summary: âI think weâre all going to have do some pretty terrible things,â Eddie said quietly. His hand came to wrap in Richieâs shirt, trying to burn out the violent grip of his fatherâs from earlier. âNone of us have a choice in anything anymore. Whatever happened at Gretaâs tonight-â Eddieâs voice broke and he felt Richie press a kiss into his hair. âThere isnât a good and a bad anymore. Thereâs just die or donât.â
[or: after the gruesome murder of his younger brother, Bill Denbrough is determined to bring about the end of the string of crimes in Derry no matter the cost. As stories unwind and fall apart, thereâs only more questions as everybodyâs lives hang in the balance.]
chapter count: 14/21
chapter warnings: graphic depictions of violence, mentions of past rape, mentions of past character death, implications of sexual situations
[Prologue] [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] [11] [12] [13] [Read Full Story on AO3] [Playlist]
Eddie Kaspbrak had just finished hanging the jacket up in his locker before it was slamming shut, nearly crushing his fingers and causing him to let out a small yelp. Standing behind where his open locker door had once been, was the tiny but fierce figure of Patricia Blum. She smiled happily up at him, as though she hadnât just almost done damage to his hand.
âCome on, Kaspbrak,â Patty said cheerfully, grabbing his hand and trying to tug him down the halls. âWe have places to go and answers to find. Whatever class you have can wait.â
Eddie let out a short, surprised noise as he stumbled under Pattyâs surprising amount of force. âWhat? Where are we going? Is Richie-â
âOh, Richie isnât coming,â Patty said happily, walking quickly through the halls. Eddieâs heart jumped slightly, looking around the group of students. The whispers would no doubt to kicking to a start, Eddie being enough of a subject to school gossip ever since he started dating Richie. Heâd wondered, for short moments, if it the reactions of the public could be anything similar to that of when Zachary Denbrough began dating Sharon. Eddie had started to feel as though he couldnât walk, couldnât breath, around his classmates without attracting attention. He supposed he should have expected that opening to his relationship with Richie Tozier would have been hot information, even with the amount of terrible things happening in Derry.
âOh, IâŠâ Eddie stalled for a moment, frowning and attempting to slow his steps behind Patty. âI should, I should probably go to class. I missed most of the last few weeks and I really shouldnât skip out on anything else-â
Patty turned around and raise her eyebrows. âEddie. Do you want to go to class?â
âNo,â Eddie replied honestly without any hesitation. Nobody would want to go to a class where everybody- including your teachers- spent the entire time staring at you and whispering. âBut-â
âCome on!â Patty grabbed at Eddie once more, yanking him through the halls fast enough that the heads of their classmates all whipped towards them. Eddie winced at the thoughts of all the rumors that would be following them out of the building.
Patty lead Eddie quickly through the cluster of student cars in the parking lot, then waited as a car pulled up to them. Stan Uris leaned out the driversâ seat window and gave him an unimpressed look. âAlright. Get in.â
Eddie shook his head slightly, head spinning through a loop. âI⊠I thought you didnât trust me.â
Stan sighed. âBeverly says you canât be trusted⊠Which basically makes you the only person I find trustworthy about now.â
xxx
Richie pressed his yellow highlighter against the textbook and held it down, dragging it across a full line⊠then another⊠and anotherâŠ. before sighing in frustration and tossing the highlighter back onto the desk. Leaning forward on his elbows, Richie ran fingers through his mess of curls.
âTOZIER!â Richie startled, looking up as Aurora Morgans came stomping into the otherwise empty classroom. Her brown eyes were blazing and slams a photograph down on the desk over his textbook. âYou are not an easy dude to find, you know that?â
Richie sighed. âYeah, Morgans. That was the whole point.â
Aurora flipped the photo over and Richie leaned to look at it on a reflex. A woman in a prom dress stared up at him, a woman he didnât recognize. Richieâs eyes flicked back up to Aurora and he frowned. âThis chick means nothing to me, and Iâm pretty sure you know that. So, what are you fishing for?â
âLook a little bit closer and stop acting like a damn idiot,â Aurora growled. Richie shook his head slowly, reaching out for the photograph and pulling it towards him. His eyes landed on his mother and Frank Kaspbrak having a conversation in the background.
Richie made an aborted noise, and shook his head with a soft laugh. âWhat are you getting at, Morgans? They were friends, them talking together at a literal school function isnât a crime. Why are you trying to make it into one?â
âThis picture,â Aurora pointed at it angrily. âWas like, the only personal belonging that Robert Gray kept in his life after being arrested- and your mother is in it. This is the student he was dating while he was chopping up her classmates. Care to give your thoughts?â
Riche pushed away from his desk, and walked around in Auroraâs space. âIf this is your snakey ass trying to accuse the Devils of being-â
âSo quick to jump to the defense-â Aurora began to mock before another person came stomping into the once deserted classroom and slammed the door shut. Ben Hanscom stomped towards them, glaring even more towards Aurora than he was towards Richie.
âYou know, I tried. I really tried.â Ben was shaking his head, face contorted with a somehow calm rage. âI tried to get out, I tried to turn off all this curiosity bullshit. But this,â he shook a crumbled piece of paper into Auroraâs face. âBut I guess I canât! So what are we going to do?â
âWhat is it?â Richie crossed his arms to give a strong air of non-chalance. He seemed to remember Ben Hanscom being a stuttering, terrified mess in his drive way not too long ago, but this boy in front of him seemed to have had ever inch of fear drained from him and replaced with annoyance.
Ben tossed the paper in Richieâs direction, Richie fumbling with it and being forced to pick it up off the floor. âYou can keep yourself away, but you canât hide from what must happen. All will be revealed on the night of senior prom- Okay, what the fuck is this shit?â
Ben sighed. âI was delivered to the paper sometime yesterday. It had my name on it.â
âSomebody threatened you?â Aurora asked, voice cracking awkwardly. She reached out to take hold of Benâs hand, but he yanked away and glared at her. Richie raised his brow and glanced back and forth between him, pursing his lips to keep from smirking.
âThey threatened all of us,â Ben said coldly. âThat shit about prom?â
âMy sisterâŠâ Richie said with a soft voice. âThere was the word prom written above her body when I found her.â
Aurora and Ben glanced at one another for moment with sharp eyes. âAnd you never thought that might be important at all?â Aurora asked in a sharp, serious tone.
Richie narrowed his eyes at her, frowning. âThe police were all there, they fucking saw it. Sorry I didnât report to you with the latest gossip immediately after finding my thirteen year old sisterâs dead body. Iâll make note of that next time.â
âThatâs not what I meant and you fucking know it, Tozier.â Aurora rolled her eyes and even Ben was shaking his head.
âActually, I donât think I do know that,â Richie almost growled and a twinkle of that all-familiar fear flashed on Benâs face. âAll I know about you, Aurora Morgans is that youâre a soulless information sucker who I would bet lost her virginity to the super information highway and-â
âOkay, okay, we get it-â Ben broke through, waving his hands in front of him. âAs true as all those things are-â
âHey!â Aurora gasped.
âThey arenât going to help us now.â Ben finished without out so much as glancing at the offended look Aurora was giving him.
âHelping us?â Richie laughed bitterly. âNo offense but Iâm not part of whatever this puppy-love-crush-turned-hate-fuck relationship you two have going on, I have my own issues.â
âAnd your own hate fuck relationship?â Aurora asked with a sweet voice.
Richieâs jaw clenched and arms twitched. âMorgans, you rat-spirited cunt, I really donât want to fucking drop you kick right now but I fucking will.â
âI could take your hyped-up daddyâs boy ass,â Aurora shot back with a laugh. âYou donât have your little gangster buddies to back you up, youâre not even wearing your jacket anymore. We both know youâre nothing on your own.â
âStop, stop, stop,â Ben cried, pushing himself between Aurora and Richie as Richieâs eyes flashed dangerously. âBasically, this is all our problem!! If we were smart, weâd probably like, drop out of school and become hermits.â
âIâm not running away from some hyped-up psychopath,â Aurora said immediately, to Richie and Benâs matching eye rolls. âBenny, weâre so close to blowing this case wide open. Look-â She drove forward to grab the photo from Richieâs desk but Ben was turning his head away.
âThis isnât some case, Aurora!â Ben cried. âThis is peopleâs lives- our lives.â
âThen why didnât you go to the police with the letter instead of me?â Aurora challenged with a smirk.
âI didnât come to you,â Ben shot back. âI came to Richie- you just happened to be here.â
Richie made a mockery of an honour noise and pressed his hands over his heart. âI am honoured, Haystack. Look a that, the loving is really starting to blossom here-â
âShut up, Tozier,â Aurora and Ben said in unison, which only prompted a larger grin from Richie.
âListen, detectives,â Richie held his hands and shook his head. âI respect yourâŠ. weird obsessions with crypic clues but this is way heavy. I donât want any part of this!â
âYouâre already part of this!â Ben actually yelled, Richie and Auroraâs both startling. âFucking like it or not, weâre all a part of this! I think weâre all going to have to work together to fix this bullshit!â
âAnd end scene,â Richie said, slapping his hands together. âWonderful performance, Mr Hanscom, just splendid. Keep your ears open for your award nomination, it should be coming in anytime now.â
âAre you always such a douchebag?â Ben hissed.
âYes,â Richie and Aurora said in unison. Richie clapped his hands together a few more times then began to gather up his belongings. âWell, this was fun, yâall. Iâve got to go⊠somewhere that isnât here with you.â
âNeed to go find your little boy toy?â Aurora asked. âDonât bother, I heard Uris and Blum tossed them into the backseat of the Rabbiâs car and drove off at the start of first period.â
For a spilt second, there was an emotion of Richie Tozierâs face that gave even Aurora a pause. He stepped forward and took Auroraâs chin in his fingers and tilted it up towards him. âRory, sweetheart⊠jacket or not, I could still make you the next Derry bitch to disappear.â
xxx
Eddie stepped out of the backseat of Stanley Urisâ car, looking up into the sunny sky. The Neibolt House was a dark stain on the whole street, falling apart sidings and over grown grass that held a height similar to the rickety front porch. The yellow crime scene tape draped around the front door really completed the picture. Stomach tense, Eddie turned back to the couple behind him. âWhat are we doing at Neibolt?â
Patty hiked her backpack higher on her shoulders and grinned excitedly. âWeâre going to find out the truth. From people who really know what happened. The people who died.â
âWhat⊠are you talking about ghosts?â Eddie asked with a crinkle of his nose. âLike⊠actual ghosts? Do Jewish people even believe in ghosts?â
Stan came around the front of the car and sighed. âI- personally as a Jewish person- am skeptic of ghosts as best. But the actual religion definitely has spirit aspects.â
âThe Torah forbids trying to communicate with the dead,â Patty added in too-happy a voice. âBut so does the Bible and literally every other book of Worship, and white people do that shit all the time.â
âThis is how white die,â Eddie said quietly, glancing back over his shoulder at the old house. âMy ma always told me to never go in this house, you know? Itâs cursed.â
âSheâs probably right.â Patty cheered, taking Stanâs hand in one and Eddieâs in the other. She pulled them quickly up to the house and ripped down the strings of CSI tape. Eddie made a small noise of disapproval but followed the pair of them down into the house.
âWeâre going right into the heart of everything,â Patty called over her shoulder as she stomped down a set of stairs that looked as though only the barest of weight would send them tumbling apart. Eddie and Stan glanced at one another anxiously, both hesitating at the top of the steps before Pattyâs voice carried back up to them. âCome on, chicken shits! I did it just fine!â
âIâve got a foot of height and almost 100 pounds on you!â Â Stan shouted down but quickly sighed and took off down after her. Eddie inhaled sharply, wishing for once that he still carried around his inhaler from youth, and moved down the stairs as quickly as he could. He collided with Stan at the bottom, who gave him a look of distaste before they both stepped further into the dingy basement.
âOh my godâŠâ Eddie whispered, taking in the make shift bed on the ground and the chains that were still attached to the walls. His stomach twisted and churned at the thought of Janie Tozier- the little pigtail girl- being held down here for months with no hopes of ever getting free. Eddie wrapped his arms around himself, noting the stark paleness of Stanleyâs face as they both move closer to the papers and cup that Patty was setting up right in front of the makeshift bed.
âWow, wait, right here?â Stan asked, voice cracking slightly under his nerves. He and Eddie both creeped closer, looking at one another in mild distress. âIsnât that a little disrespectful?â
It was that moment that Eddie really realized that Stanley had watched Janie Tozier grow up similar to how heâd watched Georgie Denbrough. Probably even closer, given the bond that the Devils all shared with one another, and kind of found family connection that Eddie would likely never have with anybody. Eddie swallowed harshly and found himself to recognize that this wasnât his place to break down.
âItâs morbid, I know,â Patty said sadly. âBut I feel like being as close to Janieâs spirit as possible will help us. She hasnât been dead long and itâll be hard to-â
âYeah, yeah,â Stan started shaking his head and took several steps back towards the stairs. âShe hasnât been dead long. This is messed up, Pats, Iâm not⊠Iâm not doing this. I want to know if Bev did this probably worse than you do, but I⊠Thereâs got to be another way.â
âWeâve already broken in!â Patty argued. âThe serious felons are already done with! The police arenât even going to come back here, you know what theyâre like!â
âItâs not the legality Iâm having with this, itâs the moral issues,â Stan said angrily, rubbing at the side of his face. âIâm not going to sit here and try to⊠talk to Richieâs dead little sister to find out if Beverly killed her! I⊠I donât want to know that bad. ItâsâŠ. disturbing.â
Patty gave Stan a sad look and as she opened her mouth to reply, the door to the basement slammed shut and Eddie felt the hair on the back of his neck stand up. Goosebumps shot down his arms and he felt moments away from throwing up, watching how Patty tugging her Devils jacket closer around herself. The pieces of paper sheâd placed on the ground started blowing until only four remained on the floor.
P⊠R ⊠O⊠M
Eddie gasped, flashes of dripping red letters on a wall burning the backs of his eyes. He grabbed at Stan and started pulling him. âWe need to go, we need to go now.â
summary: âThatâs ridiculous,â Ben said, feeling his hands shake around the pen he was using. The accusation made the back of Benâs neck break into a sweat though his body had never felt so cold. âWeâre not at war.â
Tozier looked up from underneath his messy fringe, a humourless smirk sliding across his face. âYouâre a fool if you believe that.â
[or: after the gruesome murder of his younger brother, Bill Denbrough is determined to bring about the end of the string of crimes in Derry no matter the cost. As stories unwind and fall apart, thereâs only more questions as everybodyâs lives hang in the balance.]
chapter count: 3/20
chapter warnings: mentions of past character deaths, mentions of gang activity,Â
[Prologue] [1] [2]Â Â [Read Full Story on AO3] [Playlist]
Taglist: @honkhonkrichard @hufflepuffkaspbrak @reddie-for-anything @saddhippie @reddiesetrichie @wowdidiask @emmieliabedelia @beepbeepbitchard @lemonadeandrice (if you want to be added, message me off anon!)Â
Stanley Uris would be the first person to tell you that his best friend was a stupid, reckless idiot. Heâd been friends with Richard Tozier since the first day of kindergarten when Richie had plunked himself down beside Stan and refused to detach himself since. Stan had grown to love Richie in a way that he supposed a person would come to love their sibling or parentsâ overexcited pet, despite not having wanted the pet around at all. In short, if something ever happened to Richie Tozier, Stan would kill a person over it but heâd do it a little begrudgingly.
That didnât change the fact that Stan was very, very well aware of what an idiot Richie was, and his current course of action was possibly the most idiotic thing heâd done in the 13 years Stanley had known him.
âJust leave Bill Denbrough alone,â Stan said from their spot under the bleachers at lunch. Richie had yet to say anything about it, but heâd been watching Richie watch the former mayorâs son kicking at the fallen leaves for nearly ten minutes. Richie was only that quiet and that focused for two reasons, when he was deeply upset or when he was plotting something that would get him in trouble.
âWho said anything about Denbrough?â Richie replied lightly, prompting Stan to look back towards Denbrough and his friends. His eyes fell to the small one, Kaspbrak, with his warm autumn clothes and soft hair. Stan couldnât avoid rolling his eyes.
âAbsolutely not, Tozier.â He said darkly. âI thought we were past this. You havenât lusted over Eddie Kaspbrak since eighth grade. This is supposed to be over. You know the two of you will never work out.â
Richie shrugged one shoulder, taking a deep inhale of his cigarette. Beverly mumbled something nonsensical from where her head was resting in Richieâs lap as Stan wondered, for maybe the millionth time in his life, if heâd made the right choice in friends.
Richie pushed himself up and snuffed his cigarette out on the ground. Tucking his hands into the pockets of his leather jacket, Richie strutted over to Denbrough and his friends. Sighing, Stan stood at the same moment as Beverly and they flocked to either side of Rich.
âAfternoon, preps,â Richie greeted them with, shooting Kaspbrak a cocky wink. Stan was mildly surprised to see Kaspbrakâs cheeks flush. Over the years, it had been pretty apparent that Eddie Kaspbrak would do anything and everything in his power not to react to Richie Tozierâs existence, so even this small acknowledgement was a shift in a certain power class within Derry.
âIâd be a lot better if my brother was alive,â Denbrough said coldly and even Stan had to blink in surprise. Bill Denbrough had certainly gotten a lot darker and almost edgier since his brotherâs murder but this was almost stupid bold. No matter what thoughts and theories he was holding, that wasnât the smartest method of speaking to a Tozier- even a Tozier as calm and seemingly harmless as Richie. The horrified looks on Phillipsâ and Kaspbrakâs faces seemed to imply their agreement, while Beverly and Richie both stared on in amusement.
âOh, wonderful,â Richie chuckled, running his tongue along his bottom lip. Kaspbrakâs eyes trailed its movement and Stan couldnât help but feel that the world heâd always known had been tossed a little bit sideways. âWeâre getting right to the point then. I hate chit chat.â
âWhat do you want, Richie?â Kaspbrak jumped in, glancing between his best friend and Richie as though he would physically throw himself in front of their unavoidable argument. âCanât you just leave us alone? What are you getting out of this?â
âNothing,â Richie replied, looking momentarily confused for a second himself. âBut it might be a good therapy session for your buddy, Bill, here. It isnât good to keep all that stuff locked up inside like that.â
Denbroughâs eyes flashed almost dangerously. âGet out of here, Tozier. Iâm really not in the mood to deal with your fucking bullshit today.â
âWould you be in more of a mood to deal with my bullshit tomorrow?â
There was a group starting to gather around them now, students preparing for the showdown which had been building progressively for the last six months. Stan couldnât deny that he, too, was almost wondering how this would turn out. There was unquestionably bad blood between Bill Denbrough and Richie Tozier, hurt feelings and burning accusations that would never said.
âWhat do you want?â Denbrough asked, frowning deeply and crossing his arms. He and Richie were standing only inches apart now, their breath and anger mingling in the air. Richie, with all his training, was doing a better job of hiding it but Stan could see it. Could see it in the slight clench of Richieâs jaw, in the furrow of his brow and in harshness of his smirk. Denbroughâs anger radiated off every part of his body, not hiding it, nearly exploding with it all.
âTell me what you think, William,â Richie said, voice slipping halfway through. Voice darkened, chilling and Stanâs hand twitched at his side. If Richie slipped fully- if Richie lost his control- then God Help Bill Denbrough. He might end up seeing his younger brother much sooner than expected. âI want to know what you really think.â
âYou already know,â Bill said, sentences now short, aborted. His hands trembled at his side, as though every inch of his soul was fighting against reaching out and punching Richie right in the face.Stan glanced to his side, intending to catch Beverlyâs eye, to find her already looking at him. They already knew their place, what theyâd need to do if this turned a little too sour.
âI want you to say it,â Richie said shortly, all hint of false friendliness gone now. Phillipsâ pressed a hand over her mouth, and Kaspbrakâs eyes went wide with fear. Stan caught sight of the new kid from English Lit in the crowd of students, looking like he wanted absolutely nothing more than to be somewhere else.
âI think you killed my brother.â
Stanleyâs own composure slipped then, inhaling sharply as though heâd suffered a blow to the stomach. Beverlyâs mouth had fallen open slightly, her own strong girl façade falling in her momentary shock. Stan watched as emotions crossed Richieâs face before he tongued at his cheek and took another step towards Denbrough.
âBillâŠâ Kaspbrak said meekly, going completely ignored. Richie and Denbrough were practically nose to nose now and Stan tried not to show how his heart was racing in his chest.
Richie opened his mouth when his face suddenly turned to something that resembled the way heâd look after Janie disappeared, a look of utter devastation that left an uncomfortable feeling in the pit of Stanâs guts. âYou know⊠I know our families grew apart but you canât believe for a second that Iâd hurt Georgie.â
Denbrough simply continued to stare at Richie, jaw set and eyes hard. Richie cocked his brow, eyes still sad, while the entirety of the student body around them had fallen completely still and silent. It was anybodyâs game now, whether Richie Tozier would take the accusation and let it slide off of him, or if they were going to see it go between a Denbrough and Tozier after years of anticipation. right in front of them. Stan could flip a coin, and still have no idea what the outcome would be.
Richie sighed when it became apparent that Denbrough wasnât going to give any sort of vocal response.  âMaybe it works differently for you Denbroughs,â Richie said, in a tone that wasnât trying at all to hide  the words spoken from their fellow students that stared on in wonder. Stanâs hand was still twitching at his side and he could see Beverly in the corner of his eye, getting ready to launch forward and end this before it really got started. âBut we never forget who we are or where we came from. We take care of our own, and no matter what your father chose to do, that hasnât changed. Old blood runs deep, doesnât it, Billy?â
âYou better shut the fuck up,â Denbrough hissed through his teeth, glancing nervously at his girlfriend. Phillips and Kaspbrak were glancing between Denbrough and Richie as though watching the world's most intense ping pong game. Maybe in a way, they were.
Richie shrugged, smirk back on his face at full force. âSee ya around.â Denbrough surprisingly let him pass, and Stan didnât hesitate to follow behind him.
âYou shouldnât have said that,â Stan said in low voice, knowing their classmates were still listening in as best they could. âYouâre just putting a bigger target on your back, you know that.â
Richie let out a soft sigh, glancing up at the cloudy sky above them. âIâm a Tozier. Iâve had a target on my back before I was even fucking born. Thereâs never been a point in playing it safe, not for me. I tried that life.â
-
Ben Hanscom moved quickly out of sight once it became clear that Richie Tozier and Bill Denbrough werenât going to throw hands in the middle of the school yard. Ever since Mike Hanlon and Aurora Morgan had approached him, Ben had thrown himself into the Derry Murders in a deeper fashion than when heâd been reading into it before. It was a dark one, and he felt like there were too many missing pieces for it to possibly be solved- especially once Mike added in all the stuff his grandfather had told him about the murders back in the 1990s.
A hand suddenly came out and snaked around Benâs wrist, tugging him backwards into the Student Council Supply closet. Ben let out a small, nervous shriek and found himself face-to-face with an excited looking Aurora Morgan. The fear in Ben quickly disappeared, but he found that his heart didnât slow down.
âThat was crazyâŠâ Aurora said, her dark eyes dancing with wonder. âDid you see that? What do you think Tozier was going on about? You think Mayor Denbrough was into some shady shit?â
âMaybe,â Ben said lightly.Having not grown up in Derry, like the majority of the population, had its negatives and positives.. Not knowing the deep personal histories of what families hated which and who was good and who was bad fell under both of those possibilities. In this moment, it wouldnât surprise him if Mayor Denbrough had been into some shady shit, and it wouldnât disappoint him either. He didnât have any trust in that man, nor any dislike, so the potential shady business of Zachary Denbrough would mean nothing to him outside of this investigation.
Aurora was shaking her head with a smile, hand still clutching Ben. âWe need to find out. It could be the piece of the puzzle weâre missing to solve all of this! Iâll text Mike, and weâll start looking into him.â
âWeâve already looked into everybody,â Ben said, a little impatient. It pained him but he had to say it.
âWeâre not going to learn anything else from reading newspapers and stuff in the library. We might need a⊠more hands on approach.â
Auroraâs face lit up.
-
âAre you sure about this?â Â Mary Elise Hanscom held the flimsy photograph between her fingers. She looked up to the person sitting across from her, frowning. âThis is who you say it is? You have no more information?â
âI promise. Put this picture on the front page of your paper, and youâll have people coming from every corner of town with more information. Fear is a powerful tactic.â
âWhy donât you go to the police with this?â Mary Elise asked.
âWould you trust the police in this town with anything? At least with the paper, things will be told.â
summary: âThatâs ridiculous,â Ben said, feeling his hands shake around the pen he was using. The accusation made the back of Benâs neck break into a sweat though his body had never felt so cold. âWeâre not at war.â
Tozier looked up from underneath his messy fringe, a humourless smirk sliding across his face. âYouâre a fool if you believe that.â
[or: after the gruesome murder of his younger brother, Bill Denbrough is determined to bring about the end of the string of crimes in Derry no matter the cost. As stories unwind and fall apart, thereâs only more questions as everybodyâs lives hang in the balance.]
chapter count: 3/20
chapter warnings: mentions of past character deaths, mentions of hate crimes, mentions of past statutory rape,Â
[Read Full Story on AO3] [Playlist]
Taglist: @honkhonkrichard, @hufflepuffkaspbrak, @reddie-for-anything, @saddhippiee, @reddiesetrichie, @wowdidiask, @emmieliabedelia, @beepbeepbitchard, @lemonadeandrice (if you want to be added, message me off anon!)
Mike Hanlon tucked the small, crooked wing back against the duckâs shaking body and held him closer to himself. The small bird quivered slightly and Mike frowned for a moment, having to wonder if the shaking was him or the duck. Mikeâs father entered the kitchen with a load of groceries in both hands and crinkled his brow at his only son.
âWhatâs that you got there, Mikey?â
âA duck.â
Will Hanlon looked at his son for another moment before sighing, smiling slightly. âYou always were a regular old Fern Arable, son.â
âThat was a pig,â Mike said, smiling softly down at the now-sleeping bird in his arms. âThis is a duck. We have enough pigs anyway.â
âThat we do,â Will placed the groceries on the counter and began to unload them. The feeling of discomfort and sadness that had been sitting in his stomach all afternoon returning now that Mike had another moment alone with his thoughts. Those same, disturbing thoughts. âThey found another body today.â
Mike noticed his fatherâs stature stiffen, the way it always did when Mike brought up the string of murders. Will Hanlon hated talking about the Derry Murders in way that was different than other parents in town. The other adults in Derry didnât want their children brining it up as they liked to pretend that nothing was happening as best they could. Slap on a curfew and act as though anything that happens was then out of their control. The mayors own son was murdered, and everybody just shrugged their shoulders and went on about their everyday business.
Will Hanlon was a much better father than most in town, Mike had known this since he was old enough to know anything. Something about these murders settling deep within Mr Hanlonâs bones and a part of his father shut down every time it was brought up. In any other situation, William Hanlon was open and would answer questions that Mike had ever had about anything in his life- until last spring, when kids started getting killed.
âThe Corcoran boy, right? Edward, was it?â Mr Hanlon shook his head. âA damn shame. Kidâs been through the ringer already. Ainât nobody deserve that but after all that boy had been forced to go through.â
Mike nodded solemnly. Heâd gone to school with Eddie Corcoran since heâd been switched into public school once high school started, a whole four years ago, but Mike had always kept to himself. A bit of a loner, by choice he supposed. He knew, though, of course about Eddieâs father and the death of his little brother just the year before. In a town like Derry, it was impossible not to hear about terrible things that happened to other people. Mike supposed that enough people, in time, would just chalk up Eddie Corcoranâs deaths to the same as his brothers- anything to continue pretending that the curfew was helping jack shit.
âYeah, itâsâŠâ Mike started but Mr Hanlon quickly closed the doors to the cupboards and looked expectantly to his son.
âCan you finish putting the groceries away?â Mr Hanlon asked, rubbing at his temples. âI think I need to take a nap. I feel a headache coming on something awful.â
âYeah, Dad, of course,â Mike said, quickly setting the injured duck back into its tissue box bed as he stood. Mr Hanlon patted him on the shoulder once as he walked past, and Mike tried to make the quickest work of the groceries that he could.
âYou know why he wonât talk about it, donât you, boy?â
Mike jumped, and turned around to find his grandfather moving slowly to sit at the table. He had a big leather bound notebook in his hands and he looked more lucid than Mike had seen him appear in many months. Grandpa Hanlonâs diagnosis of Alzheimerâs was all but official, though Mrs Hanlon always said he didnât have quite enough symptoms for doctors to give it the name it deserved. Mike was watching the old man struggle with things that he never would have imagined his grandfather would, but now the man that sat at the kitchen table looked so much like the grandfather Mike had grown up with that he almost forgot about his deuterating brain cells.
âIâŠâ Mike shrugged, rolling a can of gluten free gravy between his hands. âI supposed because it makes him uncomfortable. All those kids getting killed.â
Grandpa Hanlon hummed, opening up the notebook and sliding it further across the table. âIt does make him uncomfortable but not just because of those poor kids⊠because itâs happened before.â
Mike crinkled his brow, leaving the groceries discarded behind him as he moved to sit across from his grandfather. âWhat are you talking about?â
âThirty years ago, there was a string a killings. All young teens, just like now.â Grandfather Hanlon patted the notebook and Mike reached out to take it. Inside were several newpaper article dated between 1990 and 1991, all about deaths of students from Derry High- northside and southside alike. Mike frowned deeply, flipping through them. There were twenty one in total, Mike stopped at the one⊠the only one that seemed to have been a leading story in the paper.
LOCAL TEACHER ARRESTED FOR ILLEGAL RELATIONSHIP WITH UNDERAGE STUDENT
Mike raised his brow and looked up at his grandfather. âWhat does this have to do with the murders?â Mike rang his finger tips across the manâs face, admitting to himself that there was something sinister to this man. The image itself appeared as though it were taken directly out of a yearbook, the teacher in question just smiling at camera but just the smile brought a deep chill to Mike and brought goosebumps up around his arms.
âThat has everything to do with the murders, my boy.â Grandfather Hanlon said deeply. âThat man is Robert Gray, and he killed all those kids back in 1991. And wouldâve have gotten away with it, too, if he hadnât been caught messing around with that poor, young girl.â
âWhat girl?â Mike asked, his voice coming out barely above a whisper.
âGoodness, I couldnât tell you her name.â Grandfather Hanlon shook his head. âIt was so long ago and my memory isnât what it used to be. She was only fifteen, couple years older than your father was back then, and they kept her identity very hush hush.â
Mike nodded. âWhat happened to her?â
Grandfather Hanlon sighed. âI donât know, most people believe that the poor girl just changed her name and moved from Derry. It would make sense, given what he was.â
âYou donât believe that?â Mike asked lightly, rubbing his thumb into the old newspaper. Grandfather Hanlon sighed, shaking his head.
âIâm not sure how the girl could have been with this evil a man, and not know what he was.â Grandfather Hanlon said. âBut I canât pretend to know. They found all the evidence for his other crimes while searching his house for the rape charges and we know the girl never testified against him.â
âShe could have been afraid.â Mike said, but he too had a slight twinge in his stomach that told him there was much more to the story than simple fear. âWhy does Dad have all this stuff?â
âBecause Robert Gray went to jail for twenty one murders, but your father and I know he committed at least twenty four.â Grandfather Hanlon said darkly, a look coming across his face that Mike had never seen on his before. âYour father was only eleven, guess he was too young for Grayâs type but Iâll.. Iâll never forgive myself for leaving town that weekend.â
Mike swallowed harshly. He knew that his aunt and uncle had died when his father was very young, while his grandparents had been away for the weekend. The only explanation to it heâd received had been âan incidentâ but the deep, dark words in his grandfatherâs speech made Mike want to throw up.
âThis Gray guy⊠he killed them?â Mike asked, forcing his voice to stay light. He pushed the newspaper ridden notebook away from him, reaching for his duck and pulling the small animal close to his chest.
Grandfather Hanlon nodded. âYour father and I have always believed so but⊠Robert Gray was never tried in their deaths, despite the similarities in them. The Derry Police had ruled it a hate crime by the next morning, and thatâs theyâd had to say about it. Robert Gray never faced justice for my babyâs deaths, and your father has never truly gotten past that.â
Mike squeezed his eyes shut. âIs that why Dad hates talking about the deaths now? It reminds him of what happened?â
âPartly.â Grandfather Hanlon said lightly. âThough, my boy, if I can be honest with you- there are enough common actions in these crimes and those of thirty years ago that even a man with as poor a memory as I can say that it leaves me with unease.â
âYou think the same person is doing this?â Mike said, hearing an irregular pitch in his voice. âI thought you said he was arrested.â
âArrested and dead.â Grandfather Hanlon said, the smallest hint of a smile tugging at the old mansâ face. âBastard took a plea to escape the death penalty but it did him no good. Wouldâve lived longer waiting on the Green Mile than he did going into the lions den. Robert Gray didnât live to see 1992, If thereâs anything they hate up there in Shawshank, itâs kid killer and worse- kid fuckers. Robert Gray was both, and doomed from the moment he walked into that building.â
Mike nodded, digging his front teeth into his bottom lip. Grandfather Hanlon tapped the notebook and nodded at his grandson. âYou read these.. read them, Michael. Know your enemy. No gangster is killing these kids.â
Mike nodded in response, keeping eye contact with his grandfather until the man stood and shuffled from the room.
There was burning curiosity deep in Mike Hanlonâs stomach and knew that, with the new information, there was no way heâd be able to just sit on this and let bad things happen. He knew that he wouldnât be able to do this alone⊠and he knew the exact right people to help him.
xxx
âBenjamin Hanscom, please report to the journalism office, immediately. Benjamin Hanscom to the journalism office.â
Ben gathered up his books and walked from the classroom, feeling the eyes of his classmates staring at him as he moved. There was nothing Ben hated more than having attention drawn to him, and he could feel Stanley Urisâ eyes burning into the back of his neck. Ben knew only where the journalism office was because the guidance counsellor had tried to encourage him to write for the school paper when heâd first moved to Derry. Heâd known it was because of his aunt and mother, so Ben had refused.
He came into the open office door, and frowned at the two other students that seemed to be cooing over a small duck in Kleenex box. He recognized the boy as Mike Hanlon, whose family ran the farm on the edges of town and Ben wasnât sure heâd ever seen him interacting with other students anymore than Ben himself did. The girl beside him was Aurora Morgan, who ran the Derry High Harold and was- in truth- one of the prettiest girl that Ben Hanscom had ever seen.
âIâmâŠâ Ben scratched the back of his neck. âI was called here, I donâtâŠâ
âWe called you, Ben Hanscom.â Aurora said, voice high and sweet like a song. Ben felt his face turn pink and forced his eyes down to the small duck in Mikeâs hand. âWe need you.â
âNeed me? IâŠâ Ben shook his head, swallowing harshly. âWhy?â
i feel like the reason so many people hate aurora in bitw is because richie and eddie hate her so its skrewed.
LMAO richie absolutely despises her, but in the original draft ben fell in love with her (i cut it because i didnât really have time to develope ANOTHER romantic relationship) if that means anything
summary: âThatâs ridiculous,â Ben said, feeling his hands shake around the pen he was using. The accusation made the back of Benâs neck break into a sweat though his body had never felt so cold. âWeâre not at war.â
Tozier looked up from underneath his messy fringe, a humourless smirk sliding across his face. âYouâre a fool if you believe that.â
[or: after the gruesome murder of his younger brother, Bill Denbrough is determined to bring about the end of the string of crimes in Derry no matter the cost. As stories unwind and fall apart, thereâs only more questions as everybodyâs lives hang in the balance.]
chapter count: 8/20
chapter warnings: underage drinking, recreational drug use, graphic depictions of violence, minor and major character death
The Bowie house could almost be felt vibrating from down the block that Saturday night. From the inside, it was possibly the most chaotic experience of Bill Denbroughâs life. Audra was pressed tightly to his side, but his girlfriend had been distant in spirit since their visit to Wentworth Tozier. Theyâd spend just as much time together as they had been since getting together a year and a half earlier, but something about her had pulled away. Like an invisible wall had gone up between them, and Bill no idea how to knock it down.
Bill caught sight of Richie Tozier ducking through the crowds of classmates and had barely shifted his weight before Audra was squeezing his wrist. âBill, please,â Audra pleaded, though her voice was almost cold. âIâm not spending another night with you squrrielling after the Toziers. Iâm not doing this anymore.â
âI wasnât going toâŠâ Bill sighed, and stared into Audraâs eyes. He pleaded with her in a way he could never say. He understood now, he did. âJust⊠all the things Tozier was saying when we visited him⊠about Richie⊠and I just-â Bill swallowed harshly, unable not for the first time, to imagine growing up in a home where his own father could speak so terribly, so casually about him.
Audra face softened slightly, nodding towards him. Her hand slipped down further Billâs wrist until their fingers tangled in together. As Bill took the steps towards Tozier, the hyper awareness of his blue eyes and cocked of his smirk made Bill more than a little suspicious that perhaps there was less alcohol in Richieâs red cup then he might been letting their classmates believe.
âWhere are your shadows?â Bill asked, shifting his weight from the front of his feet to his heels. Audra seemed to grow stiffer beside him, and he mentally cursed himself. Tozier merely smirking and shrugged one shoulder loosely.
âI donât control Stan and Bev, believe me,â Tozier snickered, swishing the dark liquid around in his cup. âI donât keep tabs on them. They can do whatever they want, they can take care of themselves.â
Bill pulled his hand away from Audra and took another step closer to Tozier. âLook, Richie, I just wanted to say-:â
Tozier waved his hand and shook his head. âNo offense, Denbrough, but Iâm really not in the mood for some bullshit fight tonight unless youâre actually going to throw up punches. The build up has been rather disappointing you know? Iâm bored.â
Bill rolled his eyes. âI wasnât going to fight with you! Why is that everybodyâs immediate thought?â Audra and Tozier gave Bill unimpressed looks that looked so similar that it gave him chills down his spine. âI was going to apologize for being such a dick to you. I shouldâve known you werenât capable of doing that to Guh-Georgie or Juh-Juh-â
Tozier raised his brow. âDoes this have anything to do with you two going all Betty and Jughead on my dad the other day?â
Bill blinked once and glanced over to his girlfriend. Audra was standing stone-still, eyes wide and looking at Tozier in shock. Tozier let out a snicker. âYou really think you two were going to just waltz into the Long Float and nobody wouldâve noticed? And nobody wouldâve told me? You guys are smarter than that.â
Bill swallowed roughly. âIâm apologizing. I donât give a suh-shit if you accept or not.â
âNah, whatever, brother,â Tozier chugged back the rest of his drink and licked at his lips. The shining in his eyes made an uncomfortable tension settle in Billâs stomach, unable to see the look as anything other than a predator looking at its next meal. âI have more important things to-â
Tozier was cut off by a body breaking through the crowd with an annoyingly loud, persistent âRichie!â and coming forward to tug at Tozierâs jacket sleeve. âYou promised that weâdâŠâ
Billâs mouth dropped open slightly at the sight of a messy, rushed-looking Eddie Kaspbrak. Audra glanced between Eddie and a now almost nervous looking Richie Tozier. Tozier had placed his red-solo cup somewhere, and despite both boys looking ready to turn tail and run, Eddieâs hand was still tangled up in Tozierâs jacket while Tozier had shifted slightly to stand almost in front of Eddie.
âIâŠâ Bill shook his head. âEddie! You said your mother wouldnât let you uh-out!â Billâs cheeks were burning at how prominent his stutter was that night, worse than it had been since before heâd hit puberty. âWhat⊠WhatâŠâ
âI didnât lie,â Eddie said, hand tightening more in Tozierâs jacket sleeve. âShe didnât want me coming, and Iâm not- Iâm not staying I just..â
âNeeded Richie?â Audra said, arms now crossed tightly around her chest. Bill could feel his hands shaking at his side. Had he been so consumed, so blind sided by his own problems, that hadnât noticed his own best friend slipping away? Slipping into the arms of a devil?
Eddie was looking at his two friends as though in pain, and Tozier was shifting from foot to foot- staring them down. âIâŠâ Eddie squeaked. âI⊠We have to go! Rich-â
âRich?â Bill challenged in disbelief, voice raising. He could feel people watching them, people seeing what was happening. He could feel the rumours growing, the whispers and stares. Eddieâs reputation was as good as shot now, and Bill knew he was drawing the attention to them, but he couldnât bring himself to lower his voice. âWhat the fuck, Eddie? Are you guys fuh-fuh-fuck-â
âBillâŠâ Audra said lightly, glancing around at the gathering of people around them.
âWeâre not fucking,â Tozier said, his words delivering a disgust that didnât reach the flush of his cheeks or the softness of his eyes. Billâs stomach churched, glancing back down at where his best friend was pressed tightly beside his sworn enemy. Against one of the most problematic people Bill Denbrough had ever had the displeasure of meeting.
âWe have to go!â Eddie cried then, tears swimming in his eyes. His hand slipped free of Tozierâs jacket, just to reach out and tangle into Tozierâs own hand. Bill was sure he was going to throw up then. The idea that heâd just been apologizing to Richie Tozier brought on another wave of nausea, knowing that heâd spent the last few days feeling bad for Richie Tozier while the bastard was out ruining his best friendâs life.
Bill watched Eddie pull Tozier away, ducking through the groups of student that always seemed to around right when there was something worth watching. âBill, you need to calm down,â Audra was up against him, whispering in his ear, eyes on the crowd. Bill shook her off.
âWhat I need-â Bill snapped, loudly, too loudly. Audraâs eyes widened, and her words from earlier just danced in Billâs mind. Iâm not doing this anymore. âIs a fucking drink.â
Audraâs lips turned down in disapproval, but Bill didnât get the chance to heade another response before the front door was banging open and the crowd was parting. Bill and Audra turned towards the commotion, pressing together side by side on the reflex. Billâs heart hammered straight up into his throat as the group of boys in Devil Jackets moved through the house, each student moving from the path as though burned by the sight of them.
âWell, well, well,â Henry Bowers clicked his tongue, lips stuck in a permanent smirk. âI heard there was a fucking party.â
--
Mike Hanlon handed Aurora Morgans another drink and leaned against the wall beside her. âYouâre sure about this? I still think thereâs a better way to get a story than hanging around with a bunch of drunk teenagers.â
Aurora shrugged, pressed happily in beside a flustered looking Ben Hanscom. âMaybe. But you realize that high school isnât supposed to be all about getting this story? Itâs senior year, maybe we just need to spend one night as drunk teenagers.â Mike and Ben gave her equal looks of disbelief and Aurora let out a soft chuckle. âI told you already, this party is guaranteed to blow up in everybodyâs faces. Didnât you see what went down between Kaspbrak and Denbrough?â
âThat was bound to happen at some point,â Mike said with a eye roll. âEddie and Richie werenât exactly being subtle.â
âYeah, I mean, I think itâs kind of cuteâŠ. all star crossed lovers and all that,â Ben said with a slow nod, âbut they werenât doing a very good job at hiding that theyâre dating or whatever. If Bill wasnât so caught up in his own drama, he wouldâve figured it out a long time ago.â
âI donât think theyâre dating,â Aurora said lightly. âI mean, Tozier has been theoretically in love with Kaspbrak since like first grade, but they arenât together. I think theyâre working on something.â
âThatâs obvious,â Ben agreed. âYou didnât see them when I brought up that picture. They know who the third person is. I get why Richie is chasing after it, because of his sister, but the question really is.. what is Eddie getting out of it?â
Mike frowned. He, truthfully, hadnât given much concerned to that article or the third person with Wentworth and Zachary Denbrough. He still believed that their best chance at figuring out anything was Robert Gray and what happened 30 years ago. It was the only lead he was interested in investigating, and he couldnât truly bring himself to care whether Eddie Kaspbrak and Richie Tozier were dating or not. It was a doomed couple either way.
A loud commotion jerked the investigating trio out of their thoughts as group of their classmates were forced into the living room where they stood. The music was cut out and Bill Denbrough was forced down onto his knees in the middle of the room. Henry Bowers moved in front of him, grinning like a hyena and Mikeâs heart actually skipped a beat in his chest.
âIâm going to make this quick,â Bowers said, pulling gun clearly stolen from Sheriff Bowers from the loop of his belt. Aurora let out a soft gasp, clasping a hand over her mouth. Ben had gone sheet white, and was pressing a rough hand against her hip. Mike backed up slightly, unsure if he was going to rush at Bowers or make a run for it. He didnât doubt for a second that Henry Bowers was capable of pulling that trigger. âI donât want to hurt anybody,â lie. a clear lie, judging by the crazed smile on Henryâs face. âI just want to know where Richie Tozier is. You tell me what I want to know, and I let everybody go. No harm, no foul.â
Audra struggled against Victor Crissâs binding hold, pressing her tightly against his chest. Tears were pooled in her eyes, already running down her face. Bill Denbrough looked at Bowers, that look of stupid bravery that Mike knew all too well. âWhy do you need us to tell you where Tozier is? Isnât he your boss?â
Bowers tossed the gun outwards, ringing across Denbroughâs jaw with an echoing whack! Audra let out a loud sob and sunk backwards into Crissâ tight hold. Aurora whimpered as people throughout the room let out small screams and gasps. Mike caught sight of the slightly opened living room window, not opened enough for him to squeeze through without catching attention but maybeâŠHe shifted forward so he was standing in front of Aurora and nodded towards it. Auroraâs eyes went wide with fear but she nodded back at him.
Denbrough was groaning and struggling to get to back onto his knees while Bowers stared down at him with a deranged rage on his voice. âI didnât ask for your smart fucking mouth, Denbrough, but if you must know⊠we donât take our orders from the Toziers anymore.â Bowers grinned while Criss tightened his hold on Audraâs throat, bringing out a small choking noise for a singular moment.
Mike could feel Aurora moving slowly behind him, but didnât allow himself to turn towards her. Denbrough was pressed back on his knees, face bleeding slightly and already starting to swell, his eyes stuck on his no longer struggling girlfriend. Bowers pressed the barrel of the gun to the side of Denbroughâs face and used to force it roughly towards himself. Bowers knelt down to eye level with Denbrough.
âBut⊠if you must know,â Bowers drawled, voice slick with a sick entertainment. âThereâs a bigger player in the game now. Things are changing around here. We chose to be on the winning side.â
âYou mean you chose to follow whoever you think is the biggest powerhouse,â Denbrough challenged, eyes still flashing. âBecause youâre all talk and canât do anything without being lead.â
Bowers smashed the gun against Denbroughâs face once more, though Denbrough seemed to have seen it coming this time. He managed to keep his up on his knees, spitting out a mouthful of blood as his eyes flickered closed for a singular moment.
âAnymore fucking lip from you, Denbrough,â Bowers threatened, all crazy amusement drained from him the quickest of turns. âAnd Iâll pain the walls of his house with your little girlfriendâs blood. Then youâll fucking see what I can do without being lead. Now where is Richie Tozier?â
Denbrough stared him down, clenching his jaw despite the obvious pain it brought him. Tears filled his eyes at the burn, but he didnât blink, didnât move. Bowers let out a humourless chuckle. âWho are you defending, Denbrough? Itâs certainly not Tozier.â
Denbroughâs eyes flicked, just for a moment, over to where Audra was leaning against Criss- eyes squeezed shut, breathing heavily. He looked back up at Bowers and spit out another mouthful of blood as a grin spread across Bowersâ face.
âItâs not Uris or Marsh, theyâve got their own roles in this,â Bowers tapped the gun lightly against the side of his face, every eye in the room except Audraâs following it. âSo it must be your little faggy friend⊠Kaspbrak? Oh yeah, thatâs it, itâs all over your face.â
Denbrough spit his next mouth of bloody spit directly into Bowerâs face and Mike tensed his shoulders in preparation of what would happen next. To the open surprise of everybody in the room, Bowers merely laughed. âYou have no fucking clue whatâs going on here, do you, Denbrough? You think youâre so fucking smart but you know nothing⊠Eddie Kaspbrak is the safest fucker in this whole town. You donât know him at all.â
Mike glanced at to find his friend already looking at him. Looking at Ben, Mike could see Aurora from the corner of his eye. The girl had made to the window, but was frozen against it, watching the scene unfolding around them. Swallowing roughly, Mike turned back just as Greta Bowie came flying into the room with a smirking Patrick Hockstetter behind her.
âWhat the hell is going on?â Greta cried, high pitched and shriek-y. âYou canât just come into my fucking house and start-â
What Greta was going to say, nobody would ever know. Bowers barely glanced away from Bill Denbroughâs face as he turned his gun and fired. The blow flew right through Gretaâs upper forehead, the girl dropping like rock towards the ground. Blood flew out, splattering along the sides of Criss and Audraâs heads and directly against Patrick Hockstetterâs face. Audra let out a loud scream and even Criss looked disgusted and mildly horrified.
âDoes anybody else,â Bowers stood and shouted out towards the room, sounding thoroughly like the unhinged maniac that Mike had known he was since childhood. âWant to fucking interrupt me?â He gestured towards Mike and Ben with his gun. âMorgans? Get the fuck out of that window and shut it, unless you want to wear the new kid.â
Ben whimpered beside Mike as a ghost white Aurora tumbled back into the living room and shut the window with shaking hands. âI didnât want to do this. All I wanted was Richie fucking Tozier.â Bowers said then, gesturing around the room with his gun. âIt wasnât that fucking difficult! Tell me where Richie is and nobody gets fucking hurt! How fucking hard was that?â
âWe donât know where he is!â Audra broke through, hands pressed to her face. In his surprise, Criss seemed to have let go of the girl but neither teen had moved. Bloody and shaking, they both stood rooted to their spots. Crissâ eyes were stuck on Gretaâs body that Patrick had tossed his Devil jacket down to cover. âHe was here but he- he- he left! He and Eddie- they left, we donât know where they went!â
Aurora glanced around, trembling like the leaves on the trees outside. âIâŠ.â She said in a shaky voice. âNo, I donât know where they went.â
âDonât lie to me, Morgans,â Bowers pressed the barrel of the gun to Denbroughâs temple. âOr Iâll kill him, you know I will.â
âWhat do I care if you kill him?â Aurora challenged, body stiffening and eyes hardening. Mike could feel the fear radiating off her, but sheâd managed to swallow all visible signs of it outside of her shaking hands. âAnd I know you wonât. You need him.â
Bowers jaw clenched visibly even from where Mike was standing. Ben was shaking beside him, eyes glued to Aurora. Bowers blew out an angry breath and repositioned his gun to point at her. âMaybe Iâll just kill you then? Donât need you for anything. You really wanna die protecting Richie Tozier?â
âItâs not him Iâm protecting.â Aurora shot back. âAnd I think you know that.â
âIâm not going to hurt Kaspbrak!â Bowers practically roared, while Aurora raised her brow.
âYou werenât gonna hurt Greta either, but she got in your way,â Aurora shot back. âYou arenât the perfect picture of self control right now, Bowers. You seem a little unhinged.â
As Bowers pulled the trigger, Denbrough dove forward and collided into him. The pair tumbled backwards, gun jerking upwards at the final moment and firing into the ceiling. Pieces of the roof tumbled down, Mike diving forward and dropping himself on top of Aurora as it landed on top of them.
Bowers was screaming in a pure rage when Mike pushed the debris off of them. Bowers pushed himself onto his feet, shaking from head to toe. âI FUCKING TOLD YOU WHAT WOULD HAPPEN IF YOU GOT SMART WITH ME, DENBROUGH. I FUCKNIG WARNED YOU.â