I technically don’t have time for this. BUT guess what, I did it anyway.
I also added a few tattoos to Eddie because I imagined this was at the start of the 90s ;) it was fun trying to think of something he would get in this context. So there is a devil holding The nail bat and on his calf the text from the ring in lotr. And also a small sword that was supposed to be Narsil (also lotr), but I got lazy.
re-draw of this beautiful scene of the duffers absolutely murdering the cyrano trope :(
I lost motivation to colour these ones cuz I was deep inside the conformity gate rabbit hole, holy heck this fandom is WILD. we're all truly going crazy together!
There's something about the look on Steve's face the moment he realizes a person he loves is going through something and there's a real possibility he will not be able to fix it.
He can't protect Robin from the world. He can't stop Max from dying. He can't bring Eddie back. But he wants to, because his one purpose is to be the babysitter, the protecter, the one who fixes things. But sometimes your fists aren't enough. Sometimes your will and your hope and your love isn't enough to save everyone. Sometimes there's nothing you can do. And that terrifies him.
Having such a big heart is gonna end in it bleeding.
pairing: eddie munson x reader
summary: your car breaks down in a storm -- conveniently (not so conveniently) right down the road from your ex boyfriend's trailer. you're forced to wait the night out with him. a series!!themes & warnings: TENSION, ANGST, arguing, eddie being eddie, youre obv still in love w each other so its yearny
part 2: the storm (2)
You could barely see. Your sight was never impeccable to begin with, but the mixture of snow and rain flying at your windshield in the 40 mile-per-hour winds definitely didn't help.
You tried not to push your car (which you'd named Daphne) too hard, just easing her through the slush at a gentle speed, trying to ignore what road you were on. You weren't on it for the reasons you used to be. You were just on it now because it was a short-cut from work to home, and you needed the fastest route possible to avoid the storm.
Obviously, that hadn't worked.
"Fucking shit." You muttered to yourself as you hit a particularly wet patch of slush, your tail end swerving just slightly. You corrected yourself with shaky, panicked hands, somehow managing to keep yourself on the road.
Daphne was an old girl, a fixer-upper. But you knew how to handle her wheel.
The headlights of your old sedan cut twin, wavering tunnels through the horizontal sleet. The wipers groaned on their highest setting, fighting a losing battle. You were gripping the steering wheel so hard your knuckles ached, every muscle in your body tensed against the skid and sway of the tires.
You knew this road, sadly. Every pothole, every leaning fence post, every mailbox with a dent from a long-ago baseball. You’d memorized it in sunshine, in twilight, in the deep, comfortable dark of summer nights. You’d ridden down it with your heart full and your hand in his, music blaring from his shitty speakers.
Now, you drove it with your heart in your throat and your eyes straining to see five feet ahead. You just had to get past it. Past him.
The familiar, ramshackle outline of the Munson trailer came into view, a darker smudge against the storm-grey sky. A single, yellow porch light was on, a lonely beacon in the maelstrom. Your foot instinctively eased off the gas, as if slowing down could make you less visible. You held your breath, a stupid, superstitious gesture, as you passed the driveway.
You’d made it maybe two hundred yards past when Daphne gave a violent, shuddering cough. The engine spluttered -- a wet, guttural sound of pure protest. The lights on the dashboard flickered crazily. Then, with a final, dying wheeze, the engine cut out completely. The headlights died, plunging you into near-total darkness, save for the sickly green glow of the radio display.
Silence, except for the hammering of ice and rain on the roof.
“No. No, no, no, come on,” you pleaded, turning the key in the ignition. The starter gave a weak, clicking whirr. Nothing. You tried again. Click-click-click. Despair, cold and sharp, joined the chill already seeping into the car.
You were stranded. In a storm. On this road. Approximately a one-minute walk from the one place in Hawkins you’d said you’d never set foot in again.
You laid your forehead against the freezing steering wheel. A hysterical laugh bubbled up, but it died in your throat. You were well and truly screwed.
Outside, the wind howled like it was laughing at you.
You would not be approaching his door. You knew Daphne was old and at times unreliable, so you kept emergency gear in the backseat. A blanket, a heavy winter jacket, a few bottles of water. A blunt and a lighter for stress. Huffing, you pushed your seat back just enough so that you could climb into the back.
You'd wait the storm out until the morning. Then, you'd walk down the road to the gas station, which opened at 5AM, and call your brother. Or your dad. Or a fucking tow truck. Whoever you thought of first.
The backseat was cramped and smelled of old vinyl and the faint, lingering scent of the pine tree air freshener you’d bought last winter. You wrestled the blanket around your shoulders, then pulled the puffy jacket on over it, creating a sad, bulky nest. The cold was insidious, creeping up through the floorboards, seeping in through the window seals. You could see your breath, little ghostly puffs in the greenish dark.
This was fine. This was manageable. You’d been through worse. A little cold, a little storm. You were tough.
You fumbled for the pre-rolled joint and the lighter in the side pocket of the door. Your fingers were stiff and clumsy with cold. It took three tries to get the flame to catch in the howling draft whistling through the window frame. Finally, the end glowed orange. You took a deep drag, holding the smoke in your lungs, willing it to burn away the panic, the humiliation, the sheer, cosmic unfairness of it all.
The familiar, earthy warmth spread through your chest, taking the sharpest edges off your anxiety. You slumped against the door, watching the sleet paint icy patterns on the window. You were a statue in a glass coffin, waiting for the storm to pass.
You lost track of time. The joint became a stub you carefully extinguished and tucked away. The cold deepened, becoming a tangible, aching presence. You pulled your knees to your chest, tucking your hands under your armpits. The blanket was thin. The jacket helped, but your legs were freezing in your jeans. You started to shiver, a fine, constant tremor you couldn’t control.
This is stupid. This is prideful and stupid. You’re going to get hypothermia over a boy.
But it wasn't just any boy. It was Eddie. And the wound of your ending was still too fresh, too raw, to face the possibility of his pity, or worse, his indifference.
You'd be fine. You weren't freezing to death, you were maintaining body heat. Just a few more hours and you would--
A sharp knock on the window made you yelp.
No. No, no no. It's not who I think it is.
Your heart slammed against your ribs, a trapped bird. Through the ice-fogged glass, distorted by the rivulets of sleet, a dark shape loomed. A familiar silhouette, backlit by the distant, buzzing porch light.
It is. It’s exactly who you think it is.
You stayed perfectly still, a rabbit hoping the predator will lose interest. Maybe if you didn’t move, he’d think you were asleep. Or dead. God, maybe dead is better.
The knock came again, sharper this time. Insistent. Accompanied by a voice, muffled but unmistakably his, cutting through the wind’s howl.
“Open the door, Y/N. I can see you shivering from here.”
The command, the use of your full name -- it brooked no argument. It was the same tone he’d used when you’d tried to walk home from a party in the rain two summers ago, when he’d scooped you up with an exasperated, “Don’t be an idiot,” and driven you home despite your protests.
Defeated, you unlocked the door and pushed it open.
The storm rushed in, but so did he. Eddie filled the cramped space of the open door, dressed in a thick flannel over his t-shirt, a beanie pulled low over his curls. He was holding a massive, industrial-looking flashlight. His eyes swept over your pathetic nest -- the blanket, the jacket, the discarded joint stub on the floor mat -- and a smirk bloomed onto his face.
“What the hell are you doing?” he asked, his voice low, but it wasn't a question. It was an amused accusation.
“Waiting out the storm,” you said, your own voice thin and reedy from cold and disuse. “My car died.”
“I know she died. I heard Daphne cough her last breath. I’ve been watching your sorry ass freeze for the last twenty minutes from my window.” He shook his head, a mixture of disbelief and humor flashing in his eyes. “Get out of the car.”
The smirk. The absolute, insufferable smirk. It ignited a fire in your chest that had nothing to do with warmth. All the cold, all the fear, condensed into a single, white-hot point of pure indignation.
“I’m fine here,” you snapped, your voice gaining strength from the fury.
He leaned further into the car, the flashlight beam highlighting the amusement dancing in his eyes. “Oh, you’re more than fine. You’re a picture of survivalist elegance. The blanket really ties the ‘soon-to-be-icicle’ look together. But see, here’s the thing -- Wayne’s on night shift, and I have a strict policy against letting girls freeze to death within spitting distance of my home. Bad for my rep. So, for the last time: out.”
“My well-being is no longer your concern, Munson,” you shot back, wrapping the pathetic blanket tighter around your shoulders as if it were armor.
“It becomes my concern when you’re littering my view with your old ass car,” he countered, his tone light but his eyes holding yours with an unnerving intensity. “Now, I can do this the easy way, where you walk your proud, stubborn self into the warm trailer like a rational human being. Or I can do it the hard way, which involves me, this flashlight -- which is heavier than it looks -- and a very undignified extraction. Your choice, sweetheart.”
The old pet name, used now as a weapon, stole the breath from your lungs. You stared at him, this infuriating, beautiful, impossible man, standing in a storm offering you shelter you didn't want to need from him.
Another bone-deep shiver rattled through you, betraying your bravado. You saw his smirk soften, just for a second, into something that looked suspiciously like concern before the mask of amused detachment slid back into place.
With a sound of pure, exasperated defeat, you kicked the blanket off your legs. “Fine.”
You climbed out of the car, the wind immediately whipping your hair across your face. You didn't look at him as you slammed the door shut harder than necessary and started stomping through the slush toward the trailer. He fell into step beside you, his longer strides easily keeping pace with your furious march.
“You know,” he said conversationally, as if commenting on the weather, “most people, when their car breaks down in a storm, go to the nearest house. They don’t stage a one-woman Arctic expedition in their backseat.”
“Most people don’t have to worry about the emotional fallout of seeing their ex,” you muttered, staring straight ahead at the glowing porch light.
He snorted, as if it didn't mean much. As if you hadn't been the center of his life for three and a half years.
"I don't bite. Unless you ask me to. You've known me long enough to know that, haven't you?"
The casual, suggestive barb hit its mark, a different kind of chill skittering down your spine. You stopped on the bottom step, looking up to face him. The porch light cast harsh shadows on his face, but his eyes were bright, challenging.
“I know you,” you said, your voice low and steady despite the tremor in your limbs. “That’s the problem. I know exactly what your ‘not biting’ looks like. It looks like… this.” You gestured vaguely between you, at the storm, the trailer, the unbearable tension. “It’s never simple with you, Eddie. It’s a whole production.”
He leaned against the doorframe, blocking the entrance, his arms crossed over his chest. The flannel sleeves were pushed up, revealing the familiar tattoos on his forearms. “And sitting in your car until you got frostbite was the simpler option? Come on. Even you’re not that stupid.”
“It was the safer option!” The words burst out of you, raw and honest. “In there, the only thing I had to fight was the cold. Out here? With you?” You shook your head, a helpless gesture. “It’s much worse.”
The smirk finally vanished. His expression shifted into something unreadable, intense. He studied you -- your wet hair plastered to your forehead, your jacket soaked through, the defiant, fearful light in your eyes. The wind howled around you both, but on this small, lit porch, the world had narrowed to this standoff.
“You’re shaking,” he observed, his voice dropping, losing its edge.
“I’m cold.”
“Yeah.” He pushed off the doorframe and reached to open the door. Warm air, carrying the scent of him and home, rushed out to meet you. “Get inside. Before you really do turn into an icicle. We can argue about the meteorological properties of my personality when you’re not at risk of hypothermia.”
It wasn't an invitation. It was a command, but it was also a retreat. A concession. He was giving you the out, focusing on the practical, immediate danger instead of the emotional minefield.
You hesitated for one more second, then stepped across the threshold into the past. He followed, closing the door firmly on the roaring night, leaving the two of you in the sudden, overwhelming quiet of the trailer, with only the drumming of sleet on the roof and the heavy weight of everything left unsaid between you.
The smell of him was everywhere -- clean laundry, weed, curl product, and the delicious cologne you'd never figured out how he could afford. The memories you'd fought to avoid for about four months now closed in around you. You blinked in surprise at the photo of you two, from when Eddie finally graduated high school, still hung above the kitchen sink. He hadn't taken down the photos. The sight was a physical blow. It was a candid shot -- you were laughing, your head thrown back, and Eddie had his arm slung around your shoulders, grinning at the camera like he’d just won the lottery. It was perched right where it had always been, in the spot of honor where Wayne could see it while he washed dishes. The fact that it was still there felt more intimate, more revealing, than if he’d torn it down in a fit of rage.
You opted to pretend you didn't notice. Anything to avoid a tense conversation. You quickly averted your eyes, focusing on peeling off your soaked jacket. Your fingers were numb and clumsy. The zipper stuck.
“Here,” Eddie’s voice came from behind you, closer than you expected. Before you could protest, his hands were there, brushing yours aside. His touch was efficient, impersonal, as he worked the frozen zipper free. The back of his knuckles grazed the wet fabric of your sweater, and you stiffened.
The jacket came off. You were left standing there in your damp sweater and jeans, feeling more exposed than ever. The trailer’s heat was beginning to penetrate your clothes, a painful thaw that made your skin prickle.
“Bathroom’s the same,” he said, his voice carefully neutral. He pointed a thumb over his shoulder. “There’s towels in the cupboard. You can wear something of mine for the night. It won't hurt you." He asserted, looking at you with an expression that left no room for argument. "You're not wearing the wet shit."
The command in his voice, the sharp practicality of it, was a lifeline in the sea of awkwardness. It gave you a directive, something to do instead of just standing there marinating in regret and residual attraction.
“Fine,” you muttered, not meeting his eyes. You snatched up your purse and made a beeline for the bathroom, needing the space.
The small room was exactly as you remembered. The same slightly-mildewy shower curtain, the same chipped tile, the same half-empty bottle of your shampoo on the edge of the tub. He hadn’t thrown it out. The observation sent a fresh, complicated pang through you. You ignored it, focusing on the task at hand.
Stripping off the wet, icy clothes was a relief. The hot water in the quick shower you took made you feel like you were falling off the bone. You towelled off quickly, the rough fabric bringing you back to reality. Wrapped in the towel, you hesitated. The idea of putting on his clothes… it felt like a surrender. An intimacy you’d forfeited.
A knock at the door made you jump. “It’s on the hook,” Eddie’s voice came through the wood, muffled but clear. “Don’t overthink it. They’re just clothes.” The teasing air to his tone infuriated you.
You unlocked the door and cracked it open. Hanging on the outside hook was a faded, soft-looking gray hoodie and a pair of plaid flannel pajama pants. They were clean. They smelled like his laundry detergent, not like him. It was a small, considerate distinction that somehow made it worse.
You pulled them on. The hoodie was huge, the sleeves swallowing your hands. The pants were too long, pooling around your ankles. You rolled the waistband and cuffed the legs. Looking in the foggy mirror, you saw a ghost -- a version of yourself from years ago, when you’d steal his clothes just because you could, because you loved being surrounded by him.
When you emerged from the bathroom, scrubbed clean and drowning in his clothes, you found him in the kitchenette. He’d put the kettle on and was leaning against the counter, a smirk already playing on his lips as he took you in.
“Well, look at that,” he drawled, his eyes doing a slow, appreciative sweep from your rolled cuffs to the hood swallowing half your face. “The lost princess of Hawkins, slumming it in peasant garb. It’s a good look. A little… derelicte, but it works.”
You scowled, tugging at the too-long sleeve. “Shut up. You’re built like a scarecrow.”
“A scarecrow with impeccable taste in loungewear, thank you very much.” He gestured to the kettle with his chin. “Tea? Or I think Wayne might have some of that horrific instant cocoa you used to love. The kind that’s mostly sugar and artificial flavor.”
The mention of your old preference, the specific memory of you curling on this same couch with a mug of too-sweet cocoa, was a tiny landmine. You ignored it. “Tea’s fine.”
He busied himself with mugs, his back to you. “So,” he said, his voice deliberately light. “What’s the verdict? Is the storm outside still worse than the storm of my terrible personality in here?”
“It’s a tie,” you shot back, settling onto the far end of the couch, tucking your feet under you. “The sleet is less predictable, but you’re louder.”
He barked a laugh, a genuine sound that felt like a shockwave in the small space. “Fair. I’ll take it.” He brought over two mugs, handing you one. His fingers brushed yours. Neither of you flinched. He sat on the opposite end of the couch, leaving a respectable, cavernous gap between you. He took a sip, watching you over the rim. “You know, for a minute there, I thought you were really gonna try to wait it out. I had a whole running commentary planned. ‘Hour one: the princess develops a slight shiver. Hour two: regret sets in. Hour three: a single, frozen tear…’”
“You were watching me?” You tried to sound annoyed, but it came out strangely breathless.
“Entertainment’s slim during an ice apocalypse,” he shrugged, but his eyes were sharp on yours. “Besides, it was like a nature documentary. The Tragic Pride of the North American Ex-Girlfriend.”
“You’re an asshole.”
“And yet you’ve come right back to me.” He grinned, unrepentant. “Seems like we’re both dealing with unfortunate realities tonight. Daphne threw you to the dogs.”
You rolled your eyes, glaring at him.
"Don't talk shit about Daphne."
He snorted back, tilting his head back to glance out the window at said object.
"I knew as soon as I met Daphne that she'd screw you over one day. Wayne said he'd get you something new," he shrugged. "But nooo. You loved the death-trap too much."
The barb landed differently this time. It wasn't just about the car; it was about your stubbornness, your sentimentality, your refusal to let go of things -- people -- even when they were bad for you. It was a mirror held up to your own choices, and the reflection stung.
“I don’t just throw things away because they’re old or unreliable,” you shot back, your voice tight. “Some things are worth fixing.”
The moment the words left your mouth, you realized your mistake. The air in the trailer seemed to freeze solid, thicker than the ice on the windows.
Eddie’s grin vanished. His eyes, which had been sparkling with mischievous challenge, went flat and dark. He leaned forward slowly, placing his mug on the coffee table with exaggerated care. The click of ceramic on wood was deafening in the silence.
“Is that so?” he asked, his voice dangerously quiet. All traces of teasing were gone, replaced by a cold, simmering anger. “Things worth fixing, huh? That’s a fascinating philosophy.” He tilted his head, his gaze boring into you. “Tell me, then. Where’s the line? At what point does something become so fucking broken it’s not worth the effort anymore? When it leaves you stranded in the cold? Or is it before that? Maybe when it makes you feel so shitty you have to lie to get away from it?”
Each question was a lash. He wasn't talking about Daphne anymore. He was talking about you. About him. About you and him.
You flinched, pulling the oversized hoodie tighter around yourself as if it could shield you. “Eddie, that’s not what I meant--”
“Isn’t it?” he interrupted, standing up in one fluid, angry motion. He began to pace the small length of the living room, his movements restless, charged. “Because from where I’m sitting, it sounds exactly like what you meant. You’ll nurse along a shitbox car because it’s familiar. You’ll fight for it. But a relationship? A person? Nah. That you just… walk away from. No repairs. No fixing. Just a clean break and a bullshit excuse about ‘different paths.’ Or 'going nowhere.'” He stopped pacing and turned to face you, his chest heaving. “So forgive me if I’m a little fucking confused about your automotive morals.”
The raw pain in his voice, the accusation that cut straight to the heart of your own guilt, was too much. The tears you’d been fighting since you arrived sprang to your eyes, hot and immediate.
“You think it was easy?” you choked out, surging to your feet to face him. The blanket pooled at your feet. “You think I just woke up one day and decided to ‘throw you away’? I was terrified! I loved you so much it felt like I was drowning, and everyone was telling me you were a lost cause! I didn’t know how to fix us because I didn’t even know what was broken!”
“You could have talked to me!” he roared, the sound raw and startling in the small space. He took a step toward you, his hands clenched at his sides. “You could have fought with me! Instead, you just… left. You handed me a note written in fucking platitudes and disappeared. That’s not fixing something, Y/N. That’s scrapping it for parts.”
You were both shouting now, four months of suppressed hurt and anger erupting in the warm, claustrophobic space. The storm outside was nothing compared to the tempest in the room.
“I was trying to save myself!” you cried, the confession ripped from you.
“FROM WHAT?” he yelled back, throwing his hands up. “FROM ME?”
The question echoed, brutal and final. You stared at each other, breathing heavily, the truth of his words hanging between you like a guillotine.
From me.
In your darkest moments, yes. From the chaos, from the uncertainty, from the sheer, overwhelming force of loving Eddie Munson. You’d been trying to save yourself from the very thing you’d missed every single day since.
The fight drained out of you as quickly as it had come, leaving you hollow and shaking. You looked at him -- really looked at him -- seeing not the infuriating, teasing boy from the porch, but the man whose heart you’d shattered with your fear. The man who still had your picture on his wall.
“Yeah,” you whispered, the admission a surrender. A single tear traced a path down your cheek. “From you.”
He recoiled as if you’d struck him physically. All the anger bled from his face, replaced by a wounded, devastating comprehension. He took a step back, then another, until his back hit the wall. He slid down it slowly until he was sitting on the floor, his head in his hands.
You stood frozen, the weight of what you’d just said crushing you. A moment passed.
You glanced at him, hearing movement. He was looking the other direction, his profile painful to see. The flickering light of the lamp caught the silver in his rings, the curve of his lower lip. He was still so beautiful it hurt.
The silence fell upon you. Tense. Pregnant with too many emotions to name. You looked away, but you could feel him turn to you, his gaze heating up your skin. His sight was always so perceptive, so thoughtful and warm. You were afraid of him watching you, afraid of his intelligent brown eyes deducing things that you didn't want deduced.
You fought the urge to get up and hide from his eyes. In the bathroom. The spare bedroom, hiding under the covers.
"You cut your hair."
The statement was simple, but heavy. You could hear the suppressed anger in his tone. The hurt. The ache. The holding back of tears, the holding back of a rage fit. His voice was a broken rasp, a quiet devastation that was worse than any shout. It wasn't just an observation. It was an accusation of a change he hadn't been part of, a loss he'd had to witness from a distance. You cut your hair. You changed. You moved on without me.
Your hand flew self-consciously to the ends, now resting just above your shoulders. "Yeah," you whispered, your own voice trembling. "A while ago."
He didn't look at you. He kept his gaze fixed on some distant point on the wall, his jaw working. "I liked it long."
Three words. They held a universe of grief. I liked it. I liked you. I liked us.
A sob caught in your throat. This was agony. This quiet, raw aftermath was worse than the screaming. It was the autopsy of your relationship, performed in the cold, clear light of shared pain.
"I did it after," you admitted, the words tumbling out in a rush. "I thought... I thought if I looked different, I'd feel different. But I just felt... bald. And sad."
He hummed.
"Had to erase anything I touched, huh? I was that bad?"
You shuddered, looking up at the ceiling.
"Stop it, Eddie. Fucking stop it."
He laughed humorlessly, his eyes finally locking back onto yours. The predatory fire was back, the ruthless analyzing.
"Stop what? What part of this is what you didn't want? You chose it," he said, his voice raw.
"Stop, Eddie!" You cried out.
He was never a good listener. Especially not when he was hurt. Especially not when the armor of sarcasm had been stripped away, leaving only the raw, pulsing nerve of his own perceived worthlessness.
He surged to his feet, a sudden, violent motion that made you flinch back against the couch cushions. He loomed over you, his hands clenched into fists at his sides, but he didn't move closer. The threat wasn't physical; it was emotional, and it was crushing.
"You want me to stop?" he demanded, his voice a low, dangerous snarl. "You want me to pretend like you didn't look at our life together and decide it was a fucking prison sentence? Fine. Let's play pretend. Let's pretend you're just a girl whose car broke down. Let's pretend I'm just a guy being hospitable. Let's pretend the last three years never happened. Is that easier for you? Is that safer?"
He was breathing heavily, his chest rising and falling in sharp bursts. Every word was a jab, designed to hurt because he was hurting, and he wanted you to feel it, to own it. You couldn't take it anymore.
You stood, grabbing your wet jacket and clothes.
"What are you doing?" He snapped.
"Leaving," you said, your voice surprisingly steady as you shoved your arms into the damp, cold sleeves of your jacket. The fabric felt like a slab of ice against your skin, a shocking contrast to the warmth of the trailer. "You win, Eddie. Always."
He crossed the distance in three steps, grabbing ahold of the jacket. Quickly and efficiently, he yanked it off from you, tossing it to the floor.
"You're not."
His voice was final. It wasn't a plea this time; it was a decree, forged in the fire of his own panic. The sight of you actually leaving, of you choosing the literal storm over his emotional one, had short-circuited his anger, replacing it with something more primal: possession.
You stood frozen, the sudden absence of the jacket leaving you exposed in the thin, borrowed hoodie. You could see the wild, frantic beat of his pulse in his throat. His hands, which had just stripped the jacket from you, hovered in the air between you, as if he wanted to grab onto something else -- your arms, your shoulders, you -- but was holding himself back by a thread.
"You're not leaving," he repeated, quieter now, his eyes locked on yours. "You walk out that door, you'll freeze. And I… I can't…" He swallowed hard, the sentence dying in his throat.
The raw, unspoken terror in his eyes undid you. The proud, furious exit was forgotten. You were both trapped -- by the weather, by history, by this devastating, inescapable connection that neither rage nor distance could sever.
A shuddering breath escaped you. "Then what do you want from me, Eddie?" Your voice was a broken whisper. "You want me to stand here and let you flay me alive? Because I can't do that either."
The fight seemed to leave him in a rush. His shoulders slumped, and he took a step back, running both hands over his face. When he looked at you again, he just looked exhausted. Defeated.
"I don't know," he admitted, the confession hollow. "I don't know what I want. I just know I can't watch you walk into that."
The silence stretched, thick and painful. The wind howled a reminder of the impossible choice: stay in the emotional warzone, or flee into the physical one.
Finally, he gestured vaguely toward the couch. "Just… sit down. Please. I'll… I'll shut up. We don't have to talk. We don't have to do anything. Just… exist. Until morning."
It was the barest minimum. A ceasefire with no terms, no resolution. Just a mutual agreement not to destroy each other -- or yourselves -- for the next few hours.
Slowly, feeling numb, you walked back to the couch and sat on the very edge, as far from his side as possible. He didn't sit next to you. He sank into the armchair opposite, putting the width of the coffee table between you. He picked up his cold mug of tea, stared into it, and said nothing.
A/N: there IS a part 2 to this if you guys liked it. PLEASE lmk :)) i wanted some heartbreaking eddie angst bc i love hurting myself
because i'm the one you want ⋮ more mike wheeler bf hcs , part one
・mike wheeler cannot hide his facial expressions for the life of him. whenever you say no to him he'll look at you with a small sulk on his face and furrow his eyebrows together, making your boyfriend look like a child being denied candy
"i can't hang out on saturday." you pop out of nowhere. mike pauses, his brows curl up and he subtly pouts, creating the most lovable face anyone has ever seen. you curl your lips in a sorrowful frown. "i know! i'm sorry, please don't look like that you know i can't—"
"no, i'm okay. it's fine." he tries to smoothly say, but his expression says other wise. you raise a brow. "you're giving me the puppy dog eyes again."
"what? what puppy dog eyes?"
・mike walks you home every single day. even if he has his bike, he'll just lug it around and follow you to your house to make sure you're safe. sometimes the walks are silent as you both admire the scenery of hawkins that surrounds you, other times you'll stop at the store to get candy. but most times it's you verbosing about your day as mike listens with both ears. and he doesn't know it, but you take the longer route home when he's by your side.
・he likes your bedroom more than his. it's his second home—his oasis. the main reason is his room is probably one of the nastiest places ever—he doesn't clean up after himself, there's old homework everywhere, and he's pretty sure something died in there. but yours on the other hand, it's so you. from every inch. the soft lights hanging from your ceiling, the vanity that has make-up neatly propped on its shelves, the soft blanket you go to sleep with every night, even the carpet smells like you.
・mike spends most weekends over at your house that he's now made it his own. mike has his own towel in your bathroom and everything. usually you guys lay in bed and listen to music together, either in silence or deep in conversation. he feels so serene when he's in your domain; the delicate intricacies of your room comforts him.
・your guys' friends kind of despise you sometimes from how often you leave to go 'do stuff'. which they all know is code for making-out. you try not to do it so much when mike's with his friends, but your boyfriend on the other hand has no shame.
you'll be sitting with all your friends at lunch, exchanging all of the gossip you knew of, and then there comes mike. he shows up right behind you, putting a hand on your shoulder as everyone's heads turn to look at him, and they roll their eyes by instinct.
"can i borrow y/n for a sec?" he asks without waiting for an answer and grabs your wrist, ushering you away from the bustling crowd of students and into an empty bathroom with dingy lighting. you giggle as mike presses you against the cold sink counter and kisses you greedily, his lips smushing yours.
an arm loosely hangs over his neck and mike sort of pushes your body to twist to the side, furthering the kiss. his hands settle on your nape, a thumb softly stroking your temple. he's always a little shy at first, but after about a minute or two of kissing he warms up and gets bold.
his hold on you is gentle but firm, like he doesn't want you to leave.
your free hand grips onto the sink as a form of support because mike is just so damn needy. he forces his tongue deep in your mouth, reaching every minute part of it. the once barren bathroom instantaneously became suffocating when mike draws from you for just a second to catch his breath before swooping back in.
・during the winters he wears the forest green scarf you gave him as a small present every day. it's almost always secured around his neck under the jacket he's wearing. you occasionally point it out and says how cute it is, to which his freezing ears turn hot in an instant. mike says the thought of you keeps him warm.
・he has polaroids of you everywhere. your boyfriend loves to take pictures of you during the most random moments. they stay pinned on the cork bulletin board in his room, alongside all the letters you've written to him—which he looks admires at least once before passing it on his way out. the one he keeps of you in his wallet is you sitting on the curb eating your ice cream and looking up at him.
・he tries not to be too overbearing but mike is the jealous type, no matter how much he denies it. he finds his grip on a number two pencil getting tighter as a boy in your math class asks for you help, to which you scoot your desk just an inch closer to look over at his paper. that guy could have asked anyone else around him—literally anyone—but he asked you.
mike's watch on you is that of a hungry vulture, seeing how you tapped your finger on the guy's worksheet to show him the answer. and the second you show a smile—one that is identical to those you give him all the time—he walks over mid-class. mike jams in between the two of you and stands in the walkway, looking down at you; jaw nailed together, hands too deep in the pockets of his coat.
god, it was always so obvious.
"hey." he has no plan up until this point, but anything to get you to stop talking to this mouth-breather.
"hey mikey," you bat your eyes, a touch of confusion on your face as you notice his abrupt behavior. the classmate you were helping sticks his head out to the side to meet your face and says "uhm, she was in the middle of helping me."
mike doesn't even turn around to acknowledge the guy and instead focuses on you. but not really. he's still focused on the thought of the two of you together and his face continues to tense. "what'd you get for problem nineteen?"
your eyes sort of roll as you catch on to what was going on in mike's head, but you answer with a smile. "seventy-eight."
・but mike's usually not like this. he's actually the typical playful boyfriend that sweeps you off your feet before plopping you down on the bed and climbs over you. he's smiling the whole time, seeing how giggly and girly you got when he caged you in between his skinny arms. he dives his head down to the crook of your neck and his nose grazes your skin, tickling you and drawing out more giggles.
"Oh, That Little Thing? Really?"
Roommate!Eddie x Reader
Summary: Eddie, rushed and late, kisses you on his way out the door this morning. You have not been able to let it go. When he comes home, you avoid him, shy. But he is not stupid. He catches on. And he could not get any more amusement out of this.
WC: 3.2k
Warnings: Language, Eddie being a little shit, fluff, teeny bit of angst.
Masterlist
"God, where the hell--"
You couldn't help the amused smile that graced your tired cheeks as you watched the scene before you. Eddie struggled to buckle his belt as he tore apart the couch cushions, flinging them aside as he dug. Someone had misplaced their keys, and they had overslept. It wasn't looking too good for Eddie right now. You sipped your coffee casually, leaning against the kitchen counter.
"Are you sure you haven't seen them?" He asked for maybe the seventh time, running a hand through his unruly curls.
"Nope," you replied. "Not my keys."
He shot you a glare-- not necessarily an angry one, but certainly not pleased with your comment. "Will you please look one more time?"
A look to the left, a look to the right. Nothing. You shrugged, earning a groan from Eddie. You were starting to feel a bit bad. His boss wasn't exactly the kindest when it came to early morning fumbles, and he had already been late once this week. One more mistake might cost him his job. With little hope, you set down your coffee and joined him in the living room, stepping carefully over the cushions strewn about the floor.
"Did you look under the couch?" You asked.
"Of course, I did. I don't understand how they could have just--"
Eddie watched with a raised eyebrow as you lowered yourself to your stomach. He didn't mind the view, either. To his surprise, you extended an arm under the couch, pulling back within seconds. In your hand was a silver key with a red tag-- the key to his van.
"Then what's this?"
Eddie chuckled sheepishly, taking the key from your grasp. "I, uh, I guess I missed it. You're a lifesaver; thank you."
You gave him a warm smile, which he returned with more than you expected. In an instant, and only for that instant, his lips landed on your cheek-- dry, soft, but not chapped. You felt yourself bluescreen, any thoughts dying off. And then his lips were gone. So was he, with little more than, "I'll be back tonight!"
You stood in the sea of cushions, dumbfounded. What the hell had just happened? Eddie doesn't do that-- he doesn't kiss his friends. He's clingy as shit, but he's not that clingy. And all you had done was find his keys; it wasn't like you bought him a car that actually started reliably in the winter. Why did-- why did he do that?
It took you too long to bring yourself back to Earth. You had to be overthinking this. Yes, that was the problem. It was you, not Eddie. He didn't mean it. Just a friendly 'thank you.' Nothing more, nothing less.
That's what you tried to tell yourself as you put the couch back together. You weren't very convincing. You and Eddie had always had a... certain dynamic. It wasn't romantic, but it was more than friends. He definitely had a bit of control over you, but he was wrapped around your finger. One little pout with your big, doe eyes and rosy cheeks, and he'd fold. It had gotten him in some situations before. That was how he ended up with French braids and tattoos colored in with Sharpie on your birthday. And how you ended up sleeping in his bed-- in his arms-- during the last heinous storm. Neither of you wanted to admit just how head-over-heels you were for the other.
"It didn't mean anything," you mumble, dumping your now cold coffee down the sink. "Not a thing."
You told yourself you believed it constantly through the rest of the day. Staying busy helped. The vacuum helped drown the thought that maybe it did mean something. A walk down to the dog park certainly distracted you for a while. So did your weekly screening of Young Guns.
But once you heard the little jingle of keys in the door, and the creaking hinges, you knew you were cooked. The thoughts came rushing back with Eddie's arrival, and so did the embarrassment.
"I'm home!" He called out.
Normally, you would call out with a greeting, or your location, but today? Radio silence. You didn't know how to respond, not with your brain as fried as it was.
"Hello?"
You opened your mouth as you reclined on your bed, but no sound came out. No words waited in the queue.
"Hellooo?" He almost whined. You could hear the desire for your attention in his voice.
With a swallow, you worked up the nerve to respond. "Just-- just a second!"
Eddie's steps quickly came towards your door. Running on autopilot and adrenaline, you stood up, then stopped. What was the plan now? Just stand here like a dummy?
You didn't get the chance to think of step two before Eddie pushed your door open. He greeted you with a wide smile, opening his arms for you.
"Hey, Y/N. What are you up to?"
"N-nothing, really," you answered nervously, stepping into his arms. His chest was warm, the fumes clinging to him smelling strongly of nicotine and home.
"Yeah? You sure?" He looked down at you with a smirk. "You sound nervous. And you're so tense." He rubbed his hands up and down your back for emphasis.
You nodded, not sure of what else you could do.
"Mmm, I don't believe you," he teased in a sing-song voice. "You're all nervous, and tense, and you look like you got caught with your hand in the cookie jar. Were you doing something naughty?"
"God, Eddie; no!" You exclaimed, face flushing. You leaned slightly away from him, flustered.
"Oh, yeah? You sure?"
"You just-- caught me at a weird time."
"Did I?"
"Yes. And that's it." You crossed your arms over your chest, trying your damnedest to be convincing.
"Whatever helps you sleep at night," he said with a shrug. "So, listen. I know it's my night to cook dinner, but I'm just not feeling it. How's pad Thai sound?"
"Fine."
"Two stars, right?"
"Yeah."
"Cool. I'll go order, and I'll let you finish up your private time."
"Eddie!"
He cackled as he sauntered back out your bedroom door. "Have fun!"
Asshole.
~~~~~~~~
Normally, you ate dinner with Eddie. Even when you wanted nothing more to just lay down by yourself and wallow in whatever emotions you felt, Eddie always got a little time with you every night. It was his favorite part of the day, dinner. He would never admit it, but on the nights when you couldn't be home for dinner, he felt absolutely miserable. Abandoned. Like a dog that didn't understand that their owner would be back later, just standing at the door as their tail slowly fell back down. But you couldn't waterboard that out of him. He would take it to the grave and whatever lied beyond that. So, when you told him that you were going to eat in your room tonight, he let out a whine of anguish and distress.
"No!" He cried. "Why? We always eat together. We're eating together, okay? Come sit." He patted the spot beside him on the couch, a pleading look in his eyes.
"I just have some stuff I need to work on, Eds. Really important. Maybe we can watch a movie later instead, 'kay?"
"Not okay," he grumbled, setting his box of pad Thai beside him and folding his arms. "Not okay at all."
"Sorry, Eddie."
It hurt your heart to walk away. You could feel his eyes burning holes into your back, almost begging you to come back and sit with him. You felt horrible leaving him, but you just couldn't face him. Not when he seemed to have forgotten about that little parting gift he gave you this morning. Because then, that really meant that you were overthinking, and you didn't want it to be true. No matter how many times you told yourself it was true today, you didn't really want to accept it.
And so, you sat on your bed, notebook open and blank. The work you did need to do wasn't happening. You just couldn't think straight. Well, you couldn't think about anything other than Eddie, to be frank. You occasionally picked at the noodles, not really eating intently. They didn't taste right without Eddie beside you.
"God, pull your head out of your ass," you admonished, dropping your head into your hands. "It didn't mean anything. Get it through your thick skull."
But your skull was just too thick. The thought couldn't penetrate through, unable to join and soothe the jumbled mess of questions already residing in your brain.
Maybe a shower would help.
~~~~~~~~
A shower did not, in fact, help. It didn't help your thoughts, it didn't help your anxiety, and it sure as hell didn't help poor Eddie out on the couch. He couldn't help but feel that something was wrong. Had he said something? Did his comment about private time really get to you that bad? Or maybe you didn't like pad Thai anymore and just didn't want to tell him?
What had he done?
He sat on the couch for a long while, watching as Sam Elliot and Patrick Swayze kicked absolute ass in their 1989 flick. Dalton flirting with Doc didn't make him feel any better. He was always flirting with you. He loved the reaction it got him-- the deep blush and squeals of embarrassment made his heart swell. He hadn't flirted with you once today. He felt like he was going through withdrawals. He needed his bestie back, he decided. He was going to find out what he had done wrong, and he would right it in a flash, and then, he'd be back to teasing and flirting like his life depended on it.
Just as he made the decision to go hunt you down, you stepped out of the steaming bathroom. Your hair, still a bit damp, hung down long over your back. Your fleece pants bunched up around your ankles, too long but too comfortable to do anything about. And your oversized shirt-- no, wait; that was definitely his shirt-- went down to almost your knees, giving you a doll-like look. It was almost adorable.
You tried to walk right past him and to the kitchen, but somebody found their voice. It was strong and smooth as the coffee you had been forced to dump this morning, and it was calling for you.
"Y/N? Come see me for a moment."
Your heart sunk. Shit. Here came the conversation you didn't want to have. With stiff shoulders and a pounding heart, you shuffled over to the couch, stopping a couple feet in front of him.
"Yeah?"
"Come sit," he commanded softly, patting his lap.
You flushed. You could only think of one other time you had sat on his lap. But to be fair, you needed it. You had been absolutely hysterical, having had the worst day and horrible stomach pains. Even if he hadn't pulled you onto his lap that day, you probably would have crawled up there yourself. With a deep breath that did nothing for your nerves, you lowered yourself cautiously onto his lap.
His hands went to your waist immediately, a small 'tsk' sound slipping from his lips. "No, I wanna see you," he informed you as he rotated you so you were straddling his hips. Looking him right in the eyes. His warm, honey eyes that reminded you of the safest place in the world.
Don't think of that now. Just get this over with.
"What's up?" You asked, feigning a collected manner.
"You, my friend, have been avoiding me." He tapped your nose. "And I want to know why."
"I haven't--"
"Oh, bullshit," he scolded. "You have, too, and don't lie to me. You always tell me exactly where you are when I get home, and you never hesitate to come hug me. I had to shout three whole times for a response. And if we're being honest-- unlike somebody-- I don't think you we're having some fun with yourself. I think you were avoiding me. And then you didn't want to eat dinner with me. We always eat dinner together when we're both here. We've done it since we moved in. So, there's only one explanation here: you're avoiding me, and I want to know why."
A little pout found its way to your lips. You'd been found out. You should have expected this. It might have taken him a couple extra years to graduate, and he might not be the sharpest tool in the shed, but Eddie wasn't stupid. Especially when it came to you.
"No, none of that, now." His thumb rubbed over the corner of your lips. "Put that pout away and tell me why you're avoiding me."
"I-- um..."
"Come on," he coaxed. I don't have all night. I mean, I do, but there's other things I'd like to do tonight than try and pry the truth out of you. So out with it. Why is my best friend avoiding me?"
"Because you kissed me."
You could barely hear the words. They came out as such a pathetic little statement, something you would more expect to hear from a child in trouble than yourself.
"What was that?"
You steeled yourself, forcing your pout off your cheeks and looking into Eddie's patient eyes.
"You kissed me today."
A look of realization crossed Eddie's face, quickly followed by a smile. He chuckled and shook his head, tucking his arm across your back and pulling you close.
"Oh, that little thing? Really? One little kiss is all it takes to get you all wound up?" He teased. "That's pretty pathetic, you know."
"It's not funny, Eddie--" You tried to pull yourself from the crook of his neck, but one firm, warm hand snuck up your neck and cradled your head right where it was.
"Shh, it's fine. I'm not making fun of you," he assured, even though the smile was still plastered across his face. "I mean, I am, but it's sweet. That's all."
He held you like that for a moment longer, fingers working through a couple tangles in your damp hair, before he spoke up again.
"But... why did it get you so worked up? There's no reason for all this... tension."
You huffed, feeling the pout work its way back to your face. There was plenty of reason to get worked up. Your best friend, who you had been all but pining over for the past several years, kissed you, and he didn't seem to think twice about it.
"It's stupid."
Now this, Eddie wouldn't stand for. The smile erased from his face, he gently tugged your head out of the spot he had put you in, looking you dead in the face. "It's not stupid," he insisted firmly. "No matter what it is. Now you tell me right now why you're all stressed about it before I call Billy."
"Don't call Billy; he scares me--"
"Then answer the question," he chuckled, hands finding their way to your cheeks. "I promise, I won't judge you. I've never judged you before-- except for when you put mustard on your meatloaf; that was a war crime. So unless it's that, you're absolutely fine."
"...promise?"
God, you sounded so small. A warm smile found its way to Eddies lips once more, unable to get over just how precious you were.
"Yes, hon. I promise."
Hon. He had never called you that before.
"It, um... I don't know what it meant. I really wanted it to mean what I wanted it to mean, but I told myself that there's no way it could," you admitted.
"And what did you want it to mean, hmm?" Eddie could already see the answer. If he wanted to be kind, he would have answered for you. But he needed to hear you say it.
"Eddie--"
"No, no, I want to hear it. Tell me what you wanted it to mean."
Hesitantly, you put yourself back in the crook of his neck. His hand automatically followed you, cupping your skull in a comforting weight. You couldn't look at him.
"Just say it," he said softly. "It'll be fine."
You let out a shaky sigh into his skin, closing your eyes. Now or never.
"I wanted it to mean that you liked me," you muttered.
"You wanted it to mean that I liked you," he mused, absently rubbing your back. "Interesting."
Nobody said anything for a moment. You were too scared to breathe, and Eddie? He couldn't think of a single thing. Strange for him. He always had some smart quip locked and loaded, but not now. Maybe it was how small you seemed. Or how genuinely upset you were. Or the fact that he did like you but was just a bit too prideful to admit it.
"What would you do if it did mean that I liked you?" He asked quietly.
"...I guess be really happy. I don't know."
"And if it was just... friendly? Just a nice little 'thank-you' for saving my ass?"
"...I guess be really sad." This answer came out a tad quieter than the last. It had been friendly. Nothing more, nothing less. But you were too damn hopeless to see that.
"Well, we can't have that, can we?"
It took a moment for Eddie's words to register. We can't have that, can we? So, opposingly, we could have you be really happy. Was that right?
"...What?"
Eddie shook his head, a soft smile on his lips. He tangled his fingers in your hair and tugged just slightly, coaxing you from your hiding spot.
"I said, 'we can't have that, can we?' We can't have you being all sad," he repeated.
"So, what-- what is it that you're saying?" You needed to hear it. Like he needed to hear that you wanted the kiss to mean more, you needed to hear him say that it did mean more. "What did it mean, Eddie?"
He pushed some hair out of your way, brown eyes locking onto yours. "What if I gave you a hint? I like games."
You frowned. "Eddie--"
"Shh." He put a finger to your lips, a smirk growing on his own. "I think you'll like this hint."
In a moment, his lips replaced his finger, locking gently onto yours. They were still soft, dry, and you could taste the pad Thai on them, but they were also kind. Loving. You couldn't bring yourself to kiss him back, absolutely stunned.
After he clocked that you weren't kissing him in return, he pulled back. He had thought that something was wrong, but once he saw your wide-eyed expression and jaw fall to the floor with nothing left to anchor it in place, he chuckled. He tapped the tips of his fingers under your chin twice.
"Pick your jaw up, hon," he teased. "And tell me if you understand now."
All you could do was nod. He smiled proudly.
"Good. You gonna let me do that again? Because I really liked it."
Again, a nod.
"Are you going to participate this time?"
Once more.
"Words, please. This is contractual, you know, and your word is your bond."
It took you a moment to find your voice. When you used it, it was shaky and not at all confident, but it did its job.
"Uh huh."
"Good."
And then, his lips were back.
Tada? Haven't written an imagine before, so feedback is much appreciated.
Ask to join my taglist! Message me with the character(s) you want to be notified of (or just all posts in general), and I'll add you. Requests are welcome!
your finn series is so freaking good!! can you write about them meeting fans in public? i’d also love to see what fan accounts would post about them, like with them theorizing they’re dating :D
awww thank you!!!! :D
ooo yes this would be fun to see them get home and see they're being tagged in fan accounts where people start speculating i'll write this as if a fan account just posted the pic on their account and the caption is them saying they saw y/n and finn out together and now everyone is like ooohhh they hang out?? are they dating??? etc etc
takes place sometime during season 4 filming so dating for 3ish years already
off the record au masterlist
strangerthingslover011 just met y/n and finn today!!!! i saw them out together and they were super super sweet when i asked for a pic and i just had to share. they said they were shopping for groceries :p
view all comments
user1 OMG!! sooo cool!!! congrats!!
user2 AW i feel like we never see finn just out and about so this is so cute
user3 wait i didn't know y/n and finn hung out like that
| user4 they're pretty close tbh they have been since season 3
| user5 yeah they're like best friends i'd say
user6 shopping for groceries together? 🤨
| user7 friends can't shop for groceries together?
| user6 no they can idk it's just funny they went together
user8 omg they're prob filming for season 4 rn!!! how fun!!
user9 i'm just gonna say it i think they're dating
| user10 uh proof???
| user11 there's soooo much proof look at @finnxynfans they have like all the drama and tea about them possibly dating
| user12 lowkey tho i agree there have been like a LOTT of signs and subtle hints that they could be
finnxynfans someone else ran into finn and y/n today after last week's run in! here's also some photos of them together eating lunch before the pic all together was taken EDIT: @/user wasn't trying to stalk them she just didn't know if she was gonna be brave enough to ask for a pic so she took these beforehand lol
view all comments
user1 this is the second appearance and i am getting sus ngl
user2 they have to be dating no way they aren't
user3 what if it's PR tho??
| user4 i feel like they're not ones to be in a pr relationship
user5 i've been sayinggg this since like the end of season 3 press like they're totally dating i also think they lived together briefly during covid
user6 i think they've been dating since season 3 and have been keeping it quiet bc they know we're insane LOL
| user5 valid response bc i would too keep my relationship private if i was as famous as them
| user7 either way if they are or if they aren't i think they have a really cute friendship and we shouldn't be ruining that by shipping them bc it makes things so awk
user8 maybe we'll get more insight during season 4 press bc i feel like it's always so obvious during that if there's something going on
user9 she's living everyone's dream if her and finn are dating
user10 they make so much sense tho so i can see it
| user11 i do agree they are perfect for each other
user12 they were totally on a date when she ran into them LOL
finnxynfans SEASON 4 LEAK! SEASON 4 LEAK! finn and y/n spotted in their clothes for mike and sloane sharing a very intimate hug. he's cradling her head and she looks quite distressed and holding onto him tightly
view all comments
user1 omg is mane finally happening?????
user2 this is a crazyyy leak omg
user3 i need mike and sloane to happen they teased it wayyy too much last season
user4 ok but what if finn and y/n are dating irl and they convinced the duffers to get their characters together too
user5 what if they're not in character and they're just sharing that hug
| user4 that would be such crazyyy work tbh
user6 i get more convinced everyday that there's something going on between finn and y/n because even tho they're in character, that's a crazy hug
| user1 well they're also actors so they know how to make it look and feel real
finnxynfans THIS JUST IN: finn and y/n were NOT in character when this was taken
| user6 UR LYINGGGGG
user7 i know it's cute but i hope y/n is okay if she looks that distressed and finn is comforting her
| user8 wait ur right awww
user9 finn is sooo boyfriend in this wow
user10 i wonder what was going on
| user11 me too i hope everything is okay
user12 even if they're not in character i still want mane to happen bc it would be so cutie for their development