pope’s ex wife picking him up when he’s released from jail. They divorced before he went to jail, andrew didn’t tell anyone but her he was released early.
"Your mom not pick up?" are your first words to Pope in three years. Leaning against the car, you wait for him to make the walk across the parking lot.
He looks good - as good as someone can after three years incarcerated. The haircut needs work, but that'll come in time. His curls had always been one of your favourite features of his.
Washing them in the shower. Carding through them while Pope fucked into you-
No. You can't think about your ex-husband like that.
"Missed you too, honey."
The nickname warms something low in your belly, and you have to grit your teeth to keep any kind of composure. "Care to explain why I'm still your contact?"
"Because I like you more than my family," He replies, as if that's a normal thing to say about a woman who left you.
He slows to a stop, clearly unsure of how to proceed. Hands are shoved in his pocket, and his back straightens even further. His eyes flick down to your hand, the entirely bare ring finger. "You haven't remarried."
"Aren't you perceptive?" You reply dryly, rolling your eyes. "They'll be calling you up for the FBI next."
A silence falls, as you meet his gaze, and try not to squirm under it. In all the years you've known Andrew, it's always felt like he could see right through you.
Finally you speak. "I don't like your hair."
The answer is immediate. "I'll grow it back."
Letting out a heavy sigh, you step forward and pull him into the briefest hug. "Get in the car before I change my mind."
Every week a new episode of HBO’s meat and potatoes medical drama The Pitt airs and after watching you think “that was a great hour of television” and then you log online to discover that it was the first episode of TV for adults anyone has ever watched. This will repeat next week and the week after that and so on.
Incredibly violent take of mine but I actually don’t think you need to relate to a story in any way to enjoy it. You can enjoy a story even if you can’t point at a character and insert some aspect of your personality or identity into them. In fact I would argue the need for a character like that to be present in every single story you experience is a sign of stunted growth.
a/n: not canon-compliant—running with the concept of robby being based on john carter, so i'm giving robby some of carter's trauma <3
previous | next
After.
"I'm glad that you got the help that you need. But I don't know that I want you working in my E.R.—and I definitely don’t want you involved with my daughter."
Even now, sitting in her dimly lit living room after one of the worst shifts of his life, Robby’s words wouldn’t stop ringing in Frank’s ears. The framed family photos scattered around the room brought even more insult to injury. She was sitting on the opposite side of the couch, the tension in the air nearly suffocating. He didn’t think there had ever been that much space between them—literally or figuratively.
“So, your first day back…what a shit show.” She trailed off, watching out the window as fireworks streaked the horizon.
“About what I expected, if I’m being honest,” he huffed a laugh, “I’m surprised that anyone was happy to see me back, considering I didn’t hear from anyone while I was gone.”
He gave her a pointed look.
She shrugged her shoulders and mumbled, “Wasn’t sure if you wanted to hear from me.”
“I always want to hear from you.”
“Therapy sure made you honest, Frankie,” she smiled slightly, shifting her attention away from the window and fully to him. The smile didn’t last long, her expression drifting off with her mind.
“Am I,” she cleared her throat, “am I allowed to ask questions?”
He couldn’t help but laugh. It was a new feeling—neither of them were used to dancing around boundaries once they slipped into more intimate settings. His chest tightened when he remembered that this new need for boundaries, this need for uncertainty, was his own fault.
“Yeah, Y/N/N, you’re allowed to ask questions.”
She straightened a bit, “okay.”
“Were you high every time we were together?”
He expected the question, but her bluntness was like a blade to his chest.
“Not every time, but, yeah, most times.”
“Were you high when you told me you loved me?”
“Y/N…”
He couldn’t quite meet her eyes. It was all the answer she needed
“Okay,” she said softly, gave a jerky nod, looked back to the window, at the floor, then back to him, tensing, “Okay.”
“That doesn’t mean it wasn’t real.”
“Frank—”
“No, Y/N,” he cut her off—he knew the road she was about to go down all too well, “I mean, is it not obvious? That I love you? That I’ve always loved you?”
“It’s kind of hard to believe in what seems obvious anymore, Frank.” She roughly wiped away a tear before burying her face in her hands. “This would be so much easier if I hated you. I wish I could hate you.”
They sat in silence for a moment, sorting through the screaming in their minds.
“Maybe he was right,” he nodded at one of the photos hanging above them, “your dad, I mean.”
She looked at the photo, barely suppressing a scoff. It was a snapshot of her with her father’s arm slung around her shoulders as she triumphantly held up a diploma and a bouquet of flowers. They looked happy. It had been a good day.
“Yeah, because he’s really set the standard for relationships.” They shared a laugh at her father’s expense, the tension finally lifting, even if just by a fraction. She sat up straighter, a conflicted look passing over her face.
“Look, Frank,” she toyed with a loose thread on the couch, “I’m going to tell you something; even though it’s not my place. A-and I promise I’m not making excuses for him—because he’s being a total jackass, but…”
He raised his eyebrows, leaning in, “But…?”
“You need to promise me that you won’t tell anyone. Ever.” She licked her lips, a nervous habit she’d never been able to kick, “Even if you somehow find out somewhere down the line—you need to act surprised.”
He shifted one cushion closer, reaching out for her hand, “You can trust me, Y/N/N. I want you to…feel like you can trust me.”
Her eyes darted from his hands clasped around hers, up to his face, and immediately back to their hands. The bluntness from moments ago was completely gone. Frank didn’t realize he was holding his breath until she finally spoke, barely above a whisper.
“My dad, he…he struggled,” she paused, looking for the right words, “he struggled with addiction when I was a kid. Painkillers.”
Frank’s body reacted before his mind did, his eyebrows nearly shooting off his forehead.
“He’ll never admit it, but he’s more mad at himself than he is at you.” She sighed, “It’s not an excuse. Just…an explanation.”
“Wow…I mean—I never,” he couldn’t quite find the right words, “wow.”
“Yeah, wow.”
A million half-thoughts ran through his mind as the weight of what he’d done became so, so much heavier. He felt the darkness creeping in around the edges before it was sapped away by her gentle touch on his jaw. She turned his face to hers.
“You didn’t know, Frankie. There’s no way you could’ve known,” her hand slid up to cup his cheek, “It’s not your fault.”
Her lips parted to continue, but was interrupted by the harsh ring of her phone. She huffed, ready to send the caller straight to voicemail, but the name glowing on her screen made her stomach drop.
Jack Abbot.
The pair looked at each other in confusion as she slowly answered the phone and lifted it to her ear.
“Hey.”
“Are you sitting down?”
Frank saw her eyes glaze over, “Just tell me what happened, Jack.”
“Sweetheart, it’s your dad. There was an accident. Things aren’t—” his breath caught “things aren’t looking too good.”
~~~
yeah, i'm evil. get over it. more pain coming soon to a blog near you.
summary: Part two of toward grace. A snapshot of Frank and Y/N’s relationship before Pittfest.
word count: 1.5k
pairing: frank langdon x reader
warnings: MDNI! Smut. Langdon is a munch. Unprotected p in v between two consenting adults.
previous | next
Before.
The day had been unforgiving. For starters, she had overslept. She’d gotten too used to relying on Frank’s alarm, so, of course, on her first night alone in nearly a week, she’d forgotten to set hers. By the time she’d finally arrived at the hospital, it seemed like half of the department had decided against showing up at all. She’d been going non-stop for over twelve hours straight, doing her best to pick up the slack, but the cases just kept coming.
It was only natural that her car chose the end of her shift to stop working. The cool leather of the steering wheel pressed into her forehead as she mentally prepared herself for the thirty-minute walk to her apartment. Just thirty minutes of hell, and then you have the whole night to forget this day with a bottle of rosé and some crappy reality TV.
“Fuck it, okay,” she muttered, reaching for the door handle, “let’s get this shit.”
Frank jumped back just in time to not get caught in the stomach by the door. Y/N let out a gasp that was just shy of a yelp.
“Jesus, Frank, don’t sneak up on me like that.” Her tone was serious, but she couldn’t help the relieved laugh that slipped out.
“I was barely sneaking!” He beamed at her, standing a little too close for how exposed they were, “you should pay more attention to your surroundings, Y/N/N.”
Y/N scoffed, unceremoniously shutting the car door behind her, “yeah, right.”
“You’re not walking home, are you?”
“Did you hear the sound my engine was just making? Of course I’m walking home.” She moved to step around him, but stopped short as he took another step closer, practically pinning her to the car.
“Let me take you home.” He gave her a small smile, reaching out to fiddle with the zipper on her jacket. She felt her cheeks heating and an all too familiar pull in her stomach at his proximity.
“Thought this was your weekend with the kids?”
“Abby’s parents are in town, we swapped,” he pulled lightly at her jacket, inclining his head toward his SUV. “So, are you going to let me give you a ride, or would you prefer I give you a head start and meet you there in thirty?”
“Very presumptuous of you, Dr. Langdon,” she brushed past him, lightly brushing against him in the process. She pulled his passenger side door open, shooting him a teasing look over her shoulder. “Well, come on, I don’t have all night.”
———————————————————————
Frank was rambling about some stupid mistake one of the med students had made, but Y/N could barely focus on a word he was saying. All she could think about was his warm hand on her leg, his thumb lazily tracing circles on her upper thigh. She could feel her brain short circuiting with each caress.
She wouldn’t have realized that they’d parked in front of her building if Frank hadn’t snapped her out of her thoughts.
“Hey,” he squeezed her thigh, “you okay? I don’t have to come in if you don’t want me to.”
“Y-yeah. I’m good,” if she was in her right mind she would’ve been embarrassed by how breathless she sounded, “just a long day.”
She led him up to her apartment, and she barely got to set her things down before he was pushing her against the door, his lips on hers. She felt herself melt into him on instinct, her hands splaying across his chest.
“Been thinking about you all day, Y/N/N.”
A joke at his expense died on her lips as his teeth sunk into her neck. She couldn’t help the giggle that slipped out as he continued with sloppy kisses up her neck and along her jaw, concluding with a chaste kiss to her lips. He tugged her by the waist toward the couch, falling back with her on top of him.
He slipped his hands under her shirt, firmly gripping the soft skin he found there, pulling her closer to him. If he could split open his ribcage just to have her closer, he would. She ground down on him, feeling his hard length jump beneath his scrub pants. A low groan leaked out of him, and she started tugging at the hem of his shirt.
“Mm, take this off,” she mumbled against his lips.
He obeyed without hesitation, gently pushing her away so he could fling his shirt across the room. He hesitated briefly on his way back to her lips, his eye catching the light glinting off a photo frame next to the couch.
“Maybe we should take this to the bedroom,” a breathy laugh and another kiss to her neck, “y’know, where there aren’t so many photos of your father watching us.”
She grinned down at him, “what? Doesn’t do it for you?”
“Absolutely not,” he huffed.
“Hmm. Thought you were freakier than that, Frankie.”
He missed her warmth as soon as she crawled off of him and made her way to the bedroom, pulling her shirt over her head and shooting him a smile over her bare shoulder.
“You coming, handsome?”
He pulled himself off the couch with a grin, “sure hope so.”
“You’re disgusting.”
“C’mon baby,” he nipped her shoulder, pulling her down onto the bed, “I thought you liked freaky Frank?”
She snorted, “I’m starting to like him less and less,” but the way she was devouring him with her eyes took any sting out of the remark.
In a blink, he was kneeling at her bedside and tugging her toward the edge of the bed by her hips. His breath was warm on her inner thighs, his fingers toying with the elastic of her underwear.
A soft kiss to her navel. His big hands kneaded her hips. She’d lost count of how many times they’d been in this exact position, but, still, it didn’t fail to make her heartbeat quicken and her head feel light.
Another kiss, lower this time. Big blue eyes looking up at her.
“Wanna taste you,” his fingers hooking into the waistband of her underwear, tugging gently, “that okay?”
“Mmmhmm,” she nodded lazily, not quite trusting her voice.
“Use your words, baby.” His breath was hot on her core.
“Yes,” she sighed, tugging lightly at his hair, “please, Frankie.”
He didn’t hesitate. She let out a soft gasp as he ran his tongue through her folds, circling her throbbing bud as he teased her entrance with his fingers.
“Jesus, Frank,” she exhaled, arching her back as his free hand pushed her hips back down into the mattress.
“Told you,” he murmured against her, “been thinking about this all day.”
His fingers pumped inside her as he suckled at her core, curling his fingertips just enough to hit the spot that always turned her to putty in his hands. He could feel her coming undone, her walls starting to clench around him.
“C’mon, pretty girl, that’s it,” he quickened his pace just a fraction, “come for me.”
She came with a gasp of his name, twitching as she tugged his hair and he groaned into her. She knew from experience that he wasn’t going to pull himself away from her, so she tugged at his hair, sitting up a bit.
“Get up here.”
He didn’t need to be told twice. Almost immediately, he was slotted between her legs, kissing her like it was the only thing keeping him alive.
She pawed at him through his pants, “why are these still on, hm?” He didn’t break away from her as he pushed his pants off, kicking them to the floor. She grasped him, stroking his tip with her thumb, breaking away from the kiss to look into his eyes.
“Need you.”
Frank could’ve sworn his heart stopped.
He recovered, pressing a kiss to her jaw before lining himself up at her entrance. It was only a few seconds, but to her it felt like an eternity before he was finally inside her.
“Fuck,” he sighed, burying his face in the crook of her neck.
She raked her fingernails down his chest as he pumped into her at a steady rhythm. “Feels so good, Frankie.”
He hummed in response, face still pressed against her neck. Her hand moved up his chest to cup his jaw, guiding him up to capture her lips in a kiss.
“Wanna see you,” she whispered before kissing him again.
His breath caught for just a second before he nodded quickly, moving his hand down between them to bring her closer to her release.
His thrusts became more erratic as he watched her smiling softly beneath him, a dazed look in her eyes.
She looked so…perfect.
And she was all his.
He could feel her walls clenching around him again as she neared her climax, and he couldn’t contain himself any longer.
“I love you.”
Neither of them were sure if her gasp was from his omission or her release. Either way, it sent him over the edge, spilling inside her.
They never spoke of it.
The next week, he was gone.
~~~
stay tuned for part three 🤭
tagging those who commented on part one: @teenagedirtbag087 @bellaglover18 @augustkinnie @malindacath @libbyaller
summary: Part two of toward grace. A snapshot of Frank and Y/N’s relationship before Pittfest.
word count: 1.5k
pairing: frank langdon x reader
warnings: MDNI! Smut. Langdon is a munch. Unprotected p in v between two consenting adults.
previous | next
Before.
The day had been unforgiving. For starters, she had overslept. She’d gotten too used to relying on Frank’s alarm, so, of course, on her first night alone in nearly a week, she’d forgotten to set hers. By the time she’d finally arrived at the hospital, it seemed like half of the department had decided against showing up at all. She’d been going non-stop for over twelve hours straight, doing her best to pick up the slack, but the cases just kept coming.
It was only natural that her car chose the end of her shift to stop working. The cool leather of the steering wheel pressed into her forehead as she mentally prepared herself for the thirty-minute walk to her apartment. Just thirty minutes of hell, and then you have the whole night to forget this day with a bottle of rosé and some crappy reality TV.
“Fuck it, okay,” she muttered, reaching for the door handle, “let’s get this shit.”
Frank jumped back just in time to not get caught in the stomach by the door. Y/N let out a gasp that was just shy of a yelp.
“Jesus, Frank, don’t sneak up on me like that.” Her tone was serious, but she couldn’t help the relieved laugh that slipped out.
“I was barely sneaking!” He beamed at her, standing a little too close for how exposed they were, “you should pay more attention to your surroundings, Y/N/N.”
Y/N scoffed, unceremoniously shutting the car door behind her, “yeah, right.”
“You’re not walking home, are you?”
“Did you hear the sound my engine was just making? Of course I’m walking home.” She moved to step around him, but stopped short as he took another step closer, practically pinning her to the car.
“Let me take you home.” He gave her a small smile, reaching out to fiddle with the zipper on her jacket. She felt her cheeks heating and an all too familiar pull in her stomach at his proximity.
“Thought this was your weekend with the kids?”
“Abby’s parents are in town, we swapped,” he pulled lightly at her jacket, inclining his head toward his SUV. “So, are you going to let me give you a ride, or would you prefer I give you a head start and meet you there in thirty?”
“Very presumptuous of you, Dr. Langdon,” she brushed past him, lightly brushing against him in the process. She pulled his passenger side door open, shooting him a teasing look over her shoulder. “Well, come on, I don’t have all night.”
———————————————————————
Frank was rambling about some stupid mistake one of the med students had made, but Y/N could barely focus on a word he was saying. All she could think about was his warm hand on her leg, his thumb lazily tracing circles on her upper thigh. She could feel her brain short circuiting with each caress.
She wouldn’t have realized that they’d parked in front of her building if Frank hadn’t snapped her out of her thoughts.
“Hey,” he squeezed her thigh, “you okay? I don’t have to come in if you don’t want me to.”
“Y-yeah. I’m good,” if she was in her right mind she would’ve been embarrassed by how breathless she sounded, “just a long day.”
She led him up to her apartment, and she barely got to set her things down before he was pushing her against the door, his lips on hers. She felt herself melt into him on instinct, her hands splaying across his chest.
“Been thinking about you all day, Y/N/N.”
A joke at his expense died on her lips as his teeth sunk into her neck. She couldn’t help the giggle that slipped out as he continued with sloppy kisses up her neck and along her jaw, concluding with a chaste kiss to her lips. He tugged her by the waist toward the couch, falling back with her on top of him.
He slipped his hands under her shirt, firmly gripping the soft skin he found there, pulling her closer to him. If he could split open his ribcage just to have her closer, he would. She ground down on him, feeling his hard length jump beneath his scrub pants. A low groan leaked out of him, and she started tugging at the hem of his shirt.
“Mm, take this off,” she mumbled against his lips.
He obeyed without hesitation, gently pushing her away so he could fling his shirt across the room. He hesitated briefly on his way back to her lips, his eye catching the light glinting off a photo frame next to the couch.
“Maybe we should take this to the bedroom,” a breathy laugh and another kiss to her neck, “y’know, where there aren’t so many photos of your father watching us.”
She grinned down at him, “what? Doesn’t do it for you?”
“Absolutely not,” he huffed.
“Hmm. Thought you were freakier than that, Frankie.”
He missed her warmth as soon as she crawled off of him and made her way to the bedroom, pulling her shirt over her head and shooting him a smile over her bare shoulder.
“You coming, handsome?”
He pulled himself off the couch with a grin, “sure hope so.”
“You’re disgusting.”
“C’mon baby,” he nipped her shoulder, pulling her down onto the bed, “I thought you liked freaky Frank?”
She snorted, “I’m starting to like him less and less,” but the way she was devouring him with her eyes took any sting out of the remark.
In a blink, he was kneeling at her bedside and tugging her toward the edge of the bed by her hips. His breath was warm on her inner thighs, his fingers toying with the elastic of her underwear.
A soft kiss to her navel. His big hands kneaded her hips. She’d lost count of how many times they’d been in this exact position, but, still, it didn’t fail to make her heartbeat quicken and her head feel light.
Another kiss, lower this time. Big blue eyes looking up at her.
“Wanna taste you,” his fingers hooking into the waistband of her underwear, tugging gently, “that okay?”
“Mmmhmm,” she nodded lazily, not quite trusting her voice.
“Use your words, baby.” His breath was hot on her core.
“Yes,” she sighed, tugging lightly at his hair, “please, Frankie.”
He didn’t hesitate. She let out a soft gasp as he ran his tongue through her folds, circling her throbbing bud as he teased her entrance with his fingers.
“Jesus, Frank,” she exhaled, arching her back as his free hand pushed her hips back down into the mattress.
“Told you,” he murmured against her, “been thinking about this all day.”
His fingers pumped inside her as he suckled at her core, curling his fingertips just enough to hit the spot that always turned her to putty in his hands. He could feel her coming undone, her walls starting to clench around him.
“C’mon, pretty girl, that’s it,” he quickened his pace just a fraction, “come for me.”
She came with a gasp of his name, twitching as she tugged his hair and he groaned into her. She knew from experience that he wasn’t going to pull himself away from her, so she tugged at his hair, sitting up a bit.
“Get up here.”
He didn’t need to be told twice. Almost immediately, he was slotted between her legs, kissing her like it was the only thing keeping him alive.
She pawed at him through his pants, “why are these still on, hm?” He didn’t break away from her as he pushed his pants off, kicking them to the floor. She grasped him, stroking his tip with her thumb, breaking away from the kiss to look into his eyes.
“Need you.”
Frank could’ve sworn his heart stopped.
He recovered, pressing a kiss to her jaw before lining himself up at her entrance. It was only a few seconds, but to her it felt like an eternity before he was finally inside her.
“Fuck,” he sighed, burying his face in the crook of her neck.
She raked her fingernails down his chest as he pumped into her at a steady rhythm. “Feels so good, Frankie.”
He hummed in response, face still pressed against her neck. Her hand moved up his chest to cup his jaw, guiding him up to capture her lips in a kiss.
“Wanna see you,” she whispered before kissing him again.
His breath caught for just a second before he nodded quickly, moving his hand down between them to bring her closer to her release.
His thrusts became more erratic as he watched her smiling softly beneath him, a dazed look in her eyes.
She looked so…perfect.
And she was all his.
He could feel her walls clenching around him again as she neared her climax, and he couldn’t contain himself any longer.
“I love you.”
Neither of them were sure if her gasp was from his omission or her release. Either way, it sent him over the edge, spilling inside her.
They never spoke of it.
The next week, he was gone.
~~~
stay tuned for part three 🤭
tagging those who commented on part one: @teenagedirtbag087 @bellaglover18 @augustkinnie @malindacath @libbyaller
i miss fandom before ai. there was no risk of accidentally reading an ai generated fic based on stolen material. i don't want to stumble upon ai generated videos my ship kissing and see comments like "this is what ai should be used for". i don't want to see gifs of those ai generated kisses when i browse for fun reactions gifs of them. i don't want ai generated photos and definitely not ai generated art. i don't want ai to be part of my community and i definitely don't want to hear anything about anyone using it because they "can't write" or they "can't draw".
there's no valid excuse for anyone to use ai. use your imagination.
summary: Robbie’s daughter works for PTMC as a social worker and has a…complicated history with former golden boy Frank Langdon. Langdon is back from rehab after ten long months and is looking to make amends. Robbie finds out a few things about his daughter that he never wanted to know.
word count: 1.5k
pairing: frank langdon x reader
a/n: bedtime scenario so good i had to put it in writing
Y/N was not happy with her father. Shocker.
When he told her that his sabbatical was approved, she was ecstatic. He hadn’t taken proper time for himself in years. She had fuzzy memories from her youth of her father joining week-long family vacations, taking days off on a whim because she wanted to go watch the sharks at the Pittsburgh Zoo, or even taking off to visit old colleagues in Chicago. That changed after her parents separated. Now, most of her memories hold an undercurrent of wishes that her father was there. But he chose to throw himself into the Pitt.
He’s finally pulling himself out, and of course it’s for that stupid motorcycle. She gives him maybe three hours on the open road until he can’t handle being alone with his thoughts and turns back. Hell, he’ll probably be back in the Pitt before the end of July. She can only hope that it’s of his own accord, and not laid out on a gurney.
All that said, Y/N was avoiding the Pitt as much as her job would allow. At least that’s the excuse she was giving people. They didn’t need to know that her avoidance was really because she wasn’t ready to find out if the rumors were true. That Dr. Langdon was making his grand return to the Pitt today.
She hadn’t seen him since PittFest. Since she found out second-hand that he was stealing drugs from the hospital. Since she woke up in his bed that morning, only to take separate cars to the hospital and pretend to be no more than acquaintances. It felt like a lifetime ago.
Whatever he had to say to her, she wasn’t ready to hear it. Thankfully, dodging emotional conflict was in her blood.
Things were going well for most of the morning. She was able to successfully dodge the few consults coming their way from downstairs, thanks to a colleague who owed her one. Just when she started to think she might actually get away with her plan, Caleb asked for her specifically, and she was promptly dragged out of her tiny office to make the descent into the Pitt.
It was absolute chaos, as usual, as Y/N plunged in, trying simultaneously to keep her head down and on a swivel at the same time. Robbie caught her eye from across the nurse’s station, and her eyes landed on Fra—Langdon’s—back in an effort to avoid her dad’s gaze. He was turned toward a patient, nodding along as Mel spoke. Deciding it was easier to face the more familiar of two evils, she turned her attention back to her father, thankful to find him being pulled away by Whitaker and a new face that looked to her like a taller, bizarro Whitaker.
Her shoulders dropped in relief as she continued to the family room, where she could now see Caleb and Javadi huddled by the closed door.
“You know you’re gonna have to talk to him eventually.” Dana sat at her computer, looking up at Y/N over the rims of her readers.
Y/N’s steps faltered, her mouth open, about to ask how do you know about that? Before Dana continued, “He’s leaving soon—you don’t want him to go on bad terms.”
Oh, right. Dad.
“If he cared more about his wellbeing, we wouldn’t be on bad terms in the first place.”
Dana scoffed. “Last I checked, caring about his wellbeing has never been his thing. Hasn’t held you back before. What’s the point in letting it now?”
Y/N returned the scoff, angling herself back on track, “I’ve got a patient waiting on me.”
“Don’t we all,” Dana turned back to the computer, dismissing Y/N, “think about it, kid.”
Y/N practically teleported over to Caleb and Javadi. “What we got?”
———————————————————————
“Well, that went great.” Y/N rubbed a hand across her forehead after the door to the family room closed gently behind them.
“Could’ve been worse—at least we got a family history.” Caleb closed his notes with a sigh and checked his watch. “I have to go check on a few things. I’ll be in touch about this.”
Y/N gives him a curt nod and Javadi a tight smile before walking away, “let us know if his condition changes.”
Okay. Now get out. Quickly.
She’s almost to the elevator, and she feels the weight of his gaze before she sees him, his eyes locked onto her as he walks alongside a sunburnt man on a gurney.
“Dr. Santos, you can take care of Mr. Jones here.” She hears his voice. Distracted. Distant. Maybe even fearful? Maybe she’s projecting.
“You’re kidding me, I’m no—“
“Thanks.” Footsteps approaching, his voice gently calling out her name.
She quickens her pace, pretending she didn’t see him. She’s almost there.
His hand on her arm. Hesitant. The elevator door closing in her face before she can slip through. The ghost of her name on his breath. Looking up now. His deep blue eyes looking back at her.
“Can we talk?”
“I’m not sure if that’s a good idea, Dr. Langdon,” she swallowed with a shrug of her shoulder, not fully facing him. Not being able to.
Anyone else but her wouldn’t have noticed his posture tightening at the moniker. His hand remained on her arm, however, testing the waters with a slight tug at her elbow. Her body betrayed her racing mind, too attuned to giving in to his direction.
She still hadn’t said another word as the door to an empty exam room closed behind them. At least he didn’t shove her into a supply closet, as he was accustomed to do when no one was around. She might’ve thrown up if he had.
Now that they were alone, she let herself look at him—really look at him. There was no trace of his old bravado, his usual self assuredness replaced with something different, something that softened him around the edges. She wasn’t used to that, and didn't really know what to do with it.
“I’ve spent a lot of time these past few months thinking of what to say to you,” he hesitated, “I thought of a lot of different ways to do this, and I realized that I don’t want to beat around the bush with you. Not anymore.” He swallowed thickly, and Y/N felt the lump in her own throat double in size.
“I’m sorry. For everything. For betraying your trust, for hiding you away, for taking advantage of you—”
“I’m a grown woman, Frank. I’m not stupid. I’m very aware that this,” she gestured between them, “was never supposed to mean anything.”
Her chest tightened at the hurt that flashed across his face.
“Do you really think that? That it didn’t mean anything to me?”
Her response was barely above a whisper, “I’m not really sure what to think anymore, Frank.”
“Y/N, I care about you. A lot. More than I was willing to admit to myself at the time. To admit to you.” A sharp inhale, “and I understand if you want nothing to do with me. But I want to try—actually try. If you’ll let me.”
His hands were warm, his grip on her clasped hands gentle. “You can tell me to fuck off, and I’ll leave you alone forever. I just need to know.”
Her hands moved to cup his face seemingly on their own accord, and his found their home on her hips.
“Frankie, I—”
“What’s this?”
The venom in her father’s voice sent a chill down her spine. They were too wrapped up in their own world to notice him opening the exam room door.
Her mouth opened, but no words came out. Frank’s body angled slightly in front of hers, as if he could protect her from the daggers shooting from her father’s eyes.
“Robbie, listen—” He was silenced by Robbie, who held his open palm in front of him.
“No,” he pointed at his daughter, “Y/N, how long?”
It felt like her voice was coming from someone else as she held her father’s gaze.
“A while.”
His jaw clenched as he turned his glare back to Frank.
“How long.”
“A little over a year,” Frank’s voice was small, “if you don’t count the past ten months.”
“Jesus, Y/N, it’s bad enough that he—” his voice broke off, a hand rubbing down his face, “but you?”
She took a step around Frank, toward her father, “Dad, could you just—”
“No.” He was backing out the door before she could stop him.
“I can’t do this right now.” He paused for just a second, “I just—no.”
And he was gone.
Tears were blurring Y/N’s vision, and she barely registered that Frank was still behind her until she felt his touch ghost across the small of her back.
“Y/N,” he used the soft tone that was reserved only for her.
She looked at him, back to the door, to him again, sniffled, “I’m sorry.”
She was pushing through the door before she could think. What felt like hundreds of people bustled around her, but she couldn’t see a single trace of her father’s retreating figure. He was gone again; swallowed by the Pitt.
summary: Robby’s daughter works for PTMC as a social worker and has a…complicated history with former golden boy Frank Langdon. Langdon is back from rehab after ten long months and is looking to make amends. Robby finds out a few things about his daughter that he never wanted to know.
word count: 1.5k
pairing: frank langdon x reader
a/n: bedtime scenario so good i had to put it in writing
part two
Y/N was not happy with her father. Shocker.
When he told her that his sabbatical was approved, she was ecstatic. He hadn’t taken proper time for himself in years. She had fuzzy memories from her youth of her father joining week-long family vacations, taking days off on a whim because she wanted to go watch the sharks at the Pittsburgh Zoo, or even taking off to visit old colleagues in Chicago. That changed after her parents separated. Now, most of her memories hold an undercurrent of wishes that her father was there. But he chose to throw himself into the Pitt.
He’s finally pulling himself out, and of course it’s for that stupid motorcycle. She gives him maybe three hours on the open road until he can’t handle being alone with his thoughts and turns back. Hell, he’ll probably be back in the Pitt before the end of July. She can only hope that it’s of his own accord, and not laid out on a gurney.
All that said, Y/N was avoiding the Pitt as much as her job would allow. At least that’s the excuse she was giving people. They didn’t need to know that her avoidance was really because she wasn’t ready to find out if the rumors were true. That Dr. Langdon was making his grand return to the Pitt today.
She hadn’t seen him since PittFest. Since she found out second-hand that he was stealing drugs from the hospital. Since she woke up in his bed that morning, only to take separate cars to the hospital and pretend to be no more than acquaintances. It felt like a lifetime ago.
Whatever he had to say to her, she wasn’t ready to hear it. Thankfully, dodging emotional conflict was in her blood.
Things were going well for most of the morning. She was able to successfully dodge the few consults coming their way from downstairs, thanks to a colleague who owed her one. Just when she started to think she might actually get away with her plan, Caleb asked for her specifically, and she was promptly dragged out of her tiny office to make the descent into the Pitt.
It was absolute chaos, as usual, as Y/N plunged in, trying simultaneously to keep her head down and on a swivel at the same time. Robby caught her eye from across the nurse’s station, and her eyes landed on Fra—Langdon’s—back in an effort to avoid her dad’s gaze. He was turned toward a patient, nodding along as Mel spoke. Deciding it was easier to face the more familiar of two evils, she turned her attention back to her father, thankful to find him being pulled away by Whitaker and a new face that looked to her like a taller, bizarro Whitaker.
Her shoulders dropped in relief as she continued to the family room, where she could now see Caleb and Javadi huddled by the closed door.
“You know you’re gonna have to talk to him eventually.” Dana sat at her computer, looking up at Y/N over the rims of her readers.
Y/N’s steps faltered, her mouth open, about to ask how do you know about that? Before Dana continued, “He’s leaving soon—you don’t want him to go on bad terms.”
Oh, right. Dad.
“If he cared more about his wellbeing, we wouldn’t be on bad terms in the first place.”
Dana scoffed. “Last I checked, caring about his wellbeing has never been his thing. Hasn’t held you back before. What’s the point in letting it now?”
Y/N returned the scoff, angling herself back on track, “I’ve got a patient waiting on me.”
“Don’t we all,” Dana turned back to the computer, dismissing Y/N, “think about it, kid.”
Y/N practically teleported over to Caleb and Javadi. “What we got?”
———————————————————————
“Well, that went great.” Y/N rubbed a hand across her forehead after the door to the family room closed gently behind them.
“Could’ve been worse—at least we got a family history.” Caleb closed his notes with a sigh and checked his watch. “I have to go check on a few things. I’ll be in touch about this.”
Y/N gives him a curt nod and Javadi a tight smile before walking away, “let us know if his condition changes.”
Okay. Now get out. Quickly.
She’s almost to the elevator, and she feels the weight of his gaze before she sees him, his eyes locked onto her as he walks alongside a sunburnt man on a gurney.
“Dr. Santos, you can take care of Mr. Jones here.” She hears his voice. Distracted. Distant. Maybe even fearful? Maybe she’s projecting.
“You’re kidding me, I’m no—“
“Thanks.” Footsteps approaching, his voice gently calling out her name.
She quickens her pace, pretending she didn’t see him. She’s almost there.
His hand on her arm. Hesitant. The elevator door closing in her face before she can slip through. The ghost of her name on his breath. Looking up now. His deep blue eyes looking back at her.
“Can we talk?”
“I’m not sure if that’s a good idea, Dr. Langdon,” she swallowed with a shrug of her shoulder, not fully facing him. Not being able to.
Anyone else but her wouldn’t have noticed his posture tightening at the moniker. His hand remained on her arm, however, testing the waters with a slight tug at her elbow. Her body betrayed her racing mind, too attuned to giving in to his direction.
She still hadn’t said another word as the door to an empty exam room closed behind them. At least he didn’t shove her into a supply closet, as he was accustomed to do when no one was around. She might’ve thrown up if he had.
Now that they were alone, she let herself look at him—really look at him. There was no trace of his old bravado, his usual self assuredness replaced with something different, something that softened him around the edges. She wasn’t used to that, and didn't really know what to do with it.
“I’ve spent a lot of time these past few months thinking of what to say to you,” he hesitated, “I thought of a lot of different ways to do this, and I realized that I don’t want to beat around the bush with you. Not anymore.” He swallowed thickly, and Y/N felt the lump in her own throat double in size.
“I’m sorry. For everything. For betraying your trust, for hiding you away, for taking advantage of you—”
“I’m a grown woman, Frank. I’m not stupid. I’m very aware that this,” she gestured between them, “was never supposed to mean anything.”
Her chest tightened at the hurt that flashed across his face.
“Do you really think that? That it didn’t mean anything to me?”
Her response was barely above a whisper, “I’m not really sure what to think anymore, Frank.”
“Y/N, I care about you. A lot. More than I was willing to admit to myself at the time. To admit to you.” A sharp inhale, “and I understand if you want nothing to do with me. But I want to try—actually try. If you’ll let me.”
His hands were warm, his grip on her clasped hands gentle. “You can tell me to fuck off, and I’ll leave you alone forever. I just need to know.”
Her hands moved to cup his face seemingly on their own accord, and his found their home on her hips.
“Frankie, I—”
“What’s this?”
The venom in her father’s voice sent a chill down her spine. They were too wrapped up in their own world to notice him opening the exam room door.
Her mouth opened, but no words came out. Frank’s body angled slightly in front of hers, as if he could protect her from the daggers shooting from her father’s eyes.
“Robby, listen—” He was silenced by Robby, who held his open palm in front of him.
“No,” he pointed at his daughter, “Y/N, how long?”
It felt like her voice was coming from someone else as she held her father’s gaze.
“A while.”
His jaw clenched as he turned his glare back to Frank.
“How long.”
“A little over a year,” Frank’s voice was small, “if you don’t count the past ten months.”
“Jesus, Y/N, it’s bad enough that he—” his voice broke off, a hand rubbing down his face, “but you?”
She took a step around Frank, toward her father, “Dad, could you just—”
“No.” He was backing out the door before she could stop him.
“I can’t do this right now.” He paused for just a second, “I just—no.”
And he was gone.
Tears were blurring Y/N’s vision, and she barely registered that Frank was still behind her until she felt his touch ghost across the small of her back.
“Y/N,” he used the soft tone that was reserved only for her.
She looked at him, back to the door, to him again, sniffled, “I’m sorry.”
She was pushing through the door before she could think. What felt like hundreds of people bustled around her, but she couldn’t see a single trace of her father’s retreating figure. He was gone again; swallowed by the Pitt.
You ran out on Steve almost three years ago in the middle of a sweet fling, but now you’re back in Hawkins, and there’s a little girl on your hip that looks just like him. fem, 14k
afab reader, second-chance romance, girl!dad steve, slow burn idiots, no upside down au
⋆ ˚。⋆୨♡୧⋆ ˚。⋆
You realise how fucked you are pretty quickly.
It’s something in the way the kid is looking at you. He’s staring at you, not unfriendly but piercing, and his gaze keeps flicking to Leah like he’s trying to make sense of her, and his mouth is stuck obnoxiously with his tongue flat and pulled into that cruel letter ‘S’.
You freeze up like you’ve been caught, which doesn’t help.
And the kid spins in his Nike’s and races for the entrance, ditching a basket full of veggies and a pack of gum in the middle of the aisle.
“Okay, Lee,” you say, sweating despite the November chill. “Let’s get going.”
Leah grins in her seat in the shopping cart. “Meemaw’s?” she asks.
“Yeah. Let’s go make sure your meemaw had her dinner.”
Your ears ring all the way home. They don’t stop ringing. You spend the night waiting for a phone call you don’t get, awkward and clammy. There’s a certain way that rich families work in Indiana. You can see the coming hush money or the threat to leave town almost as clearly as you could see the loveless marriage years ago. You and Leah need to get out of dodge before you’re stuck having conversations you never wanted to have.
I mean, who could’ve predicted that? One of Steve’s teenagers recognises you in the grocery store three years after your fling, how’d they even remember?
The phone doesn’t ring, that night.
Or the next.
Maybe Steve didn’t believe the kid. Maybe the kid had an emergency completely unrelated to Leah. Maybe Steve believed it and didn’t care. You deem yourselves safe from harm in a venture to the grocery store when your mom asks for chicken noodle soup.
It’s there you recognise your mistake. Steve Harrington’s shiny BMW sits parked in the bay by the sign for the laundromat and the man himself sits inside with a paperback bent open on his thigh. He’s glaring at it like it killed his whole family.
You move bodily away from him with Leah clasped to your chest, wondering if you can beat him in, but then a chirp sounds near the door and you watch in slow motion as a young teenager brings a radio to his mouth and says, “Code milkshake!”
You hear a curse and can’t help looking back, right at the bimmer, where Steve is looking up through the windshield with a look of frozen trepidation on his face.
—
So.
How did you end up where you are?
You aren’t one for thinking about the past. Don’t like doing it. In fact, you try your very hardest not to think of the past when you can help it. Once Leah was born, that was easy to do. Babies are demanding, they take over your entire life, and your new life in Portland was already busy to begin with. You find thinking of the past incessant and unnecessary, but. Things are happening oh so fast —you had genuinely figured you could get through your homecoming without being spotted. You figured you could leave Leah at home with your mom while you shopped, but meemaw’s stroke has affected more than her body, and you couldn’t leave Leah there in good conscience in case an accident happened.
It’s not like you had many friends, before you left. Any, in fact. Steve was the first guy to ever show any interest in you, and as nice as he’d been in the quiet moments after, he hadn’t exactly brought you roses or promised you anything. You’re the dummy who got pregnant by the ‘washed out’ king of Hawkins High. It was probably going to be one of his peers, and it was never going to be Nancy Wheeler.
Things were obviously more detailed at the time, but you and Steve had come together in a fling. It’s not a relationship that you’d pictured for yourself, but it’s not as though you set your sights on him and thought, yeah, I’m going to fuck him. It was more that he was friendly, and you were both at the same bar at the same time sitting by yourselves, and with a little gin and a ton of mutual loneliness, it’d felt natural to let him kiss you against the hood of his car. When he drove you home, worried you’d get stuck in the rain, you’d offered him into an empty house. Things snowballed from there.
The sex was good. Steve was kind. He was a bit awkward from time to time and he didn’t know what to say without putting his foot in his mouth, but you liked it. Liked him.
Then the test. Then the memory of his Harrington name, how his mom wanted him to marry a socialite and his dad was priming him to get into the family business, whatever that may be. That silly conversation about kids. “I’d never put them through it,” he’d said, naked and tracing a star into your shoulder blades through the sheets, his hair damp at the nape of his neck with sweat, “are you joking? They’d be the loneliest kid ever.”
You remember laughing softly. You’d wanted him to say something different, but you aren’t sure what it is he could’ve said to make it right enough to stay.
In the end, you figured Leah could be part of a brand new start. You applied for a job in the classifieds and uprooted the rest of your life to go to it, and when you finally had your baby, you didn’t let yourself call Steve. What use would that have been, letting him smash the lingering, aching bit of your heart that wanted him to love you? You were smart enough then to recognise that your dream for the future was about as childish as getting knocked up at nineteen.
It hurts now, though, as he gets out of the car, how badly you want him to want you, and how stupid you’ve always been.
Steve shuts the door to the BMW and makes his way in a jog across the parking lot. He breathes your name. You’re nervous, not stupid. You don’t try to hide the baby.
She grumbles on your hip.
Steve stands in front of you. He’s remarkably not shouting at you, but he’s not smiling, either. He looks different than the last time you’d seen him for sure, fuller and broader, lip dark with stubble and his hair shorter (but not short). There’s a funny scar stretching unkindly against his throat, startlingly new to you but clearly healed.
He stands there in quiet.
Leah makes a fawning sound, like she’s tired and excited to see a new person.
“Hi, Steve,” you say, to get sound out in the air.
His eyes fall on Leah. She’s a good mix of you both. Got her dad’s eyes and her mom’s nose and a handful of his beauty marks, small dark freckles that sprouted all over her body a few weeks after she was born.
“Is she mine?” he asks, cutting straight to the fat.
You shift her closer to your chest. He’s impossible to read for once, not a lick of anything on his face as he waits for you to answer. The cold chaps your lips and the late-fall sunshine threatens to blind you where it’s rising from behind him.
“You didn’t want to have a baby,” you say carefully. Each word said with less enthusiasm than the previous.
He doesn’t speak. Leah whines at the pause, her hand spreading against your collarbone in protest.
“I know you didn’t. You said it’d be miserable, and you’d get stuck with a woman you didn’t love to save face, and I knew that. I didn’t see any good in… in making you go through that.”
To your complete and utter surprise, his face softens. His mouth puckers in sympathy and his arm twitches like he’s going to reach for you. His hair curls into his eyes in the cold breeze. He squints against it, gaze falling once again on Leah, who he can’t get enough of. He’s full-blown gawking at her, watching her sigh and sniffle and press her hand into your neck.
“Is she mine?” Steve asks again.
You clear your throat to answer, but you can’t summon the words. Your nod is jerky and embarrassed and annoyed, all at once. Of course she’s his baby. She looks so much like him, and you never let anybody else touch you.
Steve opens his mouth to finally speak and you cut him off. “Well, she’s mine,” you say tightly.
He nods like he understands. He doesn’t even look mad at the insinuation.
“Her name is Leah.” If he’d been angry with you, cruel, even agitated, which maybe he deserves to be, you’re not sure you could offer this to him now. “She… she looks a lot like you, huh?” you ask.
Steve manages a laugh, strained as it may be. “Yeah. Yeah, she does.” He swallows harshly. “I thought if I came by the house you’d turn me away. Uh. Because I thought there must’ve been a reason you didn’t want me to know, but now we’re… here.”
You glance around the parking lot. His tattle of a child has made himself scarce.
“Do you wanna come home with me?” you ask. Mostly for want of something to say.
“Yeah.”
You go to leave, but Steve makes a sound and brings you right back. Without comment, he curls an arm around your shoulder and pulls you into a half-hug, slotting his nose against your temple like he used to, even as you tense up in his embrace.
“I thought you’d be more angry at me than this,” you say under your breath.
“Yeah, that’s not really how I work.” He parts from you awkwardly and points to the car. “I’ll follow you?” he asks.
“Okay.”
“Okay.” He turns very suddenly and makes his way to his car.
You meander to your own car and pop open Leah’s door. “Sorry, Lee,” you murmur, tucking her into her carseat.
“Why?” she murmurs.
“We’re gonna go to meemaw’s, okay?” If your mom could hear you calling her meemaw before her stroke she’d have knocked you up the side of the head, but it’s all Leah’s ever known her as, and meemaw doesn’t have much choice in the matter now. You’d laugh if you didn’t feel sick.
“Okay.”
You kiss her cheek, getting stuck there with your nose in her hair, all manner of panic and awkwardness and I’d-rather-nots thrumming through you. I should’ve stayed in Portland, you think.
Leah kisses your cheek while you’re stooped there. Your misery takes a backseat as you gather your bearings.
You climb into your own seat, close the door, lock it, and shove the keys in the ignition. Steve’s car idles a few spaces behind, waiting for you to go. You cannot put this off much longer, but you’d pictured the moment so differently, there’s a sense of unreality now. Is this happening? Did you really spill the truth to him the very first time he asked?
Where’s your backbone?
Where’s your common sense?
With a groan, you pull the car out of the space and begin the drive to your mom’s house. You were never close with her, as strange as it seems. She was a woman with interests and her kid happened incidentally. It doesn't bother you anymore. You came to Hawkins to take care of her. Nobody else was going to do it for you, but so far she’s been an easy patient. She needs help making dinner and she can’t walk more than the length of the hall without finding herself breathless, but she’s recovering slowly, so long as her mental faculties recoup with her body, she’ll be alright.
You, however, have screwed the entire pooch. You look at Leah in the rearview mirror and worry you’ve ruined her entire life.
“Chill,” you say to yourself quietly, almost missing the road to your mom’s house. Worst comes to worst and we go home to Portland, you tell yourself. Nothing has to change.
“Mommy?”
“Mm?” you ask.
Leah leans forward in her car seat, huffing with annoyance when the belts keep her in place. The jacket she’s wearing has bunched into a lump under her chin. “Off?” she asks.
“Two minutes.”
“Off.”
“Let me park the car, Lee. I’ll take it off of you as soon as we get home.”
She whines long and loud.
“Sorry, sweet girl. Two minutes and we’re there.”
Leah sulks the entire way there. You park in the space in front of the house and hurry out of the car, quick enough to see Steve in the bimmer pulling onto the sidewalk. You open Leah’s door and offer her a huge smile, hoping to cull a tantrum with bubbly affection. “Hi, off?”
“Yes!”
You laugh to yourself and bring her out, even as your heartbeat climbs up your throat. You can hear Steve getting out of his car as you unbuckle Leah from the car seat and drag her out. You sit her in the slight dip of the window and use your stomach to keep her up as your fingers search for the zipper of her coat. You pull it tight down and unzipper her, freeing her of the thing that had been irking her so bad and restoring her good mood.
She exhales dramatically in relief, which has you laughing again. “Is that better?” you ask through it.
“Better,” she echoes.
Leah sits up at the sound of shoes on gravel. Steve’s crossing the drive, hands shoved in his pockets.
“Who?” she asks.
Uhhhh.
“He’s gonna come in and have dinner with us, okay?”
“Y’okay.”
“Yeah?”
Leah nods enthusiastically. You can see Steve grinning in your peripheral vision, and it’s so much like Leah’s smile you find your heart going haywire.
“Okay,” you say, your full attention to Steve. “Is that cool?”
“Can we talk, first?”
You don’t blame him for asking.
“Yeah, we’ll talk first. But… my mom, she’s not doing the best right now, so. Maybe we should talk outside?”
“I’m not going to yell.”
“No, but. If you’re angry, I get it, but she can’t cope with that right now.”
“Are you angry?” he asks.
“No.”
“Then we don’t have anything to worry about,” he says, the sound of his smile palpable as Leah gives one back. “I’m not gonna yell. I promise.”
You show him into the house. It feels like walking yourself to the gallows.
The room is narrow. The sides of your vision start to dissolve as you drop your car keys in the bowl by the door, then walk Leah to the kitchen. You hold her one handed as you palm off her shoes, dropping them and then her on the floor by the kitchen table. “Okay?” you ask her.
She wanders off toward the living room and the sound of TV.
Steve Harrington’s standing in your mom’s rinky dink kitchen waiting for you to talk. You’re standing there useless, taking sips of air that sting, waiting for him to cut the crap and berate you. It would make sense. If he’s upset that you didn’t tell him you were pregnant, or that you were stupid enough to keep her, to get pregnant in the first place, it wouldn’t surprise you. Men are cruel, and Steve had a reputation for popularity. It would make sense for him to be mean to you now.
“How old is she?” he asks finally.
“She’s turning two soon.”
Steve seems to be holding his tongue.
“Just– ask.” You try to look sorry. “Ask me whatever you want.”
“Can I–” He throws a hand out, the first sign that he’s not as genial as he appears. “Can I be her dad?”
You flinch. “What?”
“Like, I want to be her dad. A real dad. I want to be in her life, I want her to know me. Did you think I wouldn’t want that?”
“I didn’t think you wanted kids at all.”
“I want kids.” Steve crosses his arms over his chest. “I always wanted a whole team of them.”
“That’s not what you said.”
“When? When you told me you were having my baby?”
This is more what you’d been expecting. There’s a cruel pleasure in being vindicated. “When you told me you didn’t want kids, Steve. You said you didn’t want a miserable kid in a miserable marriage, what was I supposed to glean from that?”
“Exactly, I didn’t want a miserable kid, which is exactly what I was, and I didn’t want it in an arranged marriage that my mom thought would be good for me.” His anger drains a little. “I never meant– I mean, even if I didn’t, you should’ve told me.”
“She’s my baby.”
“That’s not fair.”
“That’s totally fair, she’s literally mine.”
“It’s not fair to act like I wouldn’t have cared,” he clarifies, frowning at you. It’s so disappointed-looking it pisses you off worse, but you're trying to keep a level head. Nobody here deserves for you to blow up and say words you don’t mean.
You bite your lip. “I’m sorry, Steve, but I wasn’t convinced that you would. I wanted what was best for me and her.”
“I can be best for you both.”
You wait for him to hold it up. To prove what he means.
“If she’s mine, I want to be her dad,” he says.
“If?”
He waves a hand, like he could roll his eyes. He should thank his lucky stars he didn’t. “Not like that, I’m not saying she’s not, I just want to look after her.”
“She’s looked after.”
“I’m not saying she’s not,” he says, uneasy now, shifting to hide a hand in his pocket. He wasn’t expecting you to be difficult, you think. “I’m not saying that. I’m not saying anything about you, I’m asking you if I can do right by you.”
“You might not actually want her, Steve.”
“I haven’t stopped thinking about her since the kids told me. I didn’t get a good look at her, but the idea? Just the idea of her? I wanted it.”
You sigh, frustrated, and set your sights on the fridge. “Can’t believe you had kids posted up at Bradley’s to stalk me,” you murmur.
“I needed to see her for myself.”
“Steve... You’re twenty three. We aren’t married. You don’t have to be anything to her, you don’t have to do right by me, we don’t have to play house until you’re miserable. In a couple of months we’ll go home to Portland and you don’t have to do anything. I’m sorry I didn’t tell you, but you don’t have to worry. You can tell everyone you tried and I said no and you’ll still look good.”
“Why are you being like this?” he asks, leaving little air between your sentence and his. “What are you talking about? I’m asking you if I can keep you guys and you’re trying to run me out?”
“Keep us?” you ask indignantly.
“Yes!” He clears his throat. “I don’t get why you left without telling me and I am angry, but I also don’t understand what it’s like to have to make that decision, and I’m sorry you made it by yourself, and I don’t blame you for running away. Okay? Is that okay?”
He’s so loud, then, so tightly wound and upset, his voice a shade of pleading, that the protests you’d been making die on your lips.
“Yeah,” you say quietly.
“You didn’t think I wanted a baby, and I guess I didn’t give you a reason to think that, but I do want one. I would’ve— if you’d told me, I would’ve lost my mind. I’m still losing it.”
You pull out a chair at the kitchen table to take a wobbly seat. Your heart is racing, that stupid kiddie feeling of being in trouble for hurting him clouded by a lingering sense of mistrust. You’d thought… all these years, that Steve didn’t want kids, or marriage, or anything, and– and– maybe you didn’t run away because of him, maybe it was all you, maybe—
“Hey,” he says, a hand landing between your shoulders, “I’m sorry.”
“For what?” you ask, sharper than you mean to.
“I don’t know. I wanted you to stop freaking out.”
“Well,” you say, licking your lips, your breath coming short and shallow, “it didn’t work.”
Steve Harrington rubs your back. You try desperately to chill out, Leah in the other room, your mom sleeping or listening, probably already wound up from all the ruckus, and Steve, who you haven’t seen in years, who used to kiss all over your face before he’d hug you in the dark of his bedroom, waiting for you to calm down so he can say what he needs to.
A chair pulls out next to yours after a while. Steve sits beside you, resting his hand on your knee.
After a few minutes, you cover his hand with yours.
“She’s beautiful,” he says.
“Looks like her mom,” you mumble.
“Yeah, she does. More like me though.”
You huff a weak laugh.
“Are you gonna throw me out?” Steve asks.
“You want to be her dad?”
For a few seconds, you worry he hasn’t heard you. But he rubs a small back and forth on your leg and says, “Please.”
“Okay. Okay, then. I’m not letting you meet her if you’re not serious, Steve. You have to mean it.” You raise your eyes to his and all his perfect lashes. “Promise?”
He offers his pinky, which is so dumb. This whole scenario is so stupid. Too bad it’s mostly (almost entirely) your own fault.
You shake his pinky. He keeps them tied for a long time.
In a rush, you sniffle yourself dry and usher Leah into the room with a hand on her shoulder. She is so, so small. At least your mom missed the commotion, sleeping sat up in the armchair.
“You promise?” you ask Steve, pausing at the table.
Steve nods emphatically. By the looks of things, he’s all in.
You pull your chair out opposite Steve and scoop Leah into your lap. You hold her wrist in your hand gently and lean down to talk in her ear. “Okay, Lee. I gotta tell you something, okay?”
“Y’okay.”
“This is daddy.”
You can tell he’s not expecting such a straightforward introduction, but after a moment, he cannot hide his smile. Leah looks at him with his almond shaped eyes, all smiles in return.
“Okay? This is daddy, and he’s gonna spend some time with us.”
“Huh?”
You point at Steve, smiling even as your hand trembles between you both. “This is your daddy. He missed you very much and wanted to see you. Can you say hi?”
“Hi,” Leah says, her voice raspy and high.
“Hi, Leah,” he says, ever so slightly choked up. Just barely.
“He was my best friend,” you say, “and he wants to be your best friend, too. Do you want to play a game with daddy?”
“Wam’ play game?” Leah asks Steve.
“Please, I would love to play a game. What game do you like?” he asks.
“Um…” Leah places her hand in his and you could probably weep, but he’s smiling at her with so much love as he waves it up and down you never get there. She shakes her fist up and down in his, giggling when he over exaggerates her strength.
“Woah, strong girl!” he says. “Don’t break my arm!”
Leah gives him a good shake.
—
“I do not understand why you’re so calm. How you’re so calm. This is not how I’ve seen you react to things.”
Steve pushes the shopping cart into Robin’s hip. She squawks and thrusts it at him, the crate of kiddie water bottles he’d balanced on the bottom rung hitting him clean in the ankle.
“How am I supposed to react?” he asks, wincing as he brings his leg up to rub at the new wound.
“Uh, to blow the fuck up?” She tucks her hair behind her ears, staring at him. “I was expecting more whining, if I’m totally honest.”
Steve gets back to the task at hand. The aisle they’re in is pink no matter where you look, full of Barbie dolls and ballerina tutus and teddy bears with hearts in their palms. “What would you want if you were two?” he asks.
Robin offers one of her kinder smiles. “I guess I’d want everything.”
“Well, Y/N’s not gonna like that.”
He wants to take care of you both. He doesn’t want to make you feel like you weren’t doing that already. So. The cart is full of stuff for him mostly, things he’ll need to look after Leah should he ever be allowed to take her by himself, which he assumes he will. He’s got diapers, sippy cups, wet wipes, rash creams, a mountain of clothes he has to remember to keep the receipt for, baby snacks, a changing pad, bath toys. He has a towel like a poncho with a ladybug hood and a great big bottle of bathroom cleaner to shape things up for his baby.
He also got you pajamas. He’s not sure why. He remembers that old pair you used to wear whenever he’d make it to your place with the pink and purple plaid, and he’d been wondering if you kept them, and a desire to see you in them again had come over him and now they’re in the cart. He’s hoping he can sort of slip them in between diapers.
Steve doesn’t want to show you up, but he does want to prove he’s being serious, emotionally and physically —financially. Leah is his baby. Kids are expensive, and she must’ve already cost you a small fortune, and you didn’t want his help but you can bet you’ll be getting it, not singularly because he cared for you (he has to gloss it into that one word, care, things being complicated enough as it stands without remembered notions of falling and love) but because Leah is literally his baby.
He pauses on the spot.
Leah is his girl. He’s allowed to buy her things. It will not be an insult.
He grabs a Barbie with a puppy dog on a leash, a box of stickle bricks, a teddy bear with a big cutesy grin, and purple bunny rabbit to be his best friend.
Robin watches him put it all in the cart in silence.
“Is that enough?” he asks, despite previous internal decisions. She’s his best friend. Everyone needs one.
Robin turns on the spot to look at the shelves behind them, grabbing a box set of storybooks bound with ribbon down the spines. “These ones are from me,” she says, dumping them next to the second jumbo box of diapers.
“I’m not, like, super angry,” he says, getting behind the cart to push for the checkout. “I want kids. I want Leah. This isn’t a bad thing.”
“You kind of missed out on a lot,” Robin says. Carefully, not to be cruel, but to present it to him in case he hasn’t thought about it. Obviously he’s thought about it, but.
“I mean, yeah. But do you remember being a baby?”
“It’s, like, a deep down thing.”
He swallows. “Sure, I don’t like that I didn’t get to be there when Leah was a baby, but… I’m finding it hard to be mad when she was protecting all of us from things we didn’t want, or, that’s what she thought.” Steve gives a jerky shrug. “I’m sure she got enough love from her without me, but I’m gonna make up for whatever she missed out on.”
“Okay. Well, when you explode, I’m literally right here.”
Steve is overcome with the urge to snuggle her in the middle of the store, but he hits her with the shopping cart again and feels the thanks get stuck in his throat. “I’m not gonna explode. I’m happy.”
Steve is thrilled. He has a baby. He has a child. Maybe it’s not the wife and six kids he thought he wanted, but Leah is his baby.
“She’s mine,” he says.
“I know, dingus. You’ve said it a hundred times.”
He parks his cart at the belt behind a grandma buying cat food. “I can’t wait for you to meet her, Rob, she’s–”
“She’s beautiful,” Robin says, rolling her eyes. “We’re way too young for kids, Steven. You were supposed to go to college.”
“I’m still gonna go!”
“With what money?”
Steve will save again. It’s community college.
Robin holds his eye. He avoids it, starts putting things on the checkout belt. “You’re doing the only thing you can do,” she says, “I don’t wanna be friends with a deadbeat, but I wanted you to go. I’m too young to be an Aunt.”
“I’ll going, Rob.”
“Fine. I believe you.”
“Can you help?”
She pulls stuff out of the cart reluctantly.
Together, they pack what can be bagged and take it all to the car. Steve drops Robin off at home without much of a goodbye —either she’ll call him tonight or he’ll call her, ‘cos one way or another, they’re gonna talk. Then he takes the side road to your mom’s house and parks the bimmer behind your old blue Pontiac.
He grabs the toys and the bag of groceries. He’ll have to make another trip for the diapers, but he figures it’s best to see your reaction before he lugs it all up the driveway.
You answer the door. Parenting has been going better than expected considering you kept the baby a secret for two whole years, and you’re already smiling when you see him. Things were awkward that first week, but he’s been coming by every single day after work if he works, bright and early if he doesn’t. He can tell you’re growing more confident in his promises. He’s not gonna realise how big this whole thing is and run. He’s well aware of how world-changing his decision was to stay, but it wasn’t a decision at all.
“Hi, is she awake yet?” he asks. Leah naps every day at noon.
“Mm-hm. She was asking me for daddy all morning,” you say. Secrets you may have kept, but you’re glad for both of them whenever Steve and Leah get along. “I promised you’d be here after dinner.”
“Is it cool that I’m early?”
You eye the bags in his hands. “Sure. I already told you, I’m not gonna dictate anything. You can see her when you want to… What’s that?”
“I was thinking I’d make dinner?” He shakes the lighter bag. “And this is for Leah.”
“Right. Okay.”
You let Steve in. He, despite all things in his body that remember this song and dance and demand he kiss your cheek hello, powers through to the kitchen without making a fool of himself.
“Brought your favourite. Thought Leah would probably like it, since you liked it so much,” he says. “And those pastries you loved.”
“You want me to go grab her?”
“Where is she?”
“She’s sitting with my mom. Don’t think she heard the door, she would’ve come out running by now. She’s a little sleepy.”
“That’s okay. I can put all this away and I’ll go see if she’s awake.”
You cross your arms over your stomach, leaning against the counter. “You didn’t have to get stuff for me.”
“I wanted to.”
“You don’t have to, though. Leah’s your baby, but I’m…”
He feels achy in his jaw. He abandons the bag full of groceries to look at you fully. “If you’d turned up here without Leah, after two years of full radio silence, no letters and no clue where you went, if you came back, I’d want to see you. You know that, right?”
“I…”
“I asked your mom where you went, did you know that?”
“No.”
“Well, she wouldn’t tell me.”
“I don’t think she knew.”
Steve hates how much that annoys him, hates the way he relates to it. He dries his hands on his pants, not sure if he wants to hug you or tip your head with his thumb at chin, forcing you to look at him, to say the things he’s said in his head before bed a couple nights a week for years.
Steve Harrington does not love by halves.
“You’d tell me if you were gonna leave again, right?” he asks.
“We are leaving.”
“I know, I know, but. You’re not gonna disappear in the middle of the night.”
“No, Steve. I’ll tell you before we go home. I promise.”
His shoulders relax. “Okay, then, I’ll keep bringing stuff you like, too. Trade deal.”
“Mutually beneficial. I won't kidnap your baby again and you bring me raspberry turnovers.”
“Exactly.”
You surprise him with a laugh. “Okay.”
“Okay, good,” he says, grinning, wondering if he’s finally paving a path into your lap again.
From the doorway of the kitchen comes a pleased gasp. “Daddy?” Leah asks, her eyes widening in delight, feet stomping on the spot, “Hi, daddy!”
He was supposed to give this up for community college? Steve squats down in a half-second and holds out his hands, ready for an armful of sleepy toddler. Her hair is all puffy and her pajamas big at the neck like she’d wriggled for hours, but she’s soft, smells clean as he wraps his arms around her and she burrows into his neck.
“Hi, Leah,” he says softly.
Leah hums her content.
“Good nap?”
“Yeah.”
“Yeah? Did you have a good dream?”
She laughs as he strokes her back. He must’ve tickled her. “Da-ddy,” she says, a long, pulling word.
She’s so small Steve can’t hug her properly like this, so he hooks her in one arm and stands up to his full height, catching your unreadable expression from over her shoulder. Whatever you’d been thinking fades away, your smile strengthening as Leah pulls out of his neck to wave at you.
“Mommy,” she says, poking at Steve’s neck. “Look. Daddy’s for dinner.”
Steve laughs loudly. “I’m for dinner? You’re gonna eat me? I thought you liked me!” His head falls in a dramatic agony. “Leah wants to cook me up for dinner, I can’t believe it.”
“No!” Leah says, giggling as she grabs his face. She pulls at his cheeks, forcing his head up. “Not eating,” she says, like he’s silly.
Steve shifts her so she’s sitting braced on his lower belly, looking down at her. God, she’s so pretty. She’s perfect. She’s tiny, slim for her age according to you, but she isn’t weak. She holds herself up, her hands confident as they spread over his chest. Steve has to confess that this feeling is the strongest he’s ever experienced. Nothing compares to looking at this little kid who already treats him like he’s the best person she’s ever met, knowing that she’s his. He has to look after her. He gets to be loved by her without hesitation. Leah has no reason to love him, and yet here she is giggling in his arms from the excitement of seeing him. It’s like every day she likes him more, and every day, Steve gets to love her more. It’s so weird, but it's nice.
“I brought you something,” he says, shifting her again so he can cover her back with one arm, using the other to brush a stray bit of lint off of her face. “But– mommy, can she have it now?” he asks.
You flush. Steve recognises this look on you, pleased and startled. He’s seen it on you a hundred different times. You were always that girl who didn’t expect kindness, or to be considered. He remembers how endearing it was to surprise you with a kiss to say thank-you, or picking up the bill no matter how casual dinner felt, or something as small as helping you into your pajamas after you’d both showered. It was heartbreaking, but he’s never been unfamiliar with the bare minimum.
“Yeah, of course she can.”
“Alright,” Steve says, grinning. “Your Aunt Robin sent me with a gift for you, but daddy’s is better, so you can have mine first.” He twists for the bag it’s in and yanks it out, Barbie to him so she can’t see. “It’s only small, but I saw it and I thought you’d like it.”
“Can have?” she asks.
“Depends. Can I have a hug first?” he asks, checking your face to make sure he’s not being weird.
Leah nods erratically and throws herself forward. Steve gets a big kiss right on his smooth-shaven cheek, and he can’t stop himself from beaming, his punched out sigh poorly suppressed as he turns her to give her a much gentler kiss at the very top of her cheek. “Thanks, Lee.”
Her eyes squint with a smile. “Can I have, please?”
Steve brings the box up and tosses it to flip it, brandishing it right way round to her glee.
“Barbie!” she cries.
“With a puppy!”
“Oh gosh.”
Steve bursts out laughing. “Gosh! Should we get the box open? Then you can gosh at the accessories. She has two pairs of shoes, Leah. Two!”
Leah squirms to be put down, hands clenched tightly on each side of the box. You’re already grabbing scissors to get it open.
“Thank you.” You lean over Leah to start the dissection.
“Don’t,” he says, quiet but less shame-faced. “You don’t have to say thanks.”
You shake your head to yourself. “Yeah, well.”
“She deserves it, and it’s not up to you to say thanks. I’m serious.”
“It’s nice of you.”
He doesn’t know how to prove how certain he is about staying. He decides to keep his mouth shut for now, which is hard. Almost slips up that whole evening. You don’t look happy when he doubles back before he leaves that night with the bag of snacks and the huge box of diapers, but he catches you as you and Leah stand on the stoop waving at the bimmer. You’re smiling. A real one, teeth on display for the first time since you came home.
—
“Okay,” you say quietly, “up, baby. And another one. Good job.”
Leah demonstrates a unique level of concentration as she climbs up the stairs with you. You’d have carried her if she didn’t insist she could do it herself with a displeased squeal. Her eyes are nearly closed, her tongue slipping between her lips and a hand thrown out for balance, the other held in your own as she manages two, then three, the few shallow steps that lead into the WSQK building.
“Hi,” you greet a quiet man sitting at the door. “Is Steve in?”
“Think so. Why?”
“I wanted to talk to him, if that’s okay.”
The man gives you a suspicious look that eventually metes. “Sure. Gotta knock the booth before you go in, though, they might be on the air.”
“Sure. Thank you.”
Leah stumbles with you inside. There’s a wide wooden panelled room and smaller glass one within. You knock on it and wait for movement, too scared to look through the panels. You’ve learned that Robin has her very own radio show on the 94.5 called The Morning Squawk, and Steve, through best-friend nepotism, gets to be her sound guy. He has this WSQK van they drive around to do on the road interviews, and they’re both a hundred times happier here than they were rewinding tapes at Family Video.
It’s a pretty firm knot of roots to lay.
The door opens a good fifteen seconds after you’d knocked. You’re immediately greeted by a blondified Robin Buckley, her freckled cheeks slack with surprise. “Uh…”
“Hi, Robin.”
“Hi,” she says.
The last time you saw Robin, you’d been laying on Steve’s couch in his socks and what might’ve been Robin’s own sweatshirt, the three of you arguing on what movie to watch and what candy you were gonna tip into your popcorn. You’d laid your head in Steve’s lap.
“Leah,” you say, clearing your throat as subtly as possible, “say hi, bubby.”
“Hi, bubby,” Leah says.
Robin snorts.
“This is your daddy’s best friend ever, Aunt Robin,” you say, shooting Robin a sorry look as you mouth, “Is that cool?”
Robin culls your misery and manages a real smile. “That’s me, babe.” She bends at the waist. “Oh, you really do look like Steve. Shit, this is so cool.” Her awkwardness has melded to full-bodied delight. “You’re like his twin! Well, you do look like your mommy, duh, but this is trippy! Hey, did you get your books?”
Leah looks up at her with huge eyes.
“Did you like your storybooks?” you ask Leah, kneeling down behind her to hold her shoulder. “Aunt Robin gave you those ones, remember, daddy read one to you about the ugly duckling?”
“The duckies,” Leah says factually.
“Awesome,” Robin says. “I’m so happy you liked them, sweetie. And I’m so happy to meet you.”
You don’t question for a second that she means it.
You pat Leah on the shoulder. “Aunt Robin is your daddy’s best friend in the whole world.”
“Daddy’s here?” she asks Robin.
“Uh, not right now, he had to go get lunch.”
“Oh.”
“But you can totally come in!” she says, opening the door to the booth wide. “I can show you how the radio works! And then Steve– then dad can come back. I bet he’ll be here any second.”
“You’re not busy?” you ask.
“I mean?” Robin laughs, nervously incredulous, “if I ever have kids they’d be her cousins. That’s pretty important. And, like, she’s Steve’s, so? I’d die for her?” Robin scratches a hand through her hair. “Come on, baby Stevie, I’ll show you the keyboard. It’s your dad’s favourite gimmick.”
You hover in the middle of the small room as Robin slides a chair over to the desk with a keyboard and a mic balanced on top of it. She glances at you before she holds her hands out to Leah, and Leah goes into them willingly. Robin pulls her up and settles her in the chair. She can barely see the keys, but she’s already reaching for them as Robin starts to explain which ones do what, toggling a switch that you assume makes sure whatever sounds Leah plays are off air.
You sit yourself down on a loveseat by the door.
“We can play all of this stuff on the radio in the car,” Robin says, “do you listen to the radio?”
“The music, bubby,” you say.
Leah gives a neck-breaking nod.
“Well, me and dad choose what songs to play. Do you have a favourite song?”
“She loves ‘Save it For Later’ by The Beat. She gets super into it,” you say.
“Oh, we have that one! Let’s queue it up, Leah.”
Leah mashes the keyboard in a cacophony of introductions and funny sounds, then a long run of the Rockin’ Robin intro. She finds a sound bite of applause loaded up on the tape deck, hitting it over and over as she giggles.
“Be careful, Lee, don’t break it.”
Her hitting doesn’t slow.
“Lee,” you say more firmly, “baby, stop. You have to be nice. Don’t slap the buttons.”
Leah throws you a glare. “Mommy,” she whines.
“What? You have to be nice to other people’s things. Aunt Robin is letting you play with her keyboard, but it’s important. It’s okay to try all the buttons! But with nice hands. Yeah?”
The ajar door opens fully. “Is my Leah not being nice?” Steve asks, already beaming with all his teeth as he sees her behind the keyboard. “I don’t believe that for a second!”
Leah wiggles her excitement in the depths of the chair. Doesn’t bother calling out for him, there’s no need. Steve laughs, saying hi with a quick hand dropped on your shoulder, the gentlest squeeze anyone’s ever given with his thumb rubbing a half circle before he bends down by Leah’s chair. “Hi,” he says, your heart beating so loudly in your ears that you hardly hear him. “You’re at the radiohouse! Did Rockin’ Robin show you how to play a song? Do you wanna talk on the microphone?”
“Hi,” Leah says.
“Hi.”
“Hug me now?”
Steve’s like butter in the sun. He melts into nothing. “Yeah, babe, right now.”
She slinks forward and he picks her up, standing with a baby on his hip like he’s been doing it all his life.
“I’m gonna play her a song,” Robin says. “My queues almost empty.”
“Okay, thanks,” he says, to which Robin wrinkles her nose.
“Sure,” she says, sending you a look as she heads to her desk. Like, get a load of this idiot.
Steve presses his nose to Leah’s hair and smells her. Then he smiles, patting the small of her back.
Leah looks straight at you and says, “Daddy’s here,” in case you weren’t aware.
Steve blinks away a pained flutter, his brow pulling like he’d been in pain, quickly wiped away and hidden by the time Leah glances at him again.
You think maybe, for a second, he’d wanted to cry.
“Steve?” you ask quietly. “You okay?”
“Yeah. No, yeah.”
“You sure?”
He tugs Leah higher on his hip. “I’m okay,” he tells you, holding your gaze, his left sclera bloodshot but his nearly-tears blinked away. “I’m great, ‘cos Leah’s here,” he adds, pressing his mouth to Leah’s cheek, “at work! She’s a working girl now, we gotta get you on the payroll.”
It’s a little while later, sitting on the couch and waiting for Steve to ask you what it is you’re doing here, when the door opens. Leah perks up in his lap, the headphones she’d been wearing falling down around her neck in a heap that makes her cringe, giving a warbly cry as Steve offers assurances to her.
You’re focused on the teenager standing in the door. It’s the kid.
His eyes widen at the sight of you.
“Lucas Sinclair,” you greet, giving him a stony look. “You ratted me out.”
“Uh– did I?”
“I know it was you.”
Lucas grimaces. “Are we sure it was me?”
“I saw you.”
“Steve could’ve got the information from anyone.”
You glare for a few more seconds, then relax. “I’m messing with you, Lucas. I’m not mad. Even if you are a narc.”
“I am not! I told Dustin and it was Dustin that radioed Steve. He’s the narc. I said we had to wait for proof.”
“Well, thanks for trying.”
Lucas hesitates with you, though he comes further into the room and lets the door shut behind him. “I am sorry. Kind of.”
“We’re working things out.”
Leah tugs the headphones off of her head and out of the outlet in a great show of toddler rage, Steve laughing where he holds her. He grabs the headphones before Leah can throw them at the floor. “Hey!” he admonishes through laughter, “Those aren’t mine, babe. Should we put them on the desk?”
Steve takes them from her and sets them high. He moves the chair, bumping Leah on his knee, forcing her eyes to the new figure in the room. “Look, Lee, it’s your Uncle Lucas.”
Lucas gives an awkward, endearing smile. “Hi.”
“Hi!” Leah says.
“What’s up?” Steve asks.
“Can I get a ride, tonight? I asked my dad but he’s going to that miniature car thing.”
“Where to?”
“Max’s.”
“Why are you being cagey?” Steve asks, lifting an eyebrow.
“I’m not!”
“You so are, dude. What’s happening at Max’s?”
“Nothing! She doesn’t, like, know I’m going, that’s all.”
Steve leans in his chair in what would be a total act of casual derision if he weren’t also holding Leah to his front, his fingers waving patterns into her tummy affectionately. “So I’m gonna be on her shit list for whatever it is you have planned? No deal, dude.”
“I’m not in trouble. She’s not mad at me,” Lucas says.
“For once.”
“She’s not. I have a surprise planned? And it’s gonna get ruined on my bike, so.”
Steve’s suspicion wavers. “What sort of surprise?” he asks.
His smile is nice. Doesn’t it suit him? He’s calm where he sits despite the rumble of noise coming from Robin’s booth and Leah talking to herself in his lap. The red glow of the ON AIR light makes his brown hair nearly purple at the tops but leaves his face untouched, tan fading pale in the fall, his beauty marks the darkest bit of colour to him when you aren’t looking into the well of his eyes. His irises are like wet tree bark. His lashes look long from across the room.
And his biceps don’t look half bad when they’re wrapped around your baby. Her tiny stature emphasises the bulk he’s put on while you were in Portland. You’ve been noticing more of him lately—his weight gain, the change in his muscle, the cut of his hair, those reading glasses he keeps in the console of his car. But there are things about him that didn’t change. He’s pretty happy, as things go. He likes doing things for other people.
Their conversation drifts into focus. “…not too much, right?”
“Nah, I think that’s appropriate. Four years of dating is a long time.”
“Even if you’re broken up for half a year in the middle?”
Steve chuckles. Leah looks up at the sound. “I wouldn’t mention that part,” he says. “Look, I’ll come get you after I’m done here–”
“You’re not coming tonight?” you ask, entirely sincere in asking. Not a lick of judgement in it, but surprise, and a second emotion you aren’t eager to name.
“I was– I was gonna come,” Steve says. “If that’s cool.”
“Oh, sure. Sorry. I thought you were– Yeah, it’s fine,” you say.
Steve looks at you for a long second. “I can’t miss out on dinner,” he says, dipping down to speak in Leah’s ear, “can I? What am I making tonight, Lee, do you remember?”
“S’getti,” she says, with a vindication bordering evil.
Steve presses his lips together. Shrugs at Lucas smugly. “S’getti,” he says. “I’ll be there at six, okay?”
Lucas shoots an “Awesome, thank you, sorry,” over his shoulder as he leaves.
“Thank you sorry,” Leah repeats.
Steve has to lock into work and he doesn’t ask you to leave, moving Leah around in his arms and plugs the headphones in. She enjoys the novelty enough to sit there without complaining, bathed in attention. It’s weird to have Leah with you without having to look after her. Like, she gets uncomfortable and Steve moves her. She whines in his arm and he opens a drawer to uncover a bag of chips. He does ask if it’s alright for her to eat them, but you say yes and he doesn’t need guidance after that. He wipes her dirty face in his sleeve and twists a knob on the keyboard.
He is startlingly capable.
You are startlingly hot.
You pull at your neckline, wishing you’d brought a book to read or a zip tie to garrote yourself with for thinking such stupid shitty thoughts.
—
Steve packs his shit up at five with Leah on his hip, happy to stay with him. You’ve been quiet bordering silent and he hasn’t summoned up the bravery to ask why. He didn’t wanna look a gift horse in the mouth, ‘cos you’re here, and you brought Lee without any begging on his part. He shows her off to everyone they pass on the way out, less subtly to the smiley cleaner Cindy who loves to call him handsome in the morning. Who’s this? she asks.
This is my baby, Leah.
The problem arises when he’s trying to pass Leah to you to part ways in the parking lot.
“I don’t think I’ve ever heard something that loud,” Robin laments, blinking fast. Because, despite years and time to learn, he’s her ride home.
Leah screams another ear-splitter. “No!” she’s shouting. “No, no!”
She sobs.
You try to disentangle her from Steve’s chest. He can feel your individual fingers pressing into his pecs. “Lee, come on!” you say, laughing nervously. “Daddy has stuff to do, we’ll see him for dinner!”
She sobs louder.
Robin shakes her head as though dislodging water from her ears.
“Baby, please,” you say, apparently possessing the patience of a god, “it’s okay, I promise, it’s not long. We’ll be okay for a bit.”
Leah sews her hands in his hair tightly, yanking until it stings. Steve flinches and you immediately stop trying to make Leah disengage.
“Sorry, honey,” you say, and Steve realises with a full body start you’ve spoken to him, your hand resting open on his upper shoulder. It’s an obvious slip of the tongue. You lean forward with a slight stammer, “I– Leah, don’t pull, you’re hurting.”
“Not going,” Leah says.
“Just for now!”
“No!”
You give Steve a wide-eyed frown. “I’m sorry, I don’t know what’s going on. She doesn’t do this… usually.”
“That’s okay, it’s fine, maybe you could come with me?”
You nibble your lip. “I gotta go check on my mom, I haven’t been home all day, I don’t know if she’s eaten yet.”
Steve tries to pass Leah into your arms with renewed purpose. The snap of hair behind his ear gives him pause. “Uh, can she come with me?” Steve asks, loud now, his head angled against her hand. “Ow, Lee!”
Leah stops pulling his hair with a sob.
“I’ll take her with me and I’ll drop Robin off, pick Lucas up early, and we’ll come straight to the house.”
You falter.
The thought of you not trusting him hurts his stomach, but you say, “Steve, can you deal with that? She might not get any happier for a while.”
“Sure I can, you’ve had to do it a hundred times. I’m mostly patient. If she doesn’t calm down, I won’t yell–”
“I didn’t think you would.” You pout, wrinkling your nose. “You’d have to move the car seat–”
“Yeah, I got one.”
“You got a car seat?”
“Installed it last week. Jesus Christ, Leah, not the hair!” He reaches up to force her hand as gently as he can away from his scalp. “Baby, owwww. Not the hair.”
Leah shudders away to check he’s not angry. He can see it on her tiny face, the worry. He brings his hand to her cheek, finds his hand is too big, and has to rub her cheek with his thumb alone. “You wanna come with daddy to drop off your Aunt Robin?” he asks.
“Yeah.”
“Yeah?”
“Come with you,” she says, a crocodile tear rolling down her cheek.
“But mommy has to go home, is that okay?”
Leah shudders again. “Y’okay.”
“Okay. Give mommy a big kiss,” he says, repeating one of your favourite lines when it’s time for Steve to leave.
You get a kiss. You’re startled, he thinks, almost expressionless in how slack you’ve gone, but Steve smiles at you and you smile in turn. “You know how to do the car seat?” you ask.
“Sure. It’s got the two mechanisms, right? Her arm goes through each of the triangle strap thingys?”
“Yeah. Okay. Are you sure you can manage?”
“Are you okay with me taking her?”
You shrug. He can see why Leah does it as much as she does. “I guess I am. I mean, when we go home… like, you’ll have to have her for summers, I guess?” you ask, and you’re as beautiful as you usually are, the awkward twist of you and your tired eyes don’t touch it. You were beautiful when he walked into the sound room and found you in the loveseat, beautiful when you told him you’d stay for now without saying goodbye, beautiful when he spotted you across the parking lot with his surprise on your hip. You’ve always been beautiful. He knows you don’t feel strongly about your looks, but he does, and now you made his girl? And she looks so much like the two of you?
Steve stares at you, not even in hopes of any realisation, but he stares at you and thinks I cannot let this girl go back to Portland without me.
He doesn’t expect you to stay. All he needs is to beg a ride.
Because yes, Steve will become your awkward cling-on. He’ll find a shitty apartment close to you and he’ll build his life around Leah if that’s all he can have.
But it’s not everything he wants.
“You go take care of your mom, and we’ll meet you for dinner at 6? 6:15 at the latest?”
“Okie dokie.”
Steve rolls his eyes to stop from kissing your cheek. “Say see you later, mommy,” he tells Leah.
“See you later, mommy,” Leah says.
You use his shoulder as an anchor to kiss her cheek. He swears you rub his arm as you pull away, but Robin would call that delusional thinking. “See you soon, bug.”
He watches you walk away. Every step is perfect. “Your mom’s such a bombshell,” he murmurs, “holy sugar, she’s everything.” You turn over the top of the car and give him a wave, blowing Leah a kiss. He wants to catch it. He finger waves back.
Then he spins and finds Robin judging him hard.
It takes them twenty whole human minutes to figure out how to get Leah safely secured in her car seat. Then he spends four minutes framing her face in his hands and kissing her cheeks, enamoured beyond anything to see her in the bimmer. Robin laughs at how lame he is and he strokes a hair off of Leah’s forehead rather than feed into her ridicule. His baby laughs up a storm as he chucks her under the chin.
“Steve, I’m gonna starve!” Robin warns.
“Right, right!”
He kisses Leah’s small forehead and clambers out.
Robin talks a big talk, but she bends around in the passenger seat to chatter to Leah the whole way to her neighbourhood. “And then dad got us stuck on the side of the road! It was crazy! I told him we were in trouble and he kept laughing! But nothing is that funny, Leah, nothing. I think it’s ’cos your dad has a bunch of screws loose from that time he slipped on melted ice cream at work.”
“Don’t listen to her, Lee!” Steve protests, laughing at her rolling giggles.
“He busted his head! Luckily I saved him, because I am very very smart and I went to camp–”
“You went to Girl Scout’s sleep away camp, that’s not real camp! You were there for a week.”
“But they taught me what to do when your dingus gets a concussion,” Robin says, in her silky radio voice that Leah’s magnetised to. “And that’s why dad only looks a bit wonky, as opposed to a lot.”
“I’m not wonky, am I, Lee?” Steve asks, checking the rearview for her.
“Wonky?” she asks.
“Does daddy look wonky?”
“Mm,” she says.
“What! That is so mean! Baby, I thought you liked dad?”
She giggles and goes all shy. Robin, bless her clumsy, alternative, mixed-up huge heart, goes soft as taffy against the seat. “We don’t like him at all, do we?” she asks, reaching out to rub Leah’s arm. Steve nearly hits a curb trying to watch. “Stinky dad. You can be my girl instead, if mom wants to share. I don’t mind your Harrington blood.”
He drops Robin off, but her mom comes out and wants to meet Leah and that’s a whole thing. She’s squarely heartbroken when she first sees her, going, “Aw,” and “Oh,” as her eyes fill with tears.
“Mom!” Robin says.
“Sorry, but she’s beautiful. Well done, Stevie.”
He murmurs a Thank you, Mrs. Buckley and gets the usual It’s Melissa, Steve.
It takes another ten minutes to get Leah in the car after her quick trip. He heads straight for Lucas’ and finds him freaking out about the bouquet he got Max —Erica told him to put salt in the water to keep them fresh. Steve drives him to the florists ten minutes before they close and they end up with two smaller bunches combined into a vibrant hodgepodge.
Steve buys a handful of daisies for Leah, tucking one behind her ear.
Max likes her flowers, but she’s far more interested in the baby. Lucas stands behind her rubbing his mouth.
“She does look like you,” Max says thoughtfully.
“Right? She has my eyes.”
“Yeah.” Max leans into the car. “Hi, Steve’s baby,” she says quietly.
“This is your Aunt Max,” Steve says.
Leah, who has taken all these new aunts and uncles in her stride (or is too young to get what the hell is going on), offers Max a huge smile with her tiny baby teeth. “Hi Am’ Max,” she says.
Max grins despite herself. “Hi. Are you having a good day?”
“Yessss.”
“Yeah?” She glares at Steve momentarily before standing in front of him, like she’s annoyed he’s seen her being normal, like he doesn’t catch her in a good mood all the time. “Don’t worry, you don’t have to lie. Did you have dinner?”
“Max, I am perfectly capable of looking after her.”
“I’m just checking!” She shakes Leah’s hand nicely. “This party had enough boys,” she says.
Steve ruffles Max’s hair, unbound and bouncing behind her. He’s lucky he makes it to the car with his hand.
Steve sighs when they’re on the road to your place. “Okie dokie,” he says, clenching the steering wheel to listen to the leather creak, “let’s go see your mom. It’s only–” He checks his watch. Blinks big and wide. It’s 6:37PM already, and it’s a five minute drive to your side of Hawkins. “Oh, my god. You’re mom is gonna kill me dead.”
“Kill?”
“Kiss!” he says, cringing. “Yep, she’s gonna kiss me! No other words.”
“Y’okay.”
“Who taught you to say that so cutely?” he asks, fully stressed now, the tightness in his voice surprising a giggle out of Leah. “Stop laughing!”
She giggles worse.
He can’t be more anxious as he pulls up to the house. He climbs out of the car, grabs Leah from her car seat, and in his rush to get her home before you murder him, slams his head so hard into the roof of the car he sees stars.
“Oh, fuck,” he says, holding Leah to his chest as his vision fades out.
Your laugh sounds out from behind him. “Every parent has to do it, Steve, I’m sorry to say,” you call, jogging down the path to the car. “I was wondering where you guys went. It’s… Steve?”
He blinks hard as he stands up, his arms around Leah shaky as his head pounds and pounds and pounds. “Sorry,” he says.
“Steve, what’s wrong?” You rest your arm behind his shoulders to hold him. “Hey, are you okay? Do you need to sit down?”
He urges you to take Leah.
The pain is radiating from the centre of his skull outward, into each eye and down the nape of his neck. It’s such a sudden sharpness he loses his breath, spotty vision fading in and out as he curls into himself.
“Lee, can you go inside, baby?” he hears you ask. There are a few steps, your dark shadows on the ground drifting further away before one returns, all alone. “Steve, what happened? How hard did you hit your head?” you ask softly.
“It’s– I got that–” Every word pulls at the nausea brewing in his stomach. “I’m gonna–”
Steve gags. He aims for the grass. Everything goes white.
—
Steve does a valiant job of keeping himself upright long enough for you to sit him down inside, but after that, he’s useless.
“Okay, it’s okay,” you’re saying, a ringing in your ears you can’t cope with, “it’s alright, Steve, you’re okay. Come forward, honey, let me see–”
You aren’t sure he’s conscious, but he slumps forward regardless to expose the back of his head. You feel through his hair and pull your hand out quick to check for blood on your fingertips, but they come away clean.
“Daddy?” Leah asks, wandering into the living room with her little smile and a daisy drooping behind her ear.
“How was meemaw, bub?” you ask.
“Sleeping.”
“Why don’t you go snuggle with her for a minute? I’ll bring you a buppy?”
Leah hugs your leg from behind. “Buppy?”
“Yeah, do you want one?”
Leah shoots for the bedroom. You take her absence as an opportunity to pull Steve’s head up, meeting his droopy gaze. “Steve, baby,” you say, so softly it’d be a wonder if he could hear you, “are you okay?”
He groans. “Just a migraine.”
“Are you sure?”
“Feels like one.”
“You get them a lot?”
“More since you left.”
You swallow roughly. “I’m gonna call an ambulance.”
“No.” At that, he sits up, holds his own head up to plead, “You don’t have to. I’m fine, this just happens sometimes. After I hit my head at the mall, I get these killer migraines.”
“You hit your head, though. I think you have a concussion.”
“Not my first one.”
You hold his cheek in your hand. Your thumb brushes over his beauty marks. “No?” you ask.
“Had three.”
“You never told me.”
“I know. Didn’t want you to think I was– some loser? I don’t know. I don’t know, I don’t know why it was hard to be honest with you, guess I thought– it’s not like it’s ever done any good before. I always say the wrong thing.”
You get on your knees in front of him. To cope with the strain of looking up at him, but more to see him face to face. “Steve, you nearly yacked in my yard. I think we’re past appearances.”
Steve covers his mouth with a big hand.
You tuck as much of his hair behind his ears as you can. “Can you look at me? I want to check your pupils.”
He opens his eyes properly, pouring his gaze into yours without hesitation. You check the size of each pupil and find them normal, though the longer he looks, the bigger they become. “I think there’s something wrong, Steve. Your eyes are blown.”
“It’s fine. It’s not ‘cos I hit my head. It’s a headache.”
“You almost knocked yourself out. You’re throwing up. What if I don’t call the ambulance and Leah’s dad dies on my couch?”
“I don’t need an ambulance. I barely puked, it was all spit.”
“Steve.”
“I’m serious. I didn’t even go for the first two concussions, and the third one, they said this could happen. Turns out that taking a couple of bad knocks to the head makes you fragile, I’m fine.” He cups your cheek. “Jesus, don’t feel sorry for me–”
“I do feel sorry. I’m so sorry.”
Seconds of stringy silence follow. He squints at you through the pain. “It’s okay,” he says, his own thumb rubbing at your veins. “I’m sorry, too.”
You pull his hand off your face. Not without care.
“…Can I please call an ambulance?” you ask, uneasy.
“I don’t need one.”
“How do you know?” you whisper.
He turns his hand in your grip to hold yours. His eyes are brown and teary with pain, but they’re so familiar. “I just do. Can you trust me, please?”
You try to stand. Steve squeezes your hand in his and makes you sit on the couch beside him as his eyes shutter closed and his head tips back, the column of his throat there and pale and working as he swallows his pain. You stare at the length of it with your hand too hot in his grip, wondering when it’s acceptable to pull your hand away, and if you’d even want to when the time came.
You told me you didn’t want this, you think, your two joined hands rising and falling where he’s pulled them to his chest. You swear you can see his heart in his chest. The gentle bump-bump of it against skin. A miserable wife.
“Can I get you anything?”
He croaks a hum. “Mm, no.”
“Are you sure? I have aspirin.”
His fingers flex. “It’ll go away.”
“When?”
“It depends. It can take a few hours, sometimes, but I don’t get the worst of the pain for long.” His voice is hoarse with its quiet.
“The other times?”
“They can last for days.”
You’d seen the physical change in Steve. He went weak and sweaty in seconds. His nausea was obviously extreme. You can feel the tremor in his hand as he talks like every word spurs pain.
“It won’t, though,” he says. “Don’t worry. I need five minutes and I can make dinner.”
“Uh, no you can’t. You can sit right here until you feel better, thanks.”
He sinks impossibly further into your mom’s old couch. “Okay. Sorry.”
“It’s okay.” You lower your tone. “I don’t mind. I’m sorry if you thought I would.”
“I didn’t mean to–”
“To what? Give yourself a concussion on the roof of the car? I gathered that.”
“Didn’t mean for it to become your problem,” he says.
“You’re not a problem, Steve. I promise.”
You fight for better judgement and lose, letting yourself caress a piece of hair away from his pale neck.
“I think I really screwed up,” he says. “Think I made out all the wrong things. You didn’t think you could tell me about the baby–”
“We don’t have to do this again–”
“Yeah, we do. We do. Because I made you think I wouldn’t want you. I lied to protect my ego and I could’ve had everything I wanted,” —his brow pulls tight and glared, his jaw rigid— “and I hurt you.”
“I hurt myself. You didn’t make me run away, Steve. I did it all alone. I’m good at that.”
“I don’t want you to be alone.”
“I don’t want you to live a life that you hate.”
“I don’t. I won’t. How could I ever hate anything about her?”
You have to give him that. But. “I didn’t tell you for a bunch of reasons, Steve,” you confess, hardly wanting to let it out. “I was scared of everything, you and your parents, making you into the reluctant husband, or– or at the least the reluctant father. I didn’t want to deal with it. And I didn’t wanna be that stupid girl who got knocked up by the prom king. I ran away and nobody had to know.”
“It wouldn’t have been like that.”
“I realise that now.”
His head lolls to see you. He pulls his lashes apart enough to peek through them, that dark hedging a line you’d like to count. You tip your head toward his and face him across the couch cushions, hands joined and hot as a hearth.
“It was never messing around, to me,” he says quietly. Sweat wets the hair at his temples.
“You don’t have to–”
“I got my heart stomped on pretty hard over and over and I stopped trying. I put all my cards on the table every time. But with you, I couldn’t do it again. I thought I couldn’t, so I acted less into you than I was.”
You remember all his kisses and tight armed hugs, his affectionate nudges, his nose lined to your temple as he bore down. It hadn’t felt like less. But you’d never thought it was more, either.
“I pretended we were this summer fling, told you I didn’t want kids, that I wanted to live in the city and get a full time job at a firm with a company car, like that stuff mattered.” He frowns at you deeply. “I’m sorry. I wish I could change it.”
His throat bobs.
“S’it still hurting?” you murmur.
“So much,” he murmurs too, holding your hand against his heart. “I can’t get it to stop.”
“I can’t do this with you.”
He shakes his head minutely. “M’not asking you for anything you can’t give me. I’m just sorry.”
You want him to lean in and align his mouth to yours. You imagine it vividly, the press and taste of him, the scratch of the stubble on his upper lip and his hand slipping behind your neck, squeezing your nape gently, his thumb at the hinge of your jaw trying to open your mouth. You want him so badly it’s a palpable ache in your teeth, like he’s already kissed you harsh and quick, that clack of a collision and the subsequent metallic on your tongue.
But you aren’t lying. You can’t do this.
A thudding noise echoes from your mom’s room, compelling you up and away from his warm touch. Your hand sings with pins and needles as it falls out of his.
“Lee?” you call. “Sorry. I have to go make sure she’s okay.”
He frowns again as he pinches the bridge of his nose. “That’s fine. I’ll be here.”
—
The bedroom throw blankets haven’t changed since you were here last. Your mom didn’t waste much time turning it into a guest room, but the sheets and blankets are the same, soft with wear in your hands as you lay them out. Leah waits for you to finish before climbing into bed, her bottle teat bitten between her teeth. It slips out of her hand with a rush of air as she slips into the pillows. You pick it up and offer it to her again, your shoulders aflame with the weight of an uncommon gaze.
“What side do you sleep on?”
Steve, at half-mast but less obviously pained, takes his time answering.
“Left.”
“Left side’s all yours.”
He shuffles forward in a polo and a pair of his old sweatpants. You, in a horrible stroke of great luck, had them in the bottom of the chest of drawers.
“Make room for me?” he asks Leah.
She grins around her bottle.
You’re pretty sure that if Steve can’t open his eyes for more than ten seconds at a time, he can’t drive, and you don’t want him to fall asleep at home and never wake up. Hence your impromptu sleepover. The bed is a queen and you have a shared child as a buffer, but you’re already annoyed with yourself. Your arms keep remembering what it felt like to stretch out over him whenever he ended up on his front. It is not helpful.
You put the big light out and the nightlight on, a ladybug on a mushroom that glows a warm orange on Steve’s side of the room. In your own sweatpants and a vest, you climb into the right side of the bed and nearly fall straight back out at the lack of space.
Steve curls an arm around Leah tentatively, encouraging her into his side to make room for you.
“You okay?” he asks Leah quietly.
“You okay, daddy?” she asks.
“I’m fine, beautiful. I’m good.”
“Sleep?” she asks.
“With you, if that’s cool?”
“Cool,” she says decidedly.
When you lie down, Leah immediately rolls out of Steve’s grip and makes herself comfortable in the curves of you, her nose digging hard in your arm, the bottle warm on your chest.
“I’ll move her when she falls asleep,” you whisper, nodding to the foldout cot next to the bed with its padded interior.
Sleeping in the same bed as Steve Harrington is a long gone artefact of the past. It’s odd to be face to face with him, to smell him so close, the toothpaste on his breath and the salty, earthy sting of sweat mixed with allspice. You don’t strictly mind it, but you didn’t think you’d ever be this close again. It hurries the heart. You miss him like a slap.
Refusing to think on it is the best way forward.
“You sure you’re okay?” you ask him under your breath.
Leah suckles at her bottle, breaking the quiet, though it’s a monotone sort of sound. Steve doesn’t answer. You glance at him and find him dozing already, not a blanket over him nor a sheet untucked.
“Steve.”
He blinks to attention. “Huh?”
“Pull the blanket up over yourself.”
He must like your tone. You’d gone soft by accident, too used to lulling Leah to sleep via sweetness and dulcet murmuring. He kicks it down and then pulls it up to his ribs, a tight white parcel with the pink throw laid over his feet.
“It’ll be cold tonight. Does that make the migraines worse?” you ask.
“No. I’ll be okay.”
You let him fall asleep. Leah snuggles under your chin. This isn’t the daydream. You aren’t being cuddled and coddled by warm kisses along the side of your face, his big arm around you, your baby between you. Steve keeps a good distance and he’s exhausted.
Leah takes a lot longer to fall, but when she does it’s for keeps. You give her ten minutes tucked up on your chest but decide to move her when you feel your own eyes drifting shut. A rush of unnecessary shushing and a soft kiss later, you creep toward the bed and lay down on your side. Steve sleeps as your mirror, one cheek and eye hidden by the pillow, the sheets pulled haphazard over his hip. You yank them from under you and pull them up to cover him to the shoulder, tempted to tuck his hair behind his ear again. It’s long enough.
“Can feel you staring,” he whispers.
Your heart leaps in shock, though thankfully you don’t jump. “Hm?”
“Staring at me.”
“Trying to gauge whether you died in your sleep.”
“Still ‘live.”
You do reach for him, then, stricken by how badly you want to take care of him. “I can see that.”
He peeks down at your hand on his cheek and grins dopily. “Missed you,” he says.
“Missed you, too.”
You wouldn’t tell him if it weren’t dark, if he weren’t in pain.
“You did?” he asks.
“I always miss you,” you say. You pull your hand away like it’s him that’s said the wrong thing, annoyed at your own boldness, moving onto your back to stare at the ceiling.
He feels at your wrist, up your arm. Steve slides his palm over your stomach and holds it there. When you’re starting to think he might’ve fallen asleep again, your breath aching in your throat to be expelled, he presses down carefully and sighs. “I wish I got to see it. Don’t know why you were alone.”
“I wasn't.”
“Would’ve looked after you, though.”
“Steve…”
“I would’ve.”
“I know.” You know now. You could’ve stayed here and had him look after you, but it’s not what you wanted. “I wanted… more, than that.”
He stares at you across the pillows. Your breath catches as he brings his hand up to your cheek and encourages your head toward him, as he lifts himself up off the pillows to bear down over you.
“Do you still want that?” he asks.
You laugh, weak and weary. “Not when you’re concussed.”
He laughs in your face. It’s quiet to leave Leah sleeping, and to stop from hurting himself again, but it’s a genuine laugh of joy leaning over you. His hair falls in his face and he’s beautiful. All freckled and gold in the dim amber light sunning in from behind him.
“I am not concussed,” he says, leaning down.
You don’t kiss. Won’t lift your lips to his where he waits, though waiting might not be the right word. It’s like he’s alright with anything you’re about to do, or not do, sharing your breath.
“I don’t believe you,” you tease lightly.
He’s moved so much to be over you. It is unquestionably the position of a man who’s going to kiss you.
You press your forehead to his chin.
“We should sleep,” you say, because you shouldn’t kiss.
Portland feels very, very far away as he trails his fingers down the front of you and takes a handful of your hip.
“I’m not concussed,” he says, though it’s not asking for anything; Steve’s already pulling away. He sits up and slightly away from you, rubbing a wave into your abdomen lovingly, like you never went to Portland at all. Like it’s the sleepover after a night spent kissing slow and watching shit TV. “Get some sleep, angel,” he adds, so quietly you’d doubt he spoke if you hadn’t watched his mouth shape the words.
—
In the morning, you wake to find Leah chest to chest with Steve, his hair like water on your pillows.
“An’ my hand an’ my nose as my mouth,” she says factually.
“And your ears,” he says back to her quietly, stroking a path from her shoulders to her lower back and up again. “Your eyebrows, and your hair, and your neck.”
“Yeah.”
“Your tummy, and your legs, and your little toes.”
“Am’ my toes,” she says.
“Even your toes are pretty,” Steve agrees. “‘Cos duh. Leah’s the prettiest girl I ever met, right?” His voice drops low enough to rattle hoarsely. “Just as pretty as mommy. I didn’t know that was possible.”
You hide your face in the pillows, pretending to sleep.
This is not going to go how you’d first thought.
—
thank you for reading!! so excited I love steve and I know he could be bitchier and angrier here but I’ve decided to make him whipped instead cos he’s cute when he’s in love and if it’s not implied enough he’s still whipped for the reader lol. hope you enjoyed it thank you very much for reading and taking the time
summary: ray invites a psychic to help them on a job
pairing: ray stantz x psychic!reader
word count: 1.8k
a/n: this turned out so long and is kind of niche but dr. ray stantz if you read this im free on thursday night and would like to hang out. please respond to this and then hang out with me on Thursday night when i’m free.
Spooks and specters aside, Ray liked to think that he was a reasonable, level-headed man.
His friends, however, tended to disagree.
“C’mon, Ray, you can’t believe everything this crack says just ‘cause they’re a smokeshow,” Peter chastised him from the passenger seat.
“I consulted with multiple colleagues before I even thought about using their services. I will have you know that—”
“Ah, and I’m sure those colleagues had a plethora of scientific backing.”
“You weren’t even there,” Ray scoffed, “if you would just set your biases aside for one second, one second—”
“OH, please!”
“—you might actually learn something valuable!”
“You know, this is getting ridiculous, Ray.” Peter shook his head, looking out the window.
“Ridiculous, I’m being ridiculous, that’s rich.” Ray muttered to himself.
Egon’s monotone voice broke through from the backseat, “The accuracy of the reading was quite impressive.” He didn’t bother looking up from the gadget he was toying with.
“Thank you!” “Not you, too!” Ray and Peter exclaimed in unison.
“Look, Ray,” Peter turned in his seat to face his friend, “a few lucky guesses doesn’t mean someone’s qualified.”
“Last I checked, you didn’t have any better ideas.” Ray retorted.
“Just because I don’t have any better ideas doesn’t mean this is our only option.”
Ray cut the wheel sharply into a parking spot, narrowly avoiding the other parked cars as Ecto-1 jerked to a stop.. “Pete, our equipment isn’t giving us accurate readings, the spirit is non-communicative, and there are too many objects to know which one it’s attached to. This discussion. Is. Over.”
Three car doors were flung open—only two slammed shut.
”What happened to ‘I’m not stepping foot in that scammer’s lair’?” Ray threw over his shoulder.
“If you think I’m letting you go in there alone to get manipulated by a con artist, you’re even crazier than I thought,” Peter scoffed, “especially now that Spengler’s compromised.”
“I can assure you that I am not compromised.”
“Whatever, Pete,” Ray pushed open the door to the apartment complex, “just…don’t be yourself.”
————————————————
Peter lectured Ray the entire way up to the fifth floor, and was about to octuple down on his argument when the plain door opened, cutting him off.
The psychic smiled warmly at the trio.
”Dr. Stantz, Dr. Spengler, welcome back,” they moved aside, gesturing them into the apartment, “and you must be Dr. Venkman. Welcome, my name’s Y/N.”
Y/N extended a hand, and Peter gave it a brief shake.
“Yeah, pleasure’s all mine.”
If looks could kill, Ray would’ve killed Peter a long time ago.
”Thank you for seeing us on such short notice, Y/N.” What Peter gave in sarcasm, Ray made up for in sincerity.
”It’s no problem at all—please, take a seat.”
Ray promptly sat in the plush chair closest to Y/N, and Egon took the other, leaving Peter sitting on a low cushion on the floor.
Y/N gave them another smile, “What can I do for you gentlemen?”
”Well—“ Peter began, but was promptly cut off by Ray.
”We have a job, you see. A client recently inherited his great-uncle’s estate, but there’s this poltergeist—real nasty one. We think it has an attachment to something in the house, but we can’t figure out what.”
Y/N nodded, “Hm, I see.”
Peter butted in, “These goofs were hoping you’d come to the house and be their ghost hound.”
”Peter.” Ray gave him a warning look.
”And I take it you don’t want my help?” Y/N raised an inquisitive brow.
”I mean, don’t get me wrong. I appreciate that you need to make a living. I’m just not buying it.”
“I am so sorry about him, Y/N,” Ray started.
Y/N just laughed, their focus still on Peter.
“Last week. You were on a date—she was a little too young for you, by the way.”
Peter opened his mouth to speak, but Y/N cut him off.
”You thought you were going to get lucky, but she got cold feet, kicked you out of the car and drove off with your pants. Left you there, hanging in the breeze.”
”How did you—“
”There’s a man with you, he saw the whole thing. Says his name’s Bill. He couldn’t wait to tell someone about it.”
Peter gaped at Y/N, speechless for possibly the first time in his life. Images of his late uncle Bill flashed in his mind. He had always found humor in other people’s misery.
Y/N turned their attention to Ray, who was already looking at them in awe. “I would be happy to help,” they briefly looked over his shoulder with a warm smile, “your mother says hello, by the way. Lovely woman.”
“Th-thank you.” Ray stammered a bit.
“You were actually my last appointment of the day, if you would like to go now.”
Peter shot up from the cushion, heading toward the door. “Great, let’s go.”
He just wanted to get Y/N out of his life before they could reveal anything else about him.
”Don’t mind him.” Ray smiled at Y/N apologetically.
“Oh, trust me, I won’t.” Y/N beamed back, grabbing their things and following Ray out the door.
————————————————
Ray guided Y/N into the passenger seat, much to Peter’s chagrin.
He was back to his usual self, leaning up from the backseat and gripping the back of Ray’s seat as he questioned their new addition.
”So these people—spirits—are just watching us at all times.”
”Well, yeah,” Y/N laughed softly, “unfortunately, they don’t have much else to do.”
Peter sat back in his seat, looking mortified.
”Really makes you reconsider how you act, right?”
Peter thought for a moment.
”Nah, nothing Casper can do about it, anyway. Bunch of creeps.”
Ray scoffed. “Very inspirational, Pete,” he snuck a glance at Y/N, “I know I’ll be thinking twice the next time I pick my nose—figuratively speaking, of course. I do not pick my nose.”
“Of course,” Y/N laughed, “but really, you can’t stop living just because you might have a few spectators.”
”See, they get me.” Peter lightly slapped Ray’s arm before he turned into the driveway and put the car in park.
Y/N exited the car, looking up at the house.
”Are the owners home?” They inquired, glancing at Ray.
”No,” he lightly jingled his keyring, “they gave us the spare key while we figure this out.”
Y/N looked back at the house.
”Oh…well, there’s a woman upstairs. She looks upset.”
”Yeah, they must be pretty angry. Keeps throwing things around and killing the power.”
”No,” Y/N frowned, starting toward the house, “she looks…sad.”
Ray followed Y/N, unlocking the door and guiding them to the staircase.
”I think you may have this ghost misunderstood. The energy here is…” Y/N paused, thinking, “low…but I don’t think there’s anyone here that means harm.”
The pair moved through the house, Peter and Egon left down in the foyer.
”Activity has been most concentrated in the master bedroom, the door to your left.” Ray nodded at the slightly ajar door. “We think that what we’re looking for is in there.”
Y/N wordlessly nodded and walked to the bedroom, pausing abruptly in the doorway.
”Oh, hello,” they greeted the air in a soft voice.
Ray craned his neck from the hallway, seeing nothing in the room. Y/N, however, had their eyes trained on the vanity.
”I see…” They shot a solemn look at Ray. “She’s been here for a long time.”
“That doesn’t make sense,” Ray rubbed his chin, “our clients said this activity was new.”
”The activity may be new, but she isn’t.” Y/N now stood by the vanity, lightly trailing their fingertips across the assorted beauty products, jewelry, and papers strewn across the surface. “She stayed back to be with her husband, at first…but now that he’s gone…”
Ray nodded sympathetically, “she doesn’t know how to move on.”
Y/N opened a small drawer with a sigh, picked up an envelope, and gently pulled out a yellowed piece of paper.
”She wrote it for her husband.” Y/N’s eyes scanned the letter. Before long, a tear fell down their cheek and they folded the letter up before reaching back into the envelope and pulling out a small ring.
Y/N slipped both the letter and the ring back into the envelope, wiped the tear from their cheek, and turned to Ray, handing him the letter.
”Here,” their voice sounded small, like they were taking on the pain of the spirit, “you’ll have to burn it…hopefully she can find him.”
Ray silently followed them out of the room, out of the house, and back into the car. Peter was asking Y/N and Ray a new question every other second, but Ray simply brushed him off as Y/N rested their head on the window, looking drained.
The rest of the drive was quiet, and Ray offered to walk Y/N to their apartment upon arrival. He shot Peter a look, silently letting him know to not follow.
The silence continued the whole way to their door, where Y/N cleared their throat and looked at Ray. “Thank you for walking me.”
”It’s no problem,” Ray smiled and stuffed his hands in his pockets, rocking slightly on his heels, “it really affects you, doesn’t it?”
Y/N sighed, looking down at their hands, suddenly very interested in the rings adorning their fingers.
”Only sometimes,” Y/N sighed again, “when I’m too empathetic for my own good. I just couldn’t imagine…being left behind like that.”
Ray reached out to lightly grasp their upper arm. “Well, hey…at least there’s folks like you here to help those left behind, right?”
”Yeah, I guess you’re right,” Y/N met his gaze, “thanks, Ray, really.”
”Anytime.” Ray gave their arm a light squeeze and dropped his hand to his side.
Neither of them moved to retreat.
”Well…I’ll let you get back to your work.” A slight blush powdered Y/N’s cheeks, and they suddenly felt embarrassment blooming in their chest.
Before the door could close between them, however, Ray stepped forward.
”Wait!” He blurted, feeling an embarrassment of his own creeping in. “Can I…see you again?”
Y/N gave him that warm smile that made him feel like they were the only two people on Earth.
”You know where to find me.”
Ray lingered at their door for a moment after it closed, feeling light, before retreating back to the car.
”Oh, no!” Peter cried out as Ray slid into the driver’s seat. “I know that look! Don’t tell me you’re gonna start bringing them around on a regular basis—I do not need any more spirits airing out my business.”
Egon cut in from the backseat, “I, for one, would enjoy hearing more of what Bill has to say.”
”Well I never want to hear from Bill ever again,” Peter gave Ray a serious look, “Oh, don’t smile, Ray. It’s a serious breach of privacy. You can’t expect me to—“
Ray turned up the radio, drowning out Peter’s wailings.
He drove into the night, the smile never leaving his face.
summary: the farmer drops off a care package for harvey
pairing: stardew harvey x farmer
word count: 855
The light smell of antiseptic enveloped the farmer in a gentle embrace as they pushed through the clinic door. Before moving to the valley, that smell would have made their stomach drop and their heart jump up a tempo. Now, their pulse still sped up, but it surely wasn’t out of fear.
Maru wasn’t the person they were hoping to see smiling at them behind the counter, but the girl was a welcome sight nonetheless.
“Good morning!” Maru gently closed the manila folder in her hands. “What brings you here?”
The farmer lifted the wicker basket hanging in their grasp, “Care package for the doc. Is he in?”
”He’s in his office—you can go on back,” Maru smiled and raised a knowing brow, “you know the way, right?”
”I’ll let you know if I get lost.” The farmer grinned at the girl as they shouldered the swinging door open.
Approaching the back of the clinic, the farmer smelled the coffee brewing before they heard the steady drip of the machine.
”You know it tastes a lot better when you brew it yourself, right?”
Harvey’s gaze turned toward the doorway, and the doctor sat up a bit more straight when he saw who was standing there.
”Hm, well, the machines are taking over, as you know.” Harvey pushed his glasses up the bridge of his nose as he took in the farmer. “How’s your side? Is everything healing okay since we took out your stitches?”
The farmer sat the basket on Harvey’s desk, excitement lighting up their features as they lifted up their shirt, exposing the right side of their abdomen. “Oh, it’s fine. I considered those scar patches you told me about, but I think it looks kind of cool, no?”
Harvey examined the jagged pink scar running from just under their rib cage toward their hip bone. A light pink dusted his cheeks.
”Well, it looks as ‘cool’ as any scar can, I suppose.” Harvey’s mustache twitched in a smile for a split second before he cleared his throat and turned serious.
”You’re very lucky. Any deeper and that cut could have—“
”But it wasn’t.” The farmer dropped the hem of their shirt and busied themselves unfolding the cloth laying on top of the basket. “It was shallow, and I had the best in the valley here to patch me up.”
”We call that survivorship bias in my field.” The blush dusting his cheeks turned crimson at the compliment. “You really need to be more careful.”
The farmer smiled at his concern. “I know,” they spoke softly, “thirty days with no incident—a personal record.”
Harvey’s brow furrowed. “Your accident was well over thirty days ago.”
”Anyway, I brought you a few new products I’m trying out at the farm for you to try.
Harvey knew better than to push, so he turned his attention to the basket.
”Cranberry wine,” the farmer began, holding the green bottle out like a trophy, “I kept the blueberry for myself since you don’t like it as much. Hmm…let’s see. Oh! I’ve got pickled bok choy—I tried a new method this time—truffle oil, some roasted coffee beans, and I also threw in my old French press because you have got to stop relying on that thing.” The farmer gave the old coffee pot a look of distaste.
Harvey felt overwhelmed by just how much thought the farmer put into their gift, and he felt his admiration for them swell.
“I’m going to need the basket back, though. Hot commodity…” The farmer trailed off, finally looking up from said basket only to find Harvey already looking at them.
A wave of insecurity washed over them and they cleared their throat, darting their eyes down to the floor and back to the doctor’s.
Harvey snapped out of the trance he was in. “Th-thank you. You are far too kind.”
”Well, you did save my ass,” the farmer scratched the back of their neck, “I kind of owe you.”
”Oh, never.”
The farmer smiled at him. “It’s the least I could do, anyway.”
”It’s wonderful. Thank you, sincerely.”
Harvey and the farmer held each other in their glance, their eyes betraying a million words left unsaid.
The farmer parted their lips to speak, but was interrupted by the buzz of the intercom letting Harvey know his next patient had arrived.
”I’ll let you get back to it, then.” The farmer smiled nervously. “Sorry for interrupting your work, Harv.”
Harvey returned the smile, standing from his desk. “You could never.”
The two stood, neither moving toward the door.
”Would you like to have dinner with me tomorrow night?” Harvey wondered who asked the question for a moment before realizing that the words came from him.
“I would love that.”
”It’s a….date, then.”
”It’s a date.” The farmer confirmed softly.
The pair moved toward the door, the farmer giving him a small smile and a wave before leaving the clinic.
The sun warmed their already burning cheeks as they headed for the dusty road back to their farm.
I guess a trip to the doctor doesn’t always have to be bad, they thought.
Y/N couldn’t deny that the soft glow of the saloon was awfully inviting.
She placed herself between her siblings—her personal safety blanket—and let the saloon envelop them in its warmth.
Local behavior, she thought. Best to get used to it. She was a local now, after all.
It seemed like nearly every resident of the valley had gathered at the saloon, and the trio was greeted with warm smiles and an enthusiastic “Welcome in!” from behind the bar.
Y/N sent a genuine smile and a wave to Emily behind the bar, whose eyes were as electric as her blue hair. Emily was the first friend Y/N made in the valley all those years ago. She had always been sad that they went from knowing everything about each other to being just another Instagram follower. Y/N took a brave step away from her siblings to go say hi, but was quickly intercepted by Abby. Instead of a heartfelt reunion, Emily found herself on the receiving end of an apologetic shrug as Abby ushered the three to the arcade room and away from the crowded bar.
She immediately recognized Sam and Sebastian and began to wonder if change was outlawed in a place like Pelican Town. The two men huddled around the pool table were just taller versions of the teenagers she was introduced to about a decade ago.
Jess greeted them with all the familiarity in the world, and Y/N started to realize just how entwined her sister was becoming with this town. She thought about Emily, about all of the people in this town she was close to once upon a time, and a wave of guilt crashed down on her.
Before she could think further on how she spent the past month isolating herself from these people that cared for her, Devin clapped her on the shoulder and pushed her gently toward the couches Jess and Abigail had settled into.
“I’ll go get us some drinks. Chill out for a bit, yeah? Get the stick outta your ass.”
He was gone before she could think of a smart retort.
“So how are you liking small town life, Y/N?” Abigail asked around a mouthful of pizza.
Y/N blinked.
Oh, right. Talk. I have to talk.
“It’s actually not that bad,” Y/N shrugged, looking around the room, “the quiet was weird at first, but…I’m starting to really like it.”
Sebastian huffed a laugh, “You don’t have to be nice. We know the valley is boring as hell.”
“Oh, well I wasn’t…” Y/N felt herself shrink, her voice falling into the same pit her stomach just disappeared in.
Sam scoffed, poking Sebastian with his cue for emphasis, “Are we not having fun right now?”
“I’m having a great time,” Jess mumbled around the straw of Abby’s drink.
Y/N shot a tight lipped smile in her sister’s direction, “yup,” she abruptly stood, “I’m gonna go see if Dev needs help with those drinks.”
She could hear Abby calling Sebastian an asshole and the beginnings of a hushed argument as she bee lined it to the bar. Approaching the bar, she could tell that the conversation there was even less appealing. Emily seemed pretty locked in, though. Shane, who she had a gruff introduction to during one of her visits to Marnie’s, didn’t seem as invested. He was too busy staring into his beer like it was about to tell him all the secrets of life.
Devin was on his second drink, his siblings forgotten.
“So she messes around on me, and somehow I’m the one that gets the boot?”
Wow, Y/N thought, do I talk with my hands as much as he does?
Y/N slipped on to the stool flanking her brother, “He telling you his sob story, Em?”
“Oh, yes, it’s quite tragic” Emily nodded solemnly, “can I get you anything?”
“Tequila and diet, please and thank you,” Y/N side-eyed her brother with a grin, “I’m still waiting to hear what you did wrong.”
“Okay, first of all,” Devin held up a finger directly in Y/N’s face, “tequila? You’re insane. Secondly, I’m perfect. I have never done anything wrong in my life.”
“I’m not accepting any criticism from a perfect man on his third dirty shirley.”
Shane barked a laugh, draining the rest of his beer in lieu of adding any other commentary to the conversation.
Emily giggled from across the bar, “okay, kids, let’s play nice.”
“Oh, it’s all love, Em,” Devin stuck out his tongue at Y/N before retreating to the arcade room.
Emily shook her head with a smile as she gingerly sat Y/N’s drink on the counter, “First one’s on me.”
“Oh, you don’t have to—” Y/N started.
“No, no! Don’t worry about it,” Emily beamed at Y/N, “So, how are you doing? It’s been a while.”
“Yeah, too long, actually.” Y/N fidgeted with her glass, “I’ve been good. I think. I’ve been okay. Fine, maybe. You?”
“I’ve been great!” Emily’s smile didn’t falter, “I’ve missed you, though. We should hang out soon!”
Y/N returned Emily’s smile, “Yeah, I missed you too. Not a lot of people in the city I could get hoopy-doopy with.”
“Same here—Haley says I’m weird.”
“You are weird,” Shane grumbled.
Y/N just laughed, “Yeah, I’m sure she does. Probably needs her chakras realigned.”
“That’s what I’ve been saying,” Emily giggled, “Abigail’s cool, though. You should tell her your theory on aliens.”
“Which on—”
“Yo! Y/N/N!” Devin cut her off, beckoning her to the arcade room.
“I should get back to work,” Emily threw her arms around Y/N from across the bar, “I’m so happy you’re here.”