W E L C O M E to my mindscape!
âł she/her + eighteen
âł joe keery devotee
âł requests always open
M A S T E R L I S T
steve harrington
âł evil spy
âł after hours

JBB: An Artblog!
YOU ARE THE REASON

Discoholic đȘ©
Game of Thrones Daily
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me

Love Begins

â

titsay
hello vonnie

Kaledo Art
No title available
art blog(derogatory)
ojovivo
Monterey Bay Aquarium
No title available

Product Placement
styofa doing anything
NASA
No title available

shark vs the universe
seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Germany
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom

seen from TĂŒrkiye

seen from Netherlands
seen from Germany
seen from France

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Netherlands

seen from Brazil

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Germany

seen from Spain
seen from Germany

seen from Brazil

seen from France
seen from Brazil
@dustymerlin
W E L C O M E to my mindscape!
âł she/her + eighteen
âł joe keery devotee
âł requests always open
M A S T E R L I S T
steve harrington
âł evil spy
âł after hours
WE MISS UUU WHERED U GO
aww i missed you too! i pinky promise i havenât forgotten about youuuu! iâve just been so slammed with college things and i canât believe my first year is almost over! Donât worry, i will def be picking up writing more over the summer, just give me one more month lolll đ«¶
AFTER HOURS || s.h.
PAIRING: Steve Harrington x fem!reader
SUMMARY: Where a late-night closing shift turns into a nightmare, Billy Hargrove turns into more than just an annoying coworker, and Steve sweeps in to save the day.
WHAT TO EXPECT: violence, flayed Billy Hargrove, choking/strangulation, panic/anxiety, hurt/comfort, mention of cuts, fluff, not cannon, use of Y/n
A/N: yay, third post! thank you for all the support! if you saw this posted yesterday - no, you didnât. i had a few more edits to make, so here is the finished version lol! side note - i wish my college offered a BA in fanfiction.
WORD COUNT: 4.0k (wowza! sorry)
âHey, Billy,â you glanced over your shoulder to the blond-headed boy rummaging through the supplies closet. Notes written haphazardly were scribbled on a legal pad on the check in desk, passive aggressively reminding all employees to search the lockers for forgotten food or else weâd get rats. âDid you check the menâs locker room for food? I donât want Darrell to get mad at us.â
Billyâs frantic search for a mop skidded to a halt as he turned around slowly to look at you directly in the eyes. His perfectly curled mullet clung to his sweat-drenched and pale skin. You didnât want to say anything to your coworkers, but Billy had been looking sickly for the past couple of days. It surprised you that he still showed up to work. Dark and angry veins stretched below the surface of his skin and a feverish sheen clung to him, even in the air-conditioned break room. His eyes were the worst part, though. They were glassy and unfocused, pupils blown wide like heâd been staring straight through your soul, like he knew you were already insignificant to him.Â
His jaw kept tightening and unclenching, the muscles ticking as if he was grinding his teeth down to nothing. One hand flexed at his side, fingers twitching like they didnât quite obey his mind anymore. You watched as a faint tremor ran through him, like he was trying to hold himself back.
Your instincts were screaming when nothing was technically wrong. Billy scared the shit out of you when he looked normal, even more so when he glared at you like you were his next prey. Your best guesses were a bad case of the cold, sun poisoning, or maybe even a messy breakup.Â
Despite your judgemental assumptions, part of you hoped your coworker and classmate was all right. âBilly? Are you okay?â You ask, watching his broad back muscles fill the red lifeguard longsleeve. You werenât sure if your eyes were playing tricks on you, but it looked like he had grown a few inches taller. Or maybe it was just your fear of him growing. âI have some advil in the back if you need something,â your voice suddenly small and meek.
He slammed the supply closet door with a thwack and stomped out of the check in office, completely ignoring your olive branch. âIâll check the lockers after I shower,â he said, voice flat with a tinge of aggression.
You told yourself it was nothing, just another weird mood swing of his to shove down and ignore. Youâre exhausted, and overthinking it wouldnât make the double shift any shorter. Steve was coming to pick you up soon, and the thought of him waiting outside grounded you more than anything else. He would be leaning against his signature red BMW, his jean-clad legs crossed, hands tucked in his front pockets, and an easy smile on his face as he saw you walking up. Time really couldnât move any slower as you banished the thought and focused on finishing up.
You wiped down counters, straightened the pool chairs, and put the money from the snack bar in the safe. Your body ached in that dull, heavy way that only came after too many hours on your feet.Â
The mop bucket sloshed quietly as you pushed it across the tile when you heard glass shatter then a gnarly crash echoing from down the hallway. The sound made your heart drop because it didnât sound like an accident. It sounded like something being thrown.
The crash came louder this time. It was the sound of something slamming into tile with bone-jarring force, causing the lockers to shudder in their frames. The echo ricocheted down again, sharp enough to make your ears ring, followed by the wet, hollow thud of something heavy hitting the ground.
Voices started up, high-pitched and panicked, which made you panic even more. No one was supposed to be here, it was after hours. It sure didnât sound like kids trying to trespass and jump in the pool.Â
You heard shouting, overlapped and frantic, the words blurred together. Someone was crying, another yelled the number âelevenâ, and then the distinct sound of choking. Your chest tightened and adrenaline flooded your veins so fast it made you dizzy. Your heart pounded, each beat loud in your ears as fear snapped your body awake, every nerve on edge. The rational part of your brain tells you this canât be real, but your instincts donât care.Â
You drop the mop as the lights flicker. It clatters against the tile, the sound exploding in the sudden quiet between screams. Your pulse hammers and your hands shake, breath coming quick and shallow as you brace yourself for something terrible.
You donât even have it in you to meekly peek through the crack in the door. Instead, you shoved it open completely until it slammed against the wall. The menâs locker room assaulted you all at once as you took in the sharp tang of metal and sweat, the echo of shouting bouncing off concrete walls. Your Reeboks skidded slightly on the tile as you stumbled inside, heart slamming against your ribs.
The noise was coming from the weight room. You turned the corner and froze.
Billy had a girl lifted clear off the ground, one massive hand wrapped around her throat. Sheâs brown-haired, small, her legs kicking uselessly a feet above the floor. His arm was locked straight like she weighed nothing at all.
In the corner, four kids were huddled together, backs pressed to the wall, eyes wide and shining with terror. You didnât even get a good look at them, too focused on the girl Billy was choking. You didnât know Billy was capable of this. But then again, this didnât look like Billy. His shoulders were hunched, spine curved in a way that looked painfully unnatural. The muscles in his back rippled and twitched beneath his skin like something was moving underneath it. The black veins you noticed from before were even more pronounced and now covered his whole body. He wasnât even yelling or speaking, he just looked so focused and sure of his actions.
The girlâs eyes flicked to you, wild with fear, then her eyes rolled back into her head. Something in you snapped and you didnât think or hesitate. You grabbed the heaviest weight you could lift, fingers slipping on cold metal, and swung with everything you have.
The impact was brutal. The weight connected with the side of his head in a sickening crunch, the sound echoing through the room as Billy staggered forward, grip finally loosening. The girl collapsed to the floor in a heap, gasping and coughing.
Billy began to rise. You lifted the weight over your head, muscles screaming as adrenaline carried you. You swung again, desperate and reckless, determined to finish it before he could get back up. But he caught it in his palm, making your heart stutter. His hand clamped around the metal bar of the weight like it was nothing. No strain or hesitation was in his face. The impact didnât even make him flinch.Â
Slowly, Billy straightened to his full height, still gripping the weight, his gaze never leaving yours. His eyes were dark, pupils now blown wide until there was barely any color left, like something was staring out from behind them. He threw the weight aside, crashing into the rack with a deafening clang as it skidded across the floor, but Billy didnât look away. His attention was locked on you, sharp and suffocating like you're pinned under it.Â
A slow smile pulled at his mouth. This wasnât the smile he gave the older women who lounged near his tower. There was no charm or arrogance in it, just hunger.
âYou really shouldnât have done that,â he said softly, not matching the weight of the situation. He stalked you like prey. Each step was deliberate and unhurried. âYou think youâre brave for doing that? You think that was enough, as if you could hurt me?â He talks as he moves, words slicing into you, calm and cruel. You felt weak under his scrutiny.Â
You retreat without realizing it, feet scurrying backward across the floor, heart hammering so hard it hurts. The brick pressed into your spine all too soon, stealing the last of your space from him. Billy stopped inches from you. He leaned in just enough that you could feel his breath, hot and uneven against your cheek. Like he could smell the fear radiating off you, he clamped a hand over your throat and began to drag you up the wall. Your back scraped against the brick as he lifted you, toes barely brushing the floor. The pressure around your throat tightened, crushing and merciless. His grip was iron and you choked on a broken sob as instinct took over.
You clawed at his hand. Your nails scraped uselessly against his skin, fingers slipping as panic made you clumsy. You tried to pull his wrist away, try to kick, try anything, but he didnât even react. It was like fighting a wall. Tears blurred your vision.Â
âPleaseââ The word barely made it out, strangled and weak, swallowed by the crushing force around your throat. Your lungs burned, desperate for air that wouldnât come. Each breath grew shorter and thinner, until all you could hear was the roaring of blood in your ears. Black spots crept in at the edges of your vision, closing in no matter how hard you fought them back.
You thought of your boyfriend. You thought of Steve waiting outside right now, leaning against his car, checking his watch, wondering why youâre taking so long. You imagined the crease between his brows when he got worried, the way he always asked if youâre okay, slinging an arm around your shoulders.
You shouldâve been out there by now. Your hands weakened, scratches slowing, your heart stuttered as your body started to give up on you. The room tilted. Billyâs face blurred, twisting into something inhuman as his expression read satisfied.
Your heartbeat slowed. The last thing you hear, cutting through the ringing in your ears like a lifeline, was Steveâs voice.
âHey, dickhead, get your hands off of my girl!â
You hit the floor hard, crumpling where Billy dropped you, your body folding in on itself as air tore back into your lungs in painful, ragged gasps. Your vision swam, edges blurring, brick and fluorescent light smearing together as you curled instinctively, hands still clawing at your own throat. You could still feel his hands around it.
You heard the sound of fists connecting with flesh over and over again. You blinked, trying to focus, and through the haze you saw Steve, wild and furious, swinging with everything he had. He didnât hesitate or hold back. Every hit was fueled by pure panic and rage, like the sight of Billyâs hands on you flipped some irreversible switch.
You watched from the floor, dazed, as Steve beat Billy to a pulp, only He only stopped when something Billy lifted off the ground. JustâŠrose. Your breath caught. Your head swam harder, nausea rolling through you as your brain scrambled for logic. This couldnât be real. You had to be completely out of it. Oxygen deprivation, shock, or something.
The brown-haired girl, the one Billy had been choking, stood now, eyes blazing, her face twisted in fury as her hands shook in the air. She was screaming, raw and animal, and Billy hung there like a broken marionette, suspended by nothing at all.
God, you mustâve been so out of it.
The scream crescendoed, and with a violent flick of her hands, Billy was hurled sideways with impossible force. He slammed through the wall like it was made of paper, bricks exploding outward as his body disappeared into the darkness beyond.
Silence crashed down around you. Your ears rang. Your head lolled back against the floor, vision still hazy, chest aching with every breath.
Steve was suddenly right in front of you. He dropped behind you and placed you in between his legs, your back pressed against his heaving chest. âHey,â he whispered immediately, voice low and shaking, like he was holding himself together just for you. âHey, Iâve got you. Iâve got you, okay?â
He pulled his arms firmly around your torso, one hand fidgeting with the strap of your lifeguard swimsuit. You could feel his heart racing behind your back, fast and frantic, like it was still catching up to everything that had happened. âYouâre safe,â he murmured, over and over, pressing his chin gently into your shoulder. âYouâre so safe. Iâm right here. Iâm not going anywhere.â His grip tightened just a little, protective rather than panicked. âI shouldâve been here sooner,â he whispered, words thick with guilt. âIâm so sorry. I swearâŠI swear I wonât let Billy near you ever again. Wonât let him even think about you.â
âSteveâŠâ you barely manage to whisper, feeling your throat close up all over again. âW-what just happened?â
âShh, hey, itâs okay. You donât have to say anything.â Steve rocked you in his arms, knowing that the gentle motion lulled you. He kissed the top of your head, lips lingering in your hair. âDonât worry about it, just breathe with me,â he said softly. âThatâs it, good girl. Slow. Youâre doing so good.â
âThank you,â you wheeze, âfor saving me.â
He chuckled, already knowing you were going to make a quick recovery with that fight still in you. âYou were so brave,â he whispered. âYou hear me?â You nod, finally slumping all of your dead weight into him. âSo so brave. My brave girl.âÂ
Steve adjusted his grip on you automatically when footsteps approached, tightening his hold just enough to keep you steady without jostling your breathing. He didnât look away from you at first, eyes scanning your face like he was memorizing proof that you were still here and all right.
He looked up to see the kids were hovering a few feet away. Lucas, Will, Mike, Max, and the girl that just single-handedly launched flayed Billy through the wall. However, they looked small now. Shell-shocked and covered in grime, sweat, and fear. Steve exhaled sharply.
âYou little shits okay?â he asked, voice rough.
They nodded. Hesitant. Max crossed her arms as a self defense mechanism, like didnât just watch her stepbrother get beat up. Part of her believed he deserved it in away, the other found him redeemable.
 Willâs hands were still shaking and Lucas swallowed hard before answering. âYeah,â Lucas said. âI think so.â
Steve let out a breath he had been holding for some time now, his shoulders loosened just a fraction. âGood,â he said, then immediately scowled. âBecause that was insane. Absolutely crazy. All of you couldâve been lying here dead.â
âBut, ElâEl, sheââ Mike started to argue with the older boy until he cut the kid off.
âEl this, El that,â Steve emphasized his words to get his message across. âAs the only fully conscious and responsible adult here, it wouldâve been my fault if something went south. Consider yourselves lucky I came to pick up my girlfriend.â
Steve looked down to you, nearly passed out in his arms. Max bristled. âWe didnât have a choice.â
Steve huffed a humorless laugh. âYeah? BillyâŠsomethingâs wrong with him.â
His jaw tightened. âDoesnât mean you go sneaking into places like this. You donât face off with psychopaths on your own. You donâtââ He stopped himself, rubbing a hand over his face. âGod. You donât do this without backup.â
El stepped forward, eyes flicking to you. âHe was going to kill her.â
Steve met her gaze, something serious and unflinching passing between them.
âI know,â he said quietly.
For a moment, the room was still. Then he straightened, squaring his shoulders. âBut you fought him,â he added, grudging respect threading through his tone. âYou didnât run. You protected each other.â Lucas nodded once. Will looked relieved. Max lifted her chin just a little. âThat matters,â Steve said. âThat countsâŠfor now.â Steve stood with you against his chest, hiking you higher into his hold, already turning towards the makeshift exit in the bricks. âBut next time,â he added over his shoulder, âthrow him out the door or something. This is going to be a bitch to explain.â
A bea passed. âDeal,â Max said.
Steve snorted. âYeah. Weâll see. Câmon,â Steve said, already moving. âLetâs go before Billy decides to come back for round two.â
He adjusted his grip on you and stepped through the rubble without hesitation, Nikes crunching over debris as he carried you straight through what used to be a brick wall. Warm summer night air rushed in and behind him, the kids followed, adrenaline finally bleeding into chatter.
âDid you see how far she threw him?â Lucas said, awe creeping into his voice.
âHe went through the goddamn wall,â Max added, slinging an arm around Elâs shoulders. âLike, through it.â
Will let out a shaky laugh. âThat was kind of awesome.â
Steve shot them a look over his shoulder. âHey! Heyâkeep it down.â They quieted instantly. âAs far as anyone knows,â Steve continued, nodding toward the gaping hole, âthis was a structural failure. Old building. Bad foundation. Boom! Tragic, but not Miss Supernatural over here.â
Max snorted. âSure.â
Steve didnât slow. âIâm serious. Pool management asks? Earthquake. Gas leak. Anything but a telekinetic ten year old. Y/n is not getting in trouble for this.â
âWeâre not ten!â The kids complained in unison.
You tried to breathe in, but it came out as a cough instead, sharp and rattling as you felt it through your burning chest.Â
âHey, hey,â he said, breaking into a jog, arms tightening instinctively around you. âEasy. Iâve got you. Just hang on.â
The parking lot lights blurred as he moved faster, the night cool against your overheated skin. He got to his car, yanked the door open, and didnât even think about putting you down.
âAlright,â he said, turning back to the kids. âGo. Get home. Lock your doors and stay out of trouble. Call me if you need to.â
El lingered, watching you closely. Steve nodded at her, an understanding passing through them. âThank you.â
She nodded once, satisfied, and followed the others to another side of the parking lot where their discarded bikes were..
Steve slid into the driverâs seat and shut the door, finally letting out a breath, but he still didnât move you. Instead, he shifted so you were cradled in his lap, one arm solid around your back, the other braced protectively across your waist.
He rested his forehead briefly against yours, grounding himself as much as you.
âNot letting you go yet,â he muttered. âYouâre stuck with me for a minute.â The next twenty minutes to his house, he kept you in his lap, driving with one hand as you slowly but surely recovered.
+
You were cocooned in Steveâs bed, swallowed by soft navy sheets and one of his old Hawkins High gym t-shirts that you drowned in. His pajama pants were rolled around your hips, warm and familiar, smelling faintly like detergent and his expensive cologne.
Heâd carried you inside earlier despite your protests. âI can walk, Steve,â youâd said, voice hoarse.
âI know,â heâd replied, already tightening his hold. âHumor me.â
Heâd hovered the entire time you showered, sitting on the closed toilet lid, head in his hands and back hunched over. You could hear his cautious and worried breathing, like a very good boyfriend trying not to unravel in front of you.
Now you lay on your back, staring at the fan circling on the ceiling as he sat beside you on the mattress, leaning over you just slightly.
âCold,â he warned softly, before the cream touched your skin. You hissed anyway. âIâm sorry,â he said immediately, even though his hands were impossibly gentle. He dabbed carefully along the bruises blooming dark against your throat, jaw tight as he worked. His touch was reverent, like he was afraid you might break if he pressed too hard.
He didnât say much, but something was brewing deep down. When he finished your neck, he moved to the small cuts along your hairline, cleaning them with painstaking care. You flinched once, and he froze instantly.
âHey,â he murmured. âTell me if it hurts. I mean it.â
âItâs okay,â you said. âI promise.â
He didnât look convinced. âOkay,â he said anyway, voice low. âCan you flip on your stomach for me, pretty girl?â Steve helped you roll over carefully, one hand braced at your hip, the other at your shoulder. You settled onto your stomach, cheek pressed into his pillow. âJust for a second,â he said, almost apologetically.
With his fingertips, Steve gently dragged his shirt up along your spine, exposing your mottled back to him. The scrapes there were angry and red, tracking where the brick had bitten into your skin. Steve inhaled sharply through his nose when he saw them.
You felt the way his hands hesitated, the way something in him twisted at the sight. âSteve,â your voice firm. âJ-just get it over with.â
âI shouldâveââ he started, then stopped himself. Instead, he dipped the cloth again and began to clean the scrapes, careful and methodical. You winced despite yourself, fingers curling into his sheets like a vice. âI know,â he whispered, immediately. âI know. Iâm sorry, baby.â
âItâs not you,â you said, muffled into the pillow.
âI know,â he repeated, like he was trying to convince himself.
Each time you flinched, his jaw tightened. It clearly and visibly hurt him to be the one causing you even the smallest bit of pain, even when he was helping.
When Steve finished, he gingerly pulled his shirt back down and caressed your ruddy cheek with his knuckles.
âOkay,â he said quietly. âAll done.â
He didnât move away right away and neither did you.
The room was quiet, safe, and for the first time all night, you didnât feel threatened.
You shifted closer, the sheets rustling softly as you climbed right into his space, settling on top of him like it was the most natural thing in the world. Steve adjusted instantly, one arm coming around the small of your back, where the cuts didnât reach. The other slid up to cradle your head against his chest.
His heartbeat was steady and strong now. You felt it rise and fall beneath your cheek, anchoring you there. He ran his fingers through your hair slowly, absentmindedly, the way he always did when he wanted you to sleep. Your head lifted and fell with his breathing, the motion soothing in a way you hadnât realized you needed.
âCall me crazy,â you murmured, voice soft and tired, âbut⊠did that girl in the sauna with the brown hair start levitating?â
Steveâs fingers stilled for half a second. Then they resumed, gentle and rhythmic, like you didnât just stump him. He let out a quiet huff, a small, almost fond chuckle. âYeah,â he said lightly. âI think you scared yourself pretty good back there.â
You tilted your head just enough to hear him better. âI mean, yeah, but I thought I saw her and Billyâs feet just above the ground.â
âYou lost a lot of oxygen,â he continued, tone easy, reasonable. âAdrenaline, shock, all that stuff messes with you. People see weird things.â His hand smoothed over your hair again, slower now.Â
He was probably right. Everything he was saying was true. You most likely just started hallucinating from the lack of oxygen. Plus, that would literally be impossible. âYeah, okay.â
You hummed softly, eyelids heavy. âGet some rest,â Steve murmured, thumb tracing a slow line along your scalp. âWeâll talk about it in the morning. Right now you just need to sleep.â He pressed a gentle kiss to the top of your head, voice dropping even lower. âIâve got you. Iâm not going anywhere.â
And with the steady rise and fall of his chest beneath you, and his hand still moving through your hair, you finally rested after the fever dream of whatever happened after hours.
ur fics r SOO cute !!!! i can't wait to read more xxxx
aww thank you, that means so much to me! i have two more fics coming out soon(ish). can't wait to share! đ
EVIL SPY || s.h.
PAIRING: Steve Harrington x fem!reader
SUMMARY: Where Steve Harrington and Dustin Henderson mistake you for an evil Russian spy at Starcourt Mall, a botched surveillance mission spirals into flirtation, and an unexpected date with a boy in a sailor uniform.
WHAT TO EXPECT: fluff, flirting, mild suggestive themes, mild swearing, angst if you squint, use of Y/n
A/N: #first post, this is so hype!! Please feel free to send in requests and thank you so so much for reading!!Â
WORD COUNT: 2.4k
âTarget acquired," Dustin Henderson deadpanned, fingers gripping his binoculars as he crouched behind a potted plant with his partner in crime, Steve Harrington. The duo had been searching Starcourt Mall endlessly during Steveâs fifteen minute break from scooping ice cream into the sticky fingers of Erica Sinclair and her minions.
âWhere?â Steve perked up immediately, boredom evaporating in a flash as he straightened from where heâd been lounging on the cool tiles. The mall had promised everyone in Hawkins an air-conditioned escape from Indianaâs grueling summer sun. It was teeming with bodies constantly in motion and practically buzzing with the display neon lights. Classic pop songs spilled from storefronts, the sugary smell of fresh waffle cones from Scoops Ahoy, and constant chatter and laughter filled the air. Teens roamed the mall in packs, scouting out their crushes or shopping for items to add to their summer wardrobe.Â
Dustin adjusted the focus on the lenses, âTen oâclock. Sam Goodyâs.â
âGive me that,â Steve ripped the pair of binoculars out of the younger boyâs hands. He peered into ocular lenses, revealing a girl moving briskly along the first-floor walkway. Your stride was purposeful, shoulders pushed back and squared like you had some secret business to attend to and no intention of being slowed down by any of the shenanigans in the mall. The aura of determination in your walk made people step out of your path and look behind them. A black wrap sweater clings to your form along with a black leotard thatâs hiked up over your hipbones. Sheer black tights stretch down your legs and a small duffel bag was slung securely over your shoulder. Dark sunglasses hid your eyes completely, giving nothing away to Steve other than a set, unreadable expression. Even with your gaze hidden, Steve couldnât look away. Your unspoken confidence throttled him from all the way across the mall, pulling his attention in despite every logical warning screaming in his head. Steve shook his head, luscious hair shaking with his movements. He couldnât fall in love with the enemy. âDuffel bag, dark shades, spy-looking outfit. She checks off all the boxes,â he sighed, slowly turning to face Dustin.
âEvil Russian,â the pair concluded simultaneously, soon scrambling from their crouched positions to follow their lead.
You took the escalator up to the second floor, eyes dropping briefly to your manicured nails as the steps carried you upward, checking the neatness out of habit before lifting your gaze to your surroundings. Oddly, no one stood too close to you. Usually, the escalator was so packed that people were basically back to back as they waited to reach the second floor. Instead, people glanced at you in speculation before they looked away just as fast, giving you a wide berth like you might bite.Â
Suppressing a sigh, you shift the strap of your duffel bag higher on your shoulder. It occurred to you that maybe you shouldnât have gone with the all-black outfit. The bright pink and blue set screamed approachable instead of mysterious and possibly dangerous probably wouldâve been a better move for this highly judgmental crowd. It was no use now as it was sitting in the wash back at home. Dressed like this, you looked like a ninja or something, and judging by the looks youâre getting, the idea isnât as funny to everyone else as it is to you.Â
âSlow down!â Dustin warned as he trailed behind Steve who was pushing through the crowd.
âWeâre losinâ her,â Steve responded, not looking back. His focus was directly on your ass in that leotard your backâŠjust your back.Â
The curly-haired boy catches up to his taller counterpart and follows his gaze directly to your swaying hips. Dustin groaned, slapping him with the back of his hand. âFocus, Steve. This girl is a national enemy! Besides, youâre getting too close.â Steve barely acknowledged Dustinâs comment and continued to sidestep and weave through the families, teens, and couples.
His lack of spacial awareness caused him to shoulder check a mall-goer in the process. âWatch it, dickwad!â The boy shouted with his arms raised, but Steve barely acknowledged him too.Â
The loud comment made you stop in your tracks, not being able to help yourself in avoiding mall drama. That and the tingling feeling on the back of your neck like someone was following you. You glanced over your shoulder and with two fingers, tipped your sunglasses down the bridge of your nose just enough to peek out over the rims. Eyes sharp as you assessed the surroundings, landing directly on a boy dressed in a red and blue sailorâs outfit. He was standing up against a stone pillar like he had put himself in timeout. Weirdo, you thought.
Right beside him, a boy wearing a yellow and green camp hat fumbled with the telephone, speaking robotically and trying his best to avoid eye contact with you. Weirdo, you thought again.Â
Steve froze as your gaze swept over his general area, heart slamming into his ribs. He panicked, realizing he was just staring at the pillar and quickly moved to look at shoes being displayed through the store window. Steve isnât used to feeling like this over a girl. Heâs faced interdimensional monsters and stared death in the face more times than he could count, and somehow barely managed to keep his wits about him through most of it. Girls were never a problem for him until now. It was definitely the stupid Scoops Ahoy hat that flattened his hair more than he would like it too. His coworker, Robinâs, voice rang through his ears: âCompany policy is such a drag.â Flirting always came easy to Steve, in fact, he barely had to think about it. But youâve seemed to reduce him to a mess of frayed nerves, his stomach doing flips as he gets closer and closer to you. He was secretly hoping that the lead was wrong and you werenât really an evil Russian.Â
You turned a corner sharply, not knowing the instigators were on your tail until Steveâs hand shot out, lightly yet firmly grabbing your wrist. You whipped around, startled, placing the sunglasses on the top of your head to get a clear scan of the sailor that still held your wrist in his large hand.Â
âWhat are you doing?â you ask slowly, voice raising an octave, yanking your hand away.
Steve was suddenly paralyzed, mouth opening and closing like a fish. He shifted on his feet, raking a hand through his hair as if that could somehow buy him some more time. It didnât. He planted his feet on the ground and placed his hands on his hips, trying to exude confidence. Despite this, the words refused to form, stuttering out in awkward, brown bursts. âIâI mean, waitâuhâŠâ
Your brows furrowed in confusion, eyes narrowing and flicking to the nerdy kid beside him. âLook, I gotta go, so if you have something to tell me, do it quickly.â You cross your arms against your chest and pop your hip expectantly. The sailorâs gaze drops to your cleavage in the tight leotard and you roll your eyes, already turning around. âUnbelievable.âÂ
âWait, wait! We know who you are,â the young boyâs voice stops you in your tracks once more and you slowly turn around again. âYouâre a Russian spy.â The curly-haired boy stands triumphantly like he just cracked a code heâs been trying to solve for weeks. His lips pulled back revealing a toothless grin.
âDonât listen to him, heâs had too much ice cream,â Steve awkwardly chuckled, a mix of horror and embarrassment flashed across his beet-red face. He grabbed Dustin by the collar of his vest and shoved the boy behind him, shaking his head in disbelief. âKids these days, am I right?â
You blinked at the eccentric pair, one eyebrow raised as the absurdity of the situation pressed in. A giggle started to rise through your chest, quickly hiding it behind your hand as their smiles from their faces faded and they grew antsy by the second. They looked at each other, realization dawning on their features.
Steve and Dustin knew they messed up big time.
âYou got me good!â You pouted with doe eyes, playing along with their act. Stepping closer to the two, you leaned in and tilted your head as if you were speaking to two puppies. âNext time try and be a little more stealth.âÂ
Just as you were about to step toward the studio doors of the jazzercise class, a familiar feminine voice called out, sharp and breathless. âHey, Y/n!â Your friend, Tina, came rushing up to you, dressed in a blue and green jazzercise outfit. Her sneakers and scrunched socks resembled yours. Her eyes were wide and her cheeks flushed from running from her parked car to the second floor. Without hesitation, she grabbed your other wrist and started tugging you toward the studio. âI thought you said youâd save us a spot near the front.â Seeing that your feet were rooted in the red carpet of the mall, Tina looked you up and down. âDamn, I didnât realize a funeral was happening in todayâs class. Donât you look like a ball of sunshine!â Her sarcasm bled through, but that was what you loved about her. She barely looked at the two boys before pulling you further into the upbeat music.
âBetter luck finding your evil Russian,â you call out. The younger boy placed a hand on the sailorâs shoulder, prompting him to walk away.
Steveâs eyes widened, panic and longing mixing in equal measure. He had the feeling he was letting an opportunity slip. Lunging forward and ignoring Dustinâs pleads, he caught your wrist once more, holding you steady against your friendâs pull. âWait, just hold on for a second.â His grip was gentle but firm.
Tina whipped her head around, her gaze landing on your wrist in his hand. âScram, sailor boy! Weâve got a class to attend.âÂ
âW-wait, Tina, can you just save me a spot? Iâll be right there,â you said, not taking your eyes off the boy who still held your wrist. Tina sighed, giving you a bored look and heading into the class.
âLook, Iâmââ Dustin kicked Steveâs shin lightly, âWe are really sorry about the mixup. This one came back from his âsmart peopleâ camp and hasnât stopped with the conspiracy theories.â Steve patted the boyâs head, taking the bill of his hat and using it to steer Dustin away while he chatted you up. He groaned at this and dragged his feet back to Scoops Ahoy. âIâm Steve Harrington, by the way.â He puffed his chest out but his voice didnât fully convey his confidence.Â
You tilted your head, a slow smile spreading as it dawned on you that behind the goofy costume and sailor hat, he was cute. Really cute. Steve stood there, looking nervous and earnest all at once, still holding your wrist, which made your insides do a silly flip. âY/n L/n,â you said before you could overthink it. Now you were the one getting all nervous.
âHey, I know this might be weird, but can I take you out on a date?â Steve asked, his whiskey colored eyes never straying from yours. His head drooped and his hair flopped with it as he laughed inwardly, scrubbing a palm over his cheek. âI promise I clean up nice.â
âAll right, everyone, listen up!â You heard the instructor yell, most likely setting up his boom box at the front of the studio. Where you were supposed to be right now with Tina. Wham! starts blasting from the speakers, signaling the start of the warmup. âWho is ready to sweat?â
Your brows furrowed, wanting to stay with Steve and also wanting to go back into class. âLook, Iâll meet you here after your class is done and maybe we can catch a movie or something. Super chill,â Steve said calmly even though he was the exact opposite of that. âTheyâre playing Back to the Future.â
You nodded, blushing lightly. âYeah, yeah, Iâll be there.â
Steve perked up, almost surprised you had said yes. He couldnât wait to get back at Robin for making that stupid chart, because he just earned a point for âYou Ruleâ.
âReally? IâI mean, yeah totally,â Steve mentally smacked some sense into him and combed his fingers through his voluminous waves. âIâll pick you up here when youâre done.â
Before either of you could revel in the moment any longer, Tina tugged your arm in the direction of the class, practically dragging you toward the studio doors. âCome on, seriously! Youâre going to miss the warmup, Y/n!â
You let her drag you this time, glancing back at Steve to see him staring at you with his mouth agape and eyes wide. His hands rested on his hips as he walked backwards, never taking his eyes off of you.Â
âYeah, ladies, warm it up. Bring it down to your hips and start feeling that burn down in the loins, right?âÂ
âUgh, I just love this guy, heâs so funny!â Tina giggled as the both of you rolled your hips, following the instructor.
âCome on, ladies, show me what you got!âÂ
Both of you follow along, letting the music guide you, muscles loosening as your body falls into the rhythm. You watch yourself in the mirror, trying your hardest to focus, but you catch a glimpse of the sailor boy still outside with his jaw practically on the floor.Â
Steve tells himself that he shouldnât be watching, he just met you for godsakes. A flicker of shame twists in his chest as he realizes heâs so obviously ogling you, until you look over your shoulder. Your hips sway easily with the upbeat music as your gaze locks on his through the glass. You smirk, but itâs playful, and bite back a laugh when you see the way he stiffens, like heâs been caught with his hand in the cookie jar. Steve looks away for half a second, scrubbing a hand over his face again, then glances back again anyway. Apparently self-control was not one of his strengths today. When your eyes meet his once more, something warm and fuzzy bubbles in his chest.Â
Steve had a good feeling about you, and though he said that about a lot of girls in his past, he meant it this time.Â
A firm slap landed on his back, startling Steve from the jazzercise-induced trance he was put in. âI canât believe you pulled her, man,â Dustin said. âIn a sailor costume at that.â
Steve did a double take when he saw Dustin staring at the women in the class, mouth also agape. âYeah, all right, pal. Wrap it up.â Steve pushed Dustin back toward Scoops Ahoy, as if he was any better. Internally, Steve was trying not to act giddy about his date with you later today.