying âyesâ to everything. Her and Robin have some wild stories. Did you know someone came up to them at one of those sleazy hole-in-the-wall bars and asked them to perform on stageâlike, obviously meaning you know, strippingâbut she accepted his offer, and thatâs how they started doing stand up together? Yeah, they just went up there and started shouting jokes at all the drunks. Dodging beer being thrown at them, and whatever. Sounds fun.â
âYeah, real fun,â Eddie muttered with a horrified expression, wondering how you managed to survive this long with your absurd policy.
âAnyway,â Steve surmised. âI think you should go for it.â
The mood shifted instantly. Eddieâs face went lax, aside from his flared nostrils. He spoke firmly, âI canât do that, man.â
âWhy not?â When Eddie refused to elaborate with a scornful shake of his head, and sudden tenseness to his jaw, Steve softened his nature. He tightened his hold on him in a make-shift hug, and requested, âTalk it out with me. Tell me what youâre going through, and what you want out of this, because you sure do flirt a lot for someone who keeps denying themselves a real relationship.â
âI donât know what the fuck I want anymore,â he exhaled in mind, body, and spirit. Just a complete depletion of all his anxieties under the weight of Steveâs arm.
Eddie ran his tongue along the back of his bottom teeth while he observed you crouch in someoneâs driveway to make a case for Halloween themed pencils, and how they may not be exciting as candy, but there were bats on them, and Adrienne liked bats, therefore, the pencils were cool.
The anxieties were replaced with the blooming realization of how deep his crush went, and the stab of reality pierced the good feelings.
âThereâs a million reasons why itâs a bad idea,â Eddie sighed, and gathered his thoughts to list them out as succinctly as possible. âUh, letâs see. First of all, weâre coworkers, and this week has already been a real glimpse into how this would all pan out if I took the risk and things didnât work out.â
Steve rocked his head to the side. âFair, but itâs pretty obvious she likes you too, with how she flirts back.â
âPerfect segue. Okay, so maybe she does like me. But does she like me? And does she like Adrie? Canât have one without the other. And, man, she made it clear at the movies that she doesnât even ask if her dates have kids, because thereâs never been a second oneâa second date, I mean. Sheâs that casual about it.â
âWhy not try something casual, then?â
âWhen have I ever approached anything casually in my life?â
âYou raise a good point there,â Steve answered, shivering at the sudden uptick in frigid gusts biting through his thick jacket.
You and Robin pulled off to the side so your gaggle of kids could take turns stomping on crunchy brown leaves before they blew away.
Ensuring they were at a good distance to watch, but not be overheard, Steve kept his voice low, âWhat else?â
Eddie rolled his eyes. âGee, I dunno, how about the fact she hates this place, and is going to leave eventually? Hate to break it to you, but even if she likes me like that, and even if things worked out for a while, Iâm not ready to explain to Adrie why the nice lady she loves so much doesnât come around anymore.â
âSo make her stay around.â
âWhat?â
Shrugging with that stupid grin of his, Steve explained, nonchalant and lackadaisical, âYou said she says âyesâ to everything. So just ask her to stay.â
Leaning into it, Eddie pulled an overjoyed face, and threw his arms up, gesticulating overdramatically. âOkay! Yeah, youâre right. Iâll just ask her to marry me, then sheâll be forced to stay in this hellhole with me forever. What a grand idea!â
Steveâs full-bodied laugh sent them both doubling over. âOkay, stud, going straight for marriage. It was just a suggestion that maybe sheâs over the crazy party-til-dawn city life, and is looking for.. whatever it is youâve got.â
âThanks for the pep talk,â he said with more than a hint of sarcasm. Easing out of his glare, he broke himself out of considering Steveâs validation as anything more than an audible feedback loop of the things he wanted to hear, and not the facts he needed to hear. âDoesnât matter. She could like me, she could not. She could want kids, she could not. She could stay, she could not. I still have to see her every day, regardless. Thereâs not a lot of other options out there for me, and even if she didnât want the city life anymore, I donât think sheâs gunning for the single dad whose biggest aspiration is getting a trailer of his own, so his uncle can have his room back.â
Cynicism, cynicism, cynicism. Denial.
Steveâs mouth twisted, and he became serious. âDonât talk about yourself like that.â
âItâs true, though.â
Ahead, a guy caught Steveâs attention and signaled that it was his turn again on wagon duty, which was the perfect excuse to make his exit because you were standing on your tip-toes, seeking out Eddie in the sea of Stormtroopers. You spotted him and waved with childlike glee, making your way over.
Steveâs hair fell into his eyes as he drew Eddie in. âOne last piece of advice,â he began, gaze set on the side of his friendâs face, accepting not even he could win over his attention when it came to existing in the same universe as you. âIf youâre serious about not pursuing her, maybe stop looking like youâre gonna blow your load every time she smiles at you.â
Eddie sputtered, âJesus Christ, dude.â
With that last remark to recover from, Eddie was forced to rearrange his pale face into anything remotely appropriate while Steve got to stroll away as if nothing happened.
âUh, hey,â he said, eyes scared wide, and showing too many teeth in his tight smile under your scrutiny.
You brought your hand up, and stepped into him until your chests were nearly together. Cocking your head, you pointed at something over yonder, and slowly, unwillingly, he stopped analyzing the nuances of your face to look at the group of kids at the house across the street. One kid in particular. Dressed in black, and with six additional arms dangling from his two human ones.
You couldnât keep the sheer triumph out of your voice, âThat spider is certainly bigger than your palm.â
He winced as if your joke physically pained him. He curled in on himself, and depleted himself of oxygen to groan a long, contemptuous, âSo lame,â stressing both words to exaggerate his misery. Shaking his head as if his grievance was anything other than a ploy to discover what it felt like to reject reality, and satiate the envy he felt when Adrie got to be this close to you. Foreheads almost together. Noses almost grazing.
As if your hand trapped between your bodies was anything other than a ploy to rest the backs of your fingers on his chest as you laughed. As you leaned into him. As you tugged on his sweatshirt underneath his leather jacket, begging him to give in until, at last, he broke.
Eddie laughed with you, recklessly.
âDid you really abandon my kid to run over here and tell me that?â
âSheâs safe with Bobbie,â you promised in a whisper. âAnd yes, I did.â
Leaf-shaped shadows danced across you both, cast from the orange glow of the streetlamp above. Autumnal bare branches, electric wires, swaying in the wind, revealing your faces in quick pieces; a wrinkled forehead here, contours of a nose there. Flashes of a puzzle you both collected and assembled in the scarce seconds before it was time to move on to the next house.
You crossed your arms tight over yourself and walked beside him, smiling at the ground.
âHowâve you enjoyed your Halloween experience?â he asked, swinging his arms wide to gesture at Hawkins in general. âIâm sure itâs a lot different than what youâre used to.â
âOh, I love it!â you said in earnest, surrounded by all the things youâd only seen on screen before. âItâs just like the movies. Trick-or-treating, little kids running around in costumes, the weather, the decorations. Itâs surreal. Usually Iâd be drunk in a nightclub by now.â
Furrowing his brow, he looked upwards as if he were reading a nonexistent clock, and asked with a twinge of parental disapproval, âIsnât it, like, 8PM?â
âYeah,â you admitted, unperturbed. Too impassive to put him at ease. Like you were lording a secret over him. âDonât act like you werenât the same before you had Adrie.â
âAnd what does that mean?â
âHarringtonâs been telling me stories about you,â you informed him, and rolled your bottom lip inward, biting it as he zeroed in on your cheeky grin getting a rise out of him.
He squinted at you. âCalling him Harrington, huh? Well, arenât you two chummy.â Mentally rolling a Nat 20 for Stealth, he lifted his hand to your side without you noticing. âWhatâd he tell you?â
You made an âXâ over your mouth with your fingers.
The perfect position to leave yourself open for attack. I mean, the opportunity presented itself so splendidly, how could he not? How could he resist the greatest temptation?
His impending threat continued to go undetected. Giving you one last chance, he dipped his face to yoursârelishing how the apples of your cheeks intruded on your eyes when you smiled this hard, forcing them to scrunch closedâand he asked, âWhat did he tell you?â
âIâm not repeating!â you giggled.
Oh, you were giggling all right. And in the next gasp, you were squealing, jerking away from him.
Eddie was merciless. His large hands proved too difficult to escape. He poked, prodded. Tickled you until his every, âTell me, tell me, tell me,â was met with your, âStop, stop, stop, please!â You fought him fruitlessly, grappling at his forearms, and failing to do little more than slip against his sleeves. He cackled at you. Mocked you with the tip of his tongue to his teeth each time you thought you got away, only to be caught again. You resisted. Resisted. Persevered in the face of evilâknocking your forehead into his chin on accident. Eddie thought you wouldâve caved by now, but it was him who stopped; and not because of the unwanted attention your antics drew.
You pried him away from your ribs.
âYouâre freezing!â Eddieâs mood changed on a dime at feeling your frigid fingers on top of his. He shifted so that he was enveloping your hands, encasing you in his warmth in exchange for the cold seeping to his bones.
âYeah,â you answered sheepishly.
âYou made a fuss about reminding me to put Adrie in extra layers, but youâre not wearing a jacket?â
You chewed on the inside of your cheek, distorting your grin. âYeah.â
âYouâre irresponsible, you know that?â
âYeah.â
âA real bad example.â
âYeah.â
âAn absolute pain in my ass.â Eddie grinned with you. Eyelids falling half-closed. Searing your skin with his heat. Enacting the subtle art of asking questions for the sake of prolonging the moment. Not like it was obvious, given you readily accepted his fingers curled around yours with a coy glint to your gaze. Totally discreet as he let go to shrug off his jacket and hand it over.
Obliging him, you raised your eyebrows. âWhat a gentleman.â You slid your arms into the sleeves, snuggled into his blanketing warmth, and tugged the collar over your mouth, rendering yourself to a pair of pretty eyes.
He was a goner.
âTell me what Harrington said.â
âOkay,â you indulged him, breath coming out as a fog. âHe said..â You were back to giggling behind the collar, remembering the story. âHe said one time at a party there was this big watermelon keg he spent all day working on.â Eddie pressed his lips into a line, knowing where this was going. âHe scooped out the innards. Spent painstaking hours cutting up fruit to put inside it and soak up all the rum. And then you wandered in. Already hammered, and you, youââ You snickered and peeled back the collar. âYou knocked it over within ten seconds of walking in the kitchen, smashing it everywhere like a crime scene.â You hid behind the collar again, then opened it, voice gone high-pitched with suppressed laughter. âAnd he said you panicked, and tried to scoop it up in your hands and put it in peopleâs cups!â More laughter. âAnd when they said ânoâ because it was fucking gross floor juice, you tried eating all the fruit yourself.â One more hide and seek of the collar as you lost it in a final squeak, âAnd you cried!â
He waited until you calmed down to show how thrilled he was in a deadpan tone, âGreat, great. Iâm so glad he told you that one.â
âIt certainly conjures an image.â
Thinking the conversation was over, you took a step in the direction of your trick-or-treat group, but something caught your eye. You tilted your head. He mirrored you, tilting it the same way. You shuffled to the side. He turned with you, more, more towards the streetlamp. Curious as to what you were doing, and why you were staring at his chest, mouthing something.
âWhatâs Corroded Coffin?â
âUhâItâsâItâs nothing,â Eddie said a bit too loud, wiping at his sweatshirt like the self-printed logo was a crumb he could discard himself of.
Fortunately, a wild Adrienne appeared, interrupting him from making a bigger fool of himself. âMy hands are cold. Can I have my gloves?â
Eddie glided his hands over his stomach out of habit, and realized his pockets werenât there. Without warning, he grabbed a fistful of his jacket, and yanked you to him, spinning you, manhandling you. Forcing you to catch yourself on his braced musclesâshoulder to his chest, hip to a place heâd rather not dwell on. Not gentlemanly at all.
You released a string of flustered remarks, and pushed away from him, making it appear to be a benign accident in front of his daughter.
âHere,â he said to Adrie, holding the black mittens above her head, out of her reach.
She jumped, and jumped, and stomped. âDaddy,â she whined.
Dusting yourself off from the previous encounter, you agreed, âYouâre so cruel, bullying your own child.â
âShe knows the magic words,â he led on.
âPlease!â She jumped higher, huffing and puffing.
âAnd?â
âAnd thank you!â
He relented. His evil reign came to an end. First, the tickling, now, the height advantage over a little girl. He gave Adrie the mittens and she stuck her tongue out at him before bolting off faster than lightning.
It was you turn to poke a stern finger into his ribs. âAwful, awful man,â you scolded him. Unlucky for you, he wasnât ticklish there, nor was he ashamed of any of his actions these past few minutes. He might come to regret them when you move back to New York and these were the memories he was left with, but he wasnât ashamed.
No, not ashamed to overstep the boundaries he resurrected in pursuit of happiness. If only a little. Enough to feel the thrill of danger, but remain safe inside his walls.
Casual.
You liked casual.
Fuck what he said earlier. He could keep it casual. He could handle innocent flirting without it getting out of hand.
âWe should probably catch up with everyone before they send Scooby and the gang to search for us,â you said, walking backwards, throwing your thumb over your shoulder.
He snorted. âTerrible joke. Are you sure you were a comedian?â
You answered him with two middle fingers, which you promptly put away. Adrie came running back after just one house, hunched over, dragging her feet; hair a loose mess, barrettes dangling. Displaying all the theatrics of her father.
She made grabby hands at you. Not him. And before he could voice his hurt, you scooped her into your arms, and she rested her chin on your shoulder.
âHey,â he complained weakly, walking up to you from behind so he could take the treat bucket before it spilled, and talk to Adrie directly. âYou told me you were a big girl who could walk on her own, and didnât need to be held.â Her refute was a babbling grumble laced with fatigue.
Speaking to you, he said, âYou donât have to carry her.â
âI donât mind. I think they only want to do a few more houses before we head back. Do you wanna join?â
At first, Eddie was quiet, and you spun in a slow circle to see him, catching the end of his wistful expression at the rich neighborhood and its opulent houses owned by affluent people who heard a rumor or two about Munson, and decided he wasnât worth more than their wary glances when his kid played with theirs.
âNah, Iâm good over here.â He ran his hand over the back of Adrieâs head, and relaxed his stance, staying put.
âLet me help ya out there, Cool Guy,â you said, motioning for him to bend to you. You picked a narrow, apple-red leaf out of his tangled hair, and flicked it away.
âHow long has that been there?â
Shrugging your mouth to disguise your beaming grin, you feigned ignorance while walking away. âWhoâs to say?â
To further exacerbate his embarrassment into genuine distress, after two Mummies answered the door, and you were coming down the sidewalk, he saw you pull off the side for Steve to pass with the stroller, and you laid your cheek on the top of Adrieâs head. You whispered something in her ear. Something most intriguing, on account of her coming to life, no longer sleepy. The exchange was short; her asking a question, and you answering. But as you nodded with heavy-lidded eyes, and she pressed her fingers to her smile, you both turned, looked at him, and giggled.
Eddie gulped.
He didnât like this new feeling of you two sharing secrets about him. Especially ones he couldnât threaten out of you, no matter how many times he put his hands on your ribs.
~~~
As the evening came to a close, Eddie carried Adrie on his hip while you lugged her bucket of sweets. The plastic handle bowed from the weight of the candy, and your fingertips went numb from the burden. And maybe for your troubles, you took a piece. Or two.
The group petered out until it was left to the core of you returning to Steveâs house. The goodbyes were truncated due to the three sleepy kids in tow. You handed off the bucket to Eddie, first asking if he was sure he didnât need help getting to his car, and when he assured you he was fine, you squeezed Adrieâs ankle and whispered a goodbye she didnât hear, too lost in Dreamland and drooling on her dadâs shoulder to know the night was over.
He said heâd see you Monday and parted ways, walking in the opposite direction, and you waited at the white-picket fence gate for Robin to stop swapping sneaky peeks at Steve and Nancy to join you.
âBobbie, I know you donât want me driving.â
She made eyes at Nancy one last time, and descended the porch stairs at a leisurely pace. âYeah, we can leave.â
~~~
The drive home was a welcomed respite after the constant overstimulation. The radio was set to low, the heater caressed warmth along your wind-burnt cheeks, the headlights spotlighted deer grazing on the sides of the lonely road. Robin kept lofting soft smiles in your direction, which you returned.
Parking at her parentâs house, you closed the car door behind you, hearing it echo off the forest. The rocky driveway crunched under your shoes on your way to the door. The porch light was on, elongating your shadows across the ground, following you step by step.
âSo, you and Eddie, huh?â Robin asked, turning the key in the lock.
You snapped to attention, schooling your features from giving you away. âJust friends,â you reiterated at her suggestive tone. âJust friends and coworkers. Heâs dropped more than enough hints that heâs not looking for more.â You finished in more of a sigh, âNot with me, anyway.â
âIs that so?â
Her lopsided smirk struck undesired hope in your heart.
Robin pushed open the door, and curled in her forefinger to tap her knuckle on her upper lip. She dropped her gaze to your general upper body, and hummed, âYou, uh.. forget something?â
You looked down at yourself. âOhââ
ââââ
Eddie dropped his shoulders back expecting to feel something slide down his arms. Then, he patted his chest, and realized. ââShit.â He stared at his coat hook next to the front door where his leather jacket usually hung, and reprimanded himself in a soft laugh. âGuess Iâll have to get it back on Monday.â
âHow much candy can I have?â Adrienne asked, dumping out her bucket on the coffee table, and scrambling to pick up the Tootsie Rolls that fell on the floor. She began sorting into piles of most favorite to least favorite.
âOne,â Eddie stated sternly.
He turned on the TV and sat on the couch, decompressing while Adrie cackled over her hoard like Smaug. He shouldâve known something was up when she wouldnât stop giggling to herself.
His suspicions were answered when she turned around to show him the one piece she picked outâperfectly following his rules.
âUh, absolutely not!â Eddie swiped it from her. âSeriously, who gives out full size Snickers bars on Halloween?â
âBut, Daddy, you said!â
Leaning forward to rest his arms on his thighs, he demanded her attention before the pitiful crocodile tears started. âIâll make you a deal,â he said, and reached past her for a mini Musketeers to compare. âYou can have the Snickers, but you have to share half with me. See, half is still bigger than one of these little ones, so youâll still be coming out of this a winner. âKay?â She nodded and went to grab it. âBut! I donât want any tantrums when I tell you itâs bath time.â Again, she agreed and he reeled the candybar back into himself, away from her quick fingers. âAnd! You have to brush your teeth after.â
âI will,â she promised with a deep frown.
âAnd you still have to go to bed at the normal time.â
Pushing her hair out of her face, she dropped her head in another big nod.
Eddie was satisfied and went to give it to her. But another thought crossed his mindâone of true luxuryâand the allure of the idea proved too good to ignore.
Much to her dismay, he snatched the candybar away before she could get a good grasp on it, and he deepened his voice to show he was serious, âAnd I want to shower. Ten minutes. Uninterrupted.â
She groaned at the ceiling at his never ending list of rules. âFine!â
~~~
Riding his tingly feel-good high, Eddie opened the bathroom door to let the steam out, and toweled off the fog on the medicine cabinet mirror. He took out his comb and scissors, and sectioned out his bangs.
Brunette snips of wet hair fell in triangles onto his white tank top and around the sink. It wasnât a noticeable trim, just enough to get them off his eyebrows when dried.
With some amount of clarity, he looked his reflection in the eye as he evened out the cut, and didnât know if he should be wearing the faint smile he did, or if he should listen to his better judgment, and stop making modifications to his barriers.
He knew you deserved a better life than what Hawkins could offer, but he could enjoy the innocent workplace flirtations, right? They were harmless. Little compliments here and there to boost his confidence. Thatâs all it was. Itâs not like you actually found him attractive, right? Youâd been on enough dates to know what to say to a guy. Thatâs all.
Though, he did need to remember to have a talk with Adrie about setting her expectations and understanding Daddy could have friends without it leading anywhere, and that was okay.
ââsome.â
Jumping, Eddie said a prayer that was not righteous, and thanked the stars he was not trimming closer to his eyes when his daughter scared him. âJesus Christ, kid,â he exhaled.
âHandsome,â she said again.
Taken aback, he let the flattery sink in. Besides last week at the movies, he didnât get compliments often, or at all, and to receive one now while his thoughts circled back to that familiar sting of ugliness with the way other parents looked at him tonight, Adrieâs kindness matured his grin into a real smile.
âYou think Iâm handsome?â he asked in a mild, quick laugh. âThatâs sweet.â He leaned over the sink and worked on his bangs again, snipping up into the strands between his fingers.
âMissâouse does.â
âWhatâ?â Her words were incoherent from her fingers stuffed in her mouth. âDid you say..?â He dropped the comb and scissors, and spun around, eyes set on her. Adrie released a high-pitched shriek and ran from the doorway. âWait! Adrie! She said that? She said that about me?â He chased her into the living room, dodging back and forth around the coffee table. Duping left, right. Catching her as she made a quick escape to her bedroom. âTell me what you said? Did Miss Mouse say that about me? Did she call me handsome?â
Try as he might, threatening to tickle her until she repeated herself, Adrienne refused to tell him the secret you whispered in her ear.
One of the best scene of the show !
#everybody cheeredÂ
EDDIE MUNSON APPRECIATION WEEK Day 1: Favorite Scene ⏩ The Cult of Vecna campaign
Thatâs why we play!Â
Listen, Eddie, I know everything Dustin is saying sounds totally delusional, but weâve actually been through this before. I mean, they have a few times, and⊠and I have once. Mine was more human-flesh-based and theirs was more smoke-related, but bottom line is, collectively, I really feel we got this.