Heiir4iser - Kass - Tumblr Blog
Sometimes I think about the kids seeing billy lounging at the pool with a shirt on in s3 and literally going like âoh no, he hasnât got his tits out, something is wrong!!â and the funniest thing is that they were right



ROBIN BUCKLEY in STRANGER THINGS 3.03 | Chapter Three: The Case of the Missing Lifeguard
these past couple months iâve been in a shifting slump. I havenât really thought about shifting like i used to and i donât have the urge or motivation to shift and im kind of ok with it ? I still want to shift of course i didnât go through years of attempts and learning and growing throughout my journey for nothing but iâve kind of put it on the back burner.
I want to bring back the spark but idk how. Iâve tried rewriting my script, reading fan fiction, connecting to my dr self but itâll only last a couple days. Maybe this is a sign to take a break but at the same time i donât want to. Iâm a bit lost.
Surrender.

You are in control. You have always been. You can shift and you will shift.

Stop looking for answers outside yourself.
You already have all it takes to wake up in your DR.
You are the key to shifting because you are all you need to shift.
Relax.
There's nothing left for you to do.
Stop overthinking it. Stop overcomplicating it.
Breathe.
Let go of control. It's okay. You got this.
Shifting is inevitable.
Accept it; YOU WILL SHIFT.
I believe in you, happy shifting <3
xoxo, Hydra

Not gonna lie, this was mainly for me. But hopefully, someone else needed to hear it too.

Character Moodboard - Eddie Munson
i donât think you guys understand how deeply i love lisa frankenstein and someone made an eddie fanfic based on it ?!!?! this was made for me actually !
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(A Lisa Frankenstein, Eddie Munson AU)



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Summary: After a series of unfortunate events in your life, and lonelier than ever, you often turn to a dead guy and his tombstone for comfort. Never in your wildest, fucked up dreams did you imagine heâd turn to you for the same thing, but you find yourself hiding a living corpse, bringing him further to life, reaping some justice, and cutting off a lot of body parts all while trying to fit in and falling in love.
a/n: Part One is here! Just want to say thank you to my friends for hearing me rant and rave about Lisa Frankenstein for weeks now, though Iâve been unbearable with this concept in my head. This will be the longest chapter, just to establish some stuff, but weâll get to the slaying! Hope you love Undead!Zombie!Eddie as much as I do. Happy reading! (p.s.,there will be some romantic smut in a later part)
Chapter warnings: a bit steve harrington x reader, some eddie munson x other female, death of a family member, brief description of SA (bordered with RED DIVIDERS if youâd like to skip), mistreatment of Reader, suicidal ideation (reader just has dark humor), implied murder, very campy, very cunty.


THEN, 1986.
 âWhere you headân too so in a hurry, boy?â Wayne Munson asked, sat on the couch with a mug of steaming hot coffee in one hand and the television remote in the other as he watched his nephew bounce around the trailer, grabbing all of the the items he let haphazardly around.Â
 Wayne always told him to pick up his things, but like the rambunctious boy he was, there was no breaking out of his messy habits.
 âI got people to see, pops. Things to do. Trouble to âcause, cops to anger, you know the drill.â Eddie didnât even need to turn around to know his uncle was scowling but he was proven correct when he turned to throw his father figure a shit eating grin over his shoulder, âKidding, old man. Mom had me baptized when I was a baby, remember? I can do no wrong, like Achilles.âÂ
 âWhaâ?â
 âUgh, dad. If I have to explain the joke, it ruins it. Iâll be back by dinner, alright?â
 Wayne fixed him with a pointed look, âYou best be on your best behavior, you hear me?â
 âAlways.â Eddie gave a mock salute before dipping out the front door, still grinning as he tossed the keys of the van and caught them midair.Â
 While he wasnât necessarily going to cause trouble, he certainly would be providing the fun grass, powder and pills that were often behind it. Eddie knew Wayne was aware of what he did, had implied so when talking about how he knew Eddie was a good kid, just living in the wrong circumstances sometimes. Always said he wanted nothing but the best for his boy and for Eddie to realize he was meant for more than what this particular town forced on him.Â
 Made Eddieâs chest tight, but seeing things like the broken patio boardâEddie had accidentally stomped through it after seeing a spiderâreinforced Eddieâs belief that heâd much rather help out any way he could than let his uncle bear the financial weight of providing for him.Â
 The van roared to life, after sputtering for a good seven seconds, and Eddie revved the engine a little. As he let her warm up, something in the side mirror caught his attention.Â
 Someone.Â
 Sheila. His neighbor in the trailer across the street. She was hauling a box to a car, looked rather heavy and Eddie would have dropped everything to scramble over and help her, had it not been for Mr.Brawn at her side.Â
 Eddie watched as the guy, who stole the girl he was in love with right out of his arms, grabbed the box. The two lovers exchanged words which ended with them laughing at something as she followed him to the car.
 He slid the box into the packed car as she climbed into the passenger seat, and before Eddie knew it, he was watching her drive away, right out of his life forever.
 Eddie hadnât even realized he was clutching his steering wheel so tight, his knuckles were straining against the skin, hot tears pooling at his waterline but he refused to let them fall. Heâd shed more than enough tears over her, over what could have been.
 They started off so promising; throwing flirty waves from their bedroom windows, occasionally at school, before she approached him for weed. After that, came the whirlwind romance and Eddie hadnât considered himself a romantic beforeâhadnât had a whole lot of opportunities to make that discovery but he was so fucking romantic. A big sap. And he wasnât ashamed of it.Â
 Until sheâd graduated, and he hadnât. Again. Turns out, not trying at academics all year and then aiming to ace finals wasnât enough.Â
 Suddenly, all the bullshit naive plans they had to run away somewhere far from Hawkins werenât possible. At least, Sheila couldnât with Eddie.Â
 He lost her to a guy in another band, had made the mistake of taking a piss after he and Corroded Coffin performed to their tiny ass crowd, and had come back to see her talking to the keyboardist of the band that had gone on before them. She looked entranced, leaning forward to hang on to whatever the fuck he was saying. When Eddie had gone over to ask her if she was ready to head out, fully prepared to tuck her under his arm and way from the keyboardist, sheâd insisted and told him to his face, in front of his apparent competition, that she was gonna stick around a little longer and he should head out without her.
 Heâd spent the entire night pacing in front of his window, glancing out of it every five minutes and every time he heard a pair of wheels turn onto the dirt road. Eddie got his confirmation when his car happened to be one of them. Heâd watched, heart splintering, as the keyboardist got out of the car and walked around to open her door for her before they disappeared into her trailer. Eddie knew her dad worked nights. Knew what she and that musician were doing and heâd thrown up the entire contents of his stomach at the imagery before passing out.
 Eddie woke up to Sheila hovering above him and framed by the glow of the bathroom light like some angel. Sheâd dumped him right there and left the spare key heâd trusted her with on the table.
 And now, she was living her dream with someone else while Eddie got to stick around this shitty town with these people who could barely stand him for no reason (and yeah, okay, maybe heâd poke their buttons). In truth, while he was a little heartbroken over her, it was the fact that she still got her happy ending that hurt the most.
 The girls around Hawkins might have been interested in maybe hooking up with him, but they werenât interested in being Eddieâs girl. Werenât interested in falling stupid in love with him, making plans to start a life together. Didnât want him in their plans.
 Eddie Munson was lonely. And it sucked.
 With a heavy sigh, he cranked on the radio, fingers twisting the volume dial up to the most obnoxious level before shifting the gear to drive.
 âItâll get better, Munson. Love ainât no stranger.â He mumbled, sucking on his teeth and pulling out on the road.
 If he had known then where it would lead him, where the night would take him, he would have at least hugged his uncle. It would be the last time he saw him, and it would be the last time Wayne Munson saw his nephew alive.
 Three days later, heâd be identifying and weeping over his boyâs body in the morgue after reporting Eddie missing when he didnât come home.

 NOW, 1989
 âWhere are you going? Itâs almost time for breakfast.â Chrissy called out, head poking out from her bedroom as she watched you race down the hall.
 âNot hungry! Iâll be back soon!â You called over your shoulder, the large sheet of craft paper wrinkling in your hand as you took the stairs two at a time before bounding down the short entryway.
 Youâd almost crossed the foyer and then slammed yourself back against the wall as you saw Laura, Chrissyâs mom, fiddling with something at the table. She had the radio on, some garbage self help tape spewing nonsense to her, and that condescending smile on her face.
 Yeah, youâd be avoiding her, lest you wish to be verbally and eloquently belittled. How Chrissy came out of her toxic womb to be such a good person, youâd never understand.Â
 When Laura crossed into the kitchen, you sprinted for the door, fumbling a little with the knob in your urgency, but once you got it open, you were out, running across the walkway and the fencing around the house until you were in the woods behind it.
 Only then did you feel safe, the trees a welcome reprieve from your living situation, the magnifying glass this new town had you under, and from the world in general.
 Youâd come from a small town before Hawkins, so you were used to small town living. But these people were so judgemental. You hadnât even grabbed a box from the moving van before your neighbors were casting you snide looks, noses turning up and backs to you as they watered their yard and lounged about.
 Four months later, nothing had changed. If anything, they were more open with their disdain for you, commenting on your demeanor (and you were a cool fucking person), outfits, hair, body. It was annoying. They were annoying. EVERYTHING was annoying.Â
 You didnât even want to be there but you had no real choice. Youâd graduated high school a couple of years ago and despite the popular teenage notion that youâd simply pack up your things, go to college and be successful at whatever career you wanted, life did not happen like the movies. The freedom youâd been promised by your own delusions never came. That bitch came with a hefty price tag and you werenât exactly jumping into a safe of gold coins like Scrooge McDuck with your minimum wage job.Â
 Youâd gotten into several schools of your choice, but scholarships wouldnât be nearly enough to cover it, and youâd literally have to sell your entire body to science if you wanted to be able to afford the loans you were being offered, since their interest rates were higher than the standard human beingsâ lifespan.Â
 So, living with the ârents was checked off on your list of things you didnât want to continue doing past your high school graduation. And heyâyou were only 19 years-old! You were still young! Just save up a few years, and maybe one day youâd be able to think about taking a loan. You had time. What could possibly go wrong to throw your plans off?
 Your mother was murdered.
 Yeah, that was a bummer. Couldâve been worse, you supposed. You could have died with her, when your home had been broken into, and sometimes you wish you had. Alas, you were still breathing, albeit extremely traumatized. But only good olâ mom was six feet in the ground, in an entirely different town, because your father had also moved on a mere few months after her death, with the worst woman to leave flaming footprints on the earthâs crust, and theyâd eloped after like six dates before moving you to a town where you knew no one.
 Thinking about it actually made you sick and feel a little delusional.Â
 The only real good thing about your entire soap opera of a year was the community college youâd been able to enroll in. You had no real idea what you wanted to do in life, had no real drive for career paths, but you were doing something, and that something kept the she-devil that was your stepmother off your back. Most of the time. Some of the time. She couldnât say you were a deadbeat yet.
 Chrissy, your sweet to a definitive and insensitive fault step-sister had pushed you into going with her for registration. Convinced you it was the perfect way to make some friends. It was hard to say no to Chrissy, she had a way with people and could make the meekest soul feel like they were capable of anything and everything. She could always see the best in people, and she was outgoing. Your time in Hawkins had been brief, but youâd easily gathered Chrissy was popular, a former cheerleader (and sheâd successfully tried out for the community college team) and beloved by all. While part of you felt a little jealous at her confidence, you admired her more. She was never intentionally mean to you, either. She made the occasional comment, but it seemed like Chrissy had more so a filter problem, rather than spitting anything out with sugar coated hostility like her mother. Chrissy was...nice. After everything you've been through, you could use a little nice in your life.
 And sometimes nice was also the woods behind your house, as it led to the Hawkinsâ Cemetery.Â
 Morbid, sure, but you couldnât help yourself. After a particularly nasty encounter with Laura the first week of your Hawkins sentence, and feeling lonelier than youâd ever felt before, youâd gone for a walk, tears decorating your face with wet trails as you tried to physically hold yourself together, arms wrapped around yourself.Â
 Youâd arrived at the cemetery, and because you couldnât pay your mother a visit, you decided the only decent thing to do was visit other lonely souls.
 Youâd stopped to pay your respects to just about every tombstone and plaque, but one in particular caught your attention.
 Tucked away in a corner and separate from the other graves, under a weeping willow, was the most damaged tombstone of them all. Parts of it were broken off, a lot of the information pertaining to the individual underneath it was seemingly grated off. You had no idea who it was, the only remaining legible letters were MUN and you figured it was he simply because youâd taken some paper to the tombstone for etching and ran a black crayon over it. Youâd been able to make out the word âheâ on the paper and deduced it had once read may he rest in peace.Â
 The state of his tombstone surprised you, given how recent the date of death was. While his birth date had also been worn away, the year of deathâ1986âhad been left. It was 1989. No way his grave shouldâve looked like that.
 Apparently, even the groundskeeper avoided his part of the cemetery. The grass around his grave was overgrown, and pitiful. So, youâd gone home, grabbed the lawn mower, and pushed it all the way over. Youâd ended up disgusting, covered in grass, dirt and sweating like a cheater on a Sunday morning, but his grave was looking better. Youâd taken to caring for his grave after that. A bunch of your trinkets and things you'd seen that you immediately thought heâd like surrounded him now and youâd even planted some bluebells.Â
 He also made surprisingly good conversation, even though he never talked to you. His presence, while mostly imaginary to you, was comforting.Â
 So, during any free time you had, you were sat against his tombstone, chatting about your day, life, whatever you wanted. Felt like he was always listening, no matter the subject and it was really lovely to be heard.
 When you arrived at the cemetery, it was practically vacant, with just the red headed girl you normally saw. You didnât see her all the time, she was just one of the faces you saw the most, and that was only a handful of occasions. For the most part, Hawkins didnât seem keen on remembering the dead.Â
 âHope you havenât been lonely without me,â You greeted as you approached his tombstone, ducking under a few low hanging willow branches that still brushed over you anyways. Youâd have to âborrowâ Lauraâs shears soon, the willow tree was hauntingly beautiful around his grave, but you wanted its branches and leaves to frame his grave, not conceal it, âI missed you.â
 It was a little odd, but you did.Â
 When you werenât at his grave, you were thinking about him, trying to put a face to MUN, wondering what his life had been like. Did he have any loved ones? What had his interests been? How had he died? Had he felt as lonely as you did?
 âI know, I know.â You settled onto the grass in front of his tombstone, securing the craft paper to his tombstone with some masking tape, âI was just here last night.â You imagined he would say.
 âI just canât stay away from you. You have a very intriguing aura: I canât see it because youâre dead, and that makes me want to know you more.â You pulled a black crayon from your pocket and went about scribbling on the paper, over where you knew MUN would be etched in stone, âIâve said it a million times, and youâve probably turned over in your coffin repeatedly because of it, but youâre the only one who understands me. And youâre the only one here that I care aboutâprobably in the whole world actually, except maybe Chrissy but I know her friends think Iâm weird, and I donât want to drag her down with me.â
 Once the letters appeared on the paper, you sprawled out STER and you dropped the crayon to produce a pretty hot pink marker from your pocket instead, signing your name with a little heart to go with it just above the last name youâd crafted for him.
 The odds of this dude being a Munster were slim to none, but you thought it was fitting for someone who lived in a cemetery.
 You sat back on your haunches to admire it, it was a cute piece. Would look nice on your wall and whenever you missed him and found yourself longing to be near his grave, all youâd have to do is turn on your side and you'd be able to see part of him.Â
 You ripped the paper off his tombstone, and weighed it down on the grass with a rock. With that out of the way, you gave him your full attention, shuffling until your head and shoulder were leaning against the stone, âWould you wanna be dragged down with me? Be seen with me? Iâm somewhat of a pariah around here. Did you have better luck when you were still kicking?â
 You figured with how fucked up his tombstone had been, probably not. You imagined heâd confirm it, too. Just out right say, âNah, these assholes hated me.â
 âYeah, looks like weâre two peas in a pod.â Then you glanced down, fingers, twirling the blades of grass over his grave, âOr, you know. Casket.â
 You let silence fall over you, broken only by the chirping of birds in surrounding trees.
 âGoddamit, why do you have to be dead?â Your eyelids fluttered close, and instead of the cold stone, you imagined your head pressed against a warm chest, rising and falling with breaths, and a heartbeat thumping strong below your ear, pushing blood throughout his body. Imagined he was alive, arms slipping around you, firm and strong to hold you together so you didn't have to anymore.
 But he wasnât, and you were reminded when the groundskeeper shouted, âHEY!â
 You shot up, glancing around until you saw him by the entrance with a leaf blower, âYOU AWAKE?â
 What kind of a dumbass question was that? Sure, it had looked like you were asleep but you were clearly alert now.
 âYEAH!â You shrieked back to be heard, and he went back to not caring.Â
 âHe can see me leaning against your tombstone, but he canât see overgrown grass, weeds, rocks, or your grave in general when Iâm not here. Men, always so selective, amirite?â
 You glanced at the stone, half expecting it to respond. âEh, what do you know, youâre just a man, too.â You reached your arm back, knuckles trailing over MUN.
 âDespite you mouthing off to me most of the time, I brought you something.â You reached into your other pocket and pulled out a necklace, lined with black pearls and a cross pendant. It had been your motherâs. While she had a pension for religion, it wasnât something you thought about. Dying, sure, but whatever afterlife? Not so much. Felt wrong, sometimes, to carry it around with youâfelt like you were disrespecting her a little bit to not believe what she did, even though she had no qualms with it when she was alive. So, you figured why not trust it with the other important person in your life?
 âPretty, huh? It was my momâs. Sheâs dead, like you. You wouldnât happen to have seen her around, would you?â You joked, fingers stroking over the pearls. There was no risk in leaving them with your dead friend, people avoided him and you had a feeling even grave robbers wouldnât dare step near the willow, so theyâd probably be with him for the rest of eternity, âI want you to have them, take care of them for me.â
 You placed the necklace over the peak of his tombstone, smiling when they didnât fall from their place, âMm, you look good in them. Better than I do, Iâm not big on pearls. More of a silver jewelry kind of girl. I could do gold and diamonds, though, only for a wedding ring.â
 You held your arm out, admiring your ring hand void of any actual rings, âNothing too gaudy, of course. Thatâs what my earrings are for.âÂ
 Your eyes trailed from your outstretched fingers, to your wrist, and the watch decorating it. The time made you heave a heavy sigh, âI gotta go. Chrissyâs dragging me to a party tonight, so Iâve got to mentally prepare for that. Youâll think of me while Iâm away, wonât you?â
 Trailing a finger down the stone, you leaned forward to press your lips to it in a sweet kiss.Â
 âIâll be back soon, and this time I wonât forget my book of sonnets. I know how much you love the cynical poems I force on you.â
 And though you announced your departure, you found it hard to leave him, like you always did. It took all you had to gather your crayon, marker, and your new poster (and you kept dropping all three to have an excuse to linger) and leave the cemetery behind, glancing back impulsively every couple of steps until it was no longer in view, and the moment it wasnât you wanted to drop everything and run back to him.
 You had to remind yourself he was a stranger, who didnât care for you, rotting in the ground. And it sucked.Â

 âI donât wanna go.â You announced, staring into the bathroom mirror you shared with Chrissy. Youâd just finished your makeup, eyes heavily lined, and lashes coated an electric blue that made your eyes pop. You were always a little heavy handed with your makeup, you figured the whole point of it was to use it as you wanted. Your hair had been manipulated to hell and back, but regardless of what you did, you were unsatisfied with the girl staring back at you, âIâll just stay home.â
 âNot on my watch!â Chrissy declared, reaching in front of you for her pink lipstick. The bathroom counter was littered with your combined beauty products, âThis is the first major rager of the year, the perfect social gathering. You need to meet people, sissy.âÂ
 You scowled at the idea, âI have met people.â
 Chrissy tubed the lipstick bullet, rubbing her lips together as she gave you a concerned side-eye, âPeople who like you, sissy.â
 Ouch, thereâs that brutal honesty.
 âItâs not good for you to be on your own all the time,â She set the lipstick down so she could place a dainty hand on your shoulder, big blue eyes focused on you, âI worry about you. Daddy and mom worry about you. Your doctor worries about you. You need to get out more.â Chrissy stressed, pink lips pulling into a reassuring smile before she went back to focusing on the mirror and her makeup.
 You let out a heavy sigh, mulling her words over. Definitely could have been phrased better, but Chrissy was right. You were currently the town recluse, and occupying your room and the town cemetery wouldnât change that.Â
 âThat blush isnât the right shade for you, sissy.â Chrissy broke you from your thoughts and your eyes drifted back over to your reflection, the girl looking so unsure and right back at you, âYou really have to accentuate your features, compliment them, because youâre already beautiful.âÂ
 Didnât feel like it.
 Your expression must have given your inner thoughts away because Chrissy turned to you again, practically bouncing, âWait a minute, you could use my tanning bed!â
 You deadpanned at the mention of the ridiculous full on salon tanning bed that Chrissy owned. There was a dedicated mini garage in the backyard for it, next to the pool, and complete with neon lights, her beauty pageant trophies and sashes as well as her cheer trophies. The PG&E bill was always through the roof for the Tan Shack alone, and you still had no idea how Laura could afford it.
 âNo, Chrissy I-I donât think that would work on me. At all.â
 Chrissy waved off your concerns, âItâs not about the tan, or even if you can tan. Itâs the experience. When I lay in that tanning bed, with those little goggles on my eyes and I can hear the buzzing, I feel myself blooming. Regardless of whether or not my skin actually tans,â It didnât. Chrissy burned but she somehow still looked good, âI feel amazing about myself.â
 âAre you sure thatâs not cancer?â
 âYouâre so funny!â Chrissy laughed even though you were being serious, âSissy, every girl deserves to feel beautiful. If I can provide you with an experience that might raise those confidence levels that are dragging across a nail-covered floor right now, why wouldnât I?â
 Your eyebrows furrowed, trying to decipher if that was a compliment or not, but you didnât have long to mull it over before Chrissy was framing your face with her hands.Â
 âAnd I can. Please, let me do this.â
 You groaned, long and drawn out and awkward, before squeezing your eyes shut and slowly nodding your head. She squealed, clapped her hands together and dragged you out of the bathroom.
 After explaining how it all worked, Chrissy bid you a cheerful goodbye and left you to your own devices so she could finish getting ready for the night ahead of you both.
 Youâd selected your tan level, positive you wouldnât see any real results but maybe the âexperienceâ would benefit you and shed your fuzzy slippers and robe, leaving you in some boy shorts and a tank top as you tried to settle yourself in the tanning bed. The dip was awkward, and you couldnât get a good grasp on the top of the tanning bed since it was meant to only open and close rather than stay in position so grasping onto it for balance as you lowered yourself in led to you conking yourself on the head with a noticeable bonk.
 You hissed in pain, rubbing the sore area as you clambered the rest to the way in. Once youâd stretched your legs out, lowered the top, maneuvered the goggles over your face and waited for the magic to happen as you were surrounded by neon blue lights.
 You heard the buzzing as the tanning bed started up. The magic happened alright. The entire tanning bed shocked you, and you shrieked as you felt the intense electric current ripple throughout your body, sparking every single pore in the worst way possible.

âIâm so sorry you got electrocuted, sissy.â
 Chrissy broke the silence as you sulked in the passenger seat, your hair a little bigger than normal and not a result of styling. After getting all five senses shocked out of you, youâd come out with a hairdo that would not usually be up to par with you, and some serious case of static electricity. Youâd tried to gently press your hair down and when you saw a literal spark in it, you decided to just leave it alone.
 Your step-sister had been apologizing since.
 âItâs alright. I survived.â And you wanted to forget about it.Â
 You could see Chrissy glancing nervously at you from the corner of your eye as she drove you to the party location.
 âSoâŚhow are you liking Hawkins Community, so far?â She asked, thankfully changing the subject.Â
 âItâs fine. The campus looks relatively the same as the community college I toured in my old town. Classes are decent.â Pitiful. The classes were so boring and straight out of the book, but it cost you a fraction of a fraction of what youâd have to pay to attend a university.Â
 Chrissy lips turned up in a mischievous smile and you internally groaned, fully expecting her next question.
 âSee any cute boys?â And then, as an afterthought, âOrâŚgirls?â Then she took her eyes off the road again, squinting at you as if she was trying to assess something, âOrâŚ..anyone?âÂ
 You betrayed yourself, eyes darting to the window before they were back on her and she perked up in the driverâs seat.Â
 âOkay, spill.â
 Your heart started thumping wildly in your chest as one particular guy came to mind, but you hadnât thought about him too much. Hadnât allowed yourself to entertain the idea of a romance with him. Thatâs how people got their hopes up and letdown.
 âSissy! Sissy, come on. You have to tell me. Iâm your only friend!âÂ
 This time, you could tell she was joking, even though she did have merit. You bit your lip as she ribbed you a bit more, the corners of your lips tugging up into a smile.Â
 âOkay, okay!â Your hands flew to cover your face, embarrassed, shy and a little giddy all at once to actually be admitting you had a crush.Â
 âSteve Harrington.â
 âSTEVE HARRINGTON?â She repeated, incredulous and you shushed her even though it was only you two in the car.
 âSissy, thatâs so unexpected! I havenât really seen him since high school but I didnât think heâd be your type.â Chrissy admitted with a shrug of her shoulders.
 âHe works in the library.â You sighed out, recalling your brief interactions with him when checking out a couple of books. Heâd been kind, made a couple of humorous comments about the titles, and always tried to meet your avoidant gaze, which meant he was being nice to you. Coaxing you out of your shell. You actually didn't have much trouble interacting with people, you were more abrasive than you ever were shy, Steve was just a little too easy on the eyes. Made you forget how to talk, and on occasion, walk. It was embarrassing, âAlways makes those cute displays with recommendations.â
 âGood for him,â She commented, sounding impressed. âI didnât really know he was intellectual. Wasnât, the last I heard. Had a big reputation in high school, seemed kind of mean and everyone called him King Steve.â
 You frowned, feeling the need to protect him, âDidnât they call you the Queen of Hawkins High?â
 âYeah, but only to make me seem pretentious.âÂ
 You raised your eyebrows, glancing away. Chrissy was kind, but sometimes, she could be pretentious.
 âAnd anyways, Iâm not a student at Hawkins High anymore, so they canât call me that. Maybe Steve really did change. Come to think of it, I havenât heard much about him since he struck out with a series of girls. Maybe he took a good look at himself and decided a change was needed.â You could feel her eyes on you again.Â
 âDoes he flirt with you?â
 âNo.â
 âSee him flirt with any girls?â
 âNope.â
 âDoes he still make his hair all big and poofy?â
 âLooks more voluminous than poofy.â
 Chrissy hummed, âAn improvement. Is he all beret wearing and drinking coffee now?â
 You tried to recall ever seeing him in a hat, let alone a beret, âNo, I donât think so. If anything, heâs introspective.â
 âHeâs on the spectrum?â
 Your smile waned when you realized she was asking a legitimate question, âOh. No. Thatâsâthatâs not what that means. I just meant heâs thinking about what he does; how he acts, how he behaves.â
 It got quiet for a few moments.
 âWell,â Chrissy broke the silence once more, âHe might be there tonight. Iâm not sure if theyâre still friends, but Tommy Hagan is hosting tonight, and once upon a time, they were inseparable.â
 You made a sound of acknowledgment, upper lip twitching in disgust. You knew Tommy, saw him around campus. He was a big jerk, youâd witnessed him throw some guyâs backpack in the trash and pour his drink on it. You wish youâd known it was his party you were going to in advance. Tommy was a nasty piece of work, so his friend group was the same. Out of all of them, though, Carol got on your nerves the most.Â
 She didnât pay you a whole lot of attention, but when you were walking in with Chrissyâand this is Chrissy, so she acknowledged everyoneâand she said hi, Carol would just look you up and down before pursing her big mouth like sheâd sucked on something sour. One day, youâd like to give her your fist to suck on.
 âPatrick McKinney is bringing three kegs and I heard Reefer Rick is bringing his whole inventory.â
 âReefer Rick?â
 âYeah, heâs the local drug dealer now. I mean, heâs always been but he used to have somebody sell for him while he supplied, but he died.â
 Your eyes widened while your pupils dilated, mind conjuring up some image of a poor dude being murdered for drugs and then the supplier just taking over, not fearful at all of meeting the same fate, âHe died?â
 Chrissy nodded her head, looking thoughtful, âYeah, Eddie Munson.â
 Munson.
 You sat up in your seat, fully alert and invested in the conversation now, âEddie Munson? Is he buried under the willow tree in the cemetery?â
 You stared at Chrissy, willing her to think faster as she squinted and pursed her lips, âI think Tina mentioned something about someone peeing on a tree over there, so I think so.â
 Your mouth dropped open, expression utterly horrified that someone could do that, âThatâs beastly, what the fuck?â
 âI know,â Chrissy sighed with a shake of her head. âI didn't know him all that much, bought some weed off of him a couple of times and he seemed a little scaryâappearance and mannerism wiseâbut he seemed nice when you had to interact with him. He didnât deserve that.â
 âHow did he die?â You asked, voice small and heart shrinking. You didnât like where this was going. Didnât like it one bit.
 âWell, the official determination, if I remember right, was like a drug deal gone bad or something, but no one really believes it. He was known to have weed on him, kept the harder stuff somewhere else. Everyone knows he was murdered. They did a number on him, it was all everyone could talk about because Sydney Porter couldnât even get her dadâhe worked at the stationâto show her pictures. He told her they messed Eddie up bad. People here really didnât like him. No one knows who did it though.â
 You sunk back into your seat, mind troubled and stomach turning. This whole time, you'd been tending to and caring for the grave of a murdered guy, taken from this world simply because people didnât like him. He must have been so lonely. So scared. And they killed him.
 Chrissy was wrong. People in this town knew who killed him, because one of them, or some of them, had to have been his murderers.
 Your fingers curled into tight fists, painted nails digging into the flesh of your palms. Chrissy noticed the change in your demeanor.
 âOh, sissy. Youâre such an empath. Donât be so sad, I know itâs a horrible story, but heâs resting now. In peace.â
 âNo, heâs not. They fucked up his tombstone. He canât even be dead in peace.â You huffed, furious on his behalf.
 âHow do you know?â Chrissy asked, raising a perfectly plucked eyebrow.Â
 âI go there a lot, itâs nice. Quiet. A little creepy, but that adds to its charm, makes it relatively peaceful. Iâve been visiting all the graves, but I was drawn to him the most. Etched his tombstone. Heâs my favorite.â
 Despite the horrors youâd learned, the thought of MunâEddie, still brought a wistful smile to your lips. Maybe your presence was enough to settle him, bring him a little bit of peace this town and the people in it refused to give him.
 âH-Heâs your favoriteâŚ?â
 âYeah. I feel thisâŚ.connection with him. From the very first time I visited. Now, I leave him gifts, flowers, pretty stones, poems I wrote, a book of sonnets I stole from the library.â
 âYouâŚ.should talk to your doctor about this, Sissy. Thatâs really weird. Thatâs really weird, sissy.â
 You fought to not roll your eyes. As much as you cared about Chrissy, and knew she cared about you, she didnât understand you.Â
 âWell, since people ruined his grave, I thought it might be nice to clean it up and make sure heâs not forgotten.â You snapped, âItâs not like I call him my boyfriend or anything.â
 Chrissy eyed you skeptically, âWell, then thatâs nice of you, I guess. Just donât go around telling everybody about that, or youâll be known as the Ghost Whisperer.â
 âHe hasnât talked back to me yet.â
 Chrissy laughed, and freed one hand off the wheel to lightly slap your arm, âSee, now thatâs funny. If you do tell anyone, end it with that joke. Youâll be a riot.â
 You smirked, staring out the front windshield. Youâd let her think it was a joke. For now.
 You made a sound of displeasure as Chrissy pulled into a clear space on the grass and parked. She jumped out to dance over to her friends, some wine coolers cradled in a plastic bag she clutched.
 You allowed yourself a full minute to stew in your misery before getting out of the car and following after her. As you neared her group, you quickly realized that was a bad idea.Â
 âOh my GOD! Vickie, you fixed your teeth! They look so good. I wasnât gonna say anything because I thought you were happy with the overcrowding, but now that you fixed it, I canât look away!â
 Yeesh. You beelined away from them and wandered around the crowded front lawn, dodging rowdy friend groups and couples until you spotted a cooler.
 Maybe a drink would calm you down.
 You squatted down and popped the lid, digging around the ice but all you spotted were Pepsi and Squirt cans.
 âThe liquid fun is inside.â A guyâs voice came from behind you and you rolled your eyes. You were so not in the mood to be hit on right now.Â
 âWhat?â You asked, tone bored, but you didnât want to make him seem helpful so you grabbed a Squirt.
 âAlcohol. He keeps it inside.â
 You slammed the cooler shut and popped the tab of the can, rising to your feet, âYeah, I figured that muâshhhh.â
 Oh, shit.Â
 Steve Harrington was standing before you, eyes alight with mirth as he smirked down at you.
 You swallowed hard, hoping to god your tongue hadnât gone down with the movement. See? Here you went getting all stupid around him.
 âFunny seeing you here.â
 You laughed nervously, âYeah. Iâuh, mhm.â You forced yourself to take a drink of your soda to keep from making an even bigger fool of yourself.
 âSorry if itâs weird of me to just walk up to you. I was chilling on the side of the house and thought I saw you, but Iâm a little nearsighted and I didnât bring my glasses.â
 You pulled the can away from your mouth as your brain registered the lack of metal frames on the bridge of his nose. He looked handsome with and without them, that wasnât fair. It was still throwing you off.Â
 âItâsâItâs okay. Uhm, no harm done.â You shrugged your shoulders, hoping it looked cool and not as stiff as you felt. You even added in a smile with some teeth for a little razzle dazzle.
 âI actually came over here to tell you your books are significantly overdue.â Steve deadpanned, tongue playing with his canine tooth as he scrutinized you and you shrunk, smile falling from your face. You had got to get better at following up on your due dates.
 âOh.â
 He scoffed, face breaking out into a grin as his shoulders shook with his chuckles âIâm kidding.â
 OH, THANK FUCK.Â
 âOh,â And then, because every god probably hates you, you started snorting with laughter. You cut that shit quick, clearing your throat as you took another sip of your beverage.
 âSo,â Steve took a step closer to you, âAre you enjoyingââ
 âHey!â Carol stepped right up to Steve, practically leaning all over him as her ruby red lips spread into a seductive smile, eyes lidded and no doubt a few drinks in with a drink for Steve in her hand. For the billionth time that night, you rolled your eyes, trying not to gag at how desperate she was. You knew Tommy had recently dumped her, the entire town knew and now she was clearly trying to get into Steveâs pants, âI found the keg.â
 She could eat shit, his pants were yours.
 âOh, Thank you.â Came Steveâs bleak reply and part of you thought he might have actually wanted to talk to just you. Now, you were really annoyed sheâd interrupted.
 âHey, Carol.â
 Carol looked surprised that youâd even dare speak to her, raising her eyebrows, âHey. Hiâ sorry, how do we know each other?â
 âYouâre my lab partner.â You were unimpressed, you expected her to be a better mean girl.Â
 âYay me.â The smile she directed at you was anything but friendly, reminding you of the one Laura would make after you did something in public she didnât like, but she couldnât yell at you until you were home. Carol swirled the liquid in her cup around, head tilting as she offered it to you, âYou wanna sip, partner?â
 âCarol.â Steve warned and she tutted, flicking her wrist.
 âYouâre right, I donât know why I assumed she partied.â
 âIâll take a beer,â You could handle alcohol, had cleared your motherâs wine cabinet after she was murdered, so this would be no big deal.
 Carol looked annoyed but handed you the cup, and to make sure you wouldnât gag and vomit, you threw it back, throat opening as you swallowed the liquid as fast as you could to refuse it as much time on your taste buds as possible.
 When you lowered the cup, you realized youâd made a mistake and glanced into it at the small amount left behind, watching as the ground in your peripheral view began to shift.
 Steve seemed to realize something was wrong, quickly taking your cup and ingesting what was left. His suspicions were confirmed and he spat it out on the grass before scowling at Carol, âPCP? Really, Carol? What the fuck is wrong with you? Why the hell would you give that to her!?â
 âOopsie.â
 But it was too late for you. You dropped the soda can in your other hand and lifted your hands to your face, watching the lines around your palms and fingers begin to move, swirling around and you backed away from them, watching as everything around you began to come undone.
 âHey!â You heard a voice next to you and someone started rubbing your back, you hadnât even realized you were crouching. You craned your head up to see Chrissy and you frowned. Her voice was so different, distorted. She sounded more like your dad than Chrissy.Â
 Her face was both far away and right in front of you, you reached a hand out to test the theory, see if it really was close. Chrissy caught your wrist, frowning at the state you were falling into.
 Chrissy started asking you questions, about what youâd taken, what you drank but her voice was too loud for you, and the purple behind her head was distracting. Still, you nodded your head.
 At your confirmation, Chrissyâs frown intensified and she helped you to the ground before darting over to chew Steve and Carol out.
 You couldnât stay on the grass for long, the blades of it stabbing you and sending pain shooting up your palms and into your bones so you crawled some distance away before you managed to push yourself up and stumble towards the house. It was hard.
 Everything was moving. You heard a loud sound and glanced around wildly until you were staring up at the sky, mouth dropping open to see green clouds and lightning.Â
 You had to get away, the need to escape, be safe was urgent but it felt like the closer you got to the front door, the farther away it went. Your breathing was heavy and panicked as you kept stumbling forward, arm outstretched and finally you reached it.
 You yanked it open and nearly fell inside, tripping over your feet until you hit the back of the couch and used it to sink to the floor.
 You heard your name being called and lifted your head, eyes crazed as you tried to find the source. Fred Benson approached you, the skinny boy squatting to be eye level with you.
 âYou okay?â He asked and you reached forward, grasping his face in your hand and squeezing to make sure he was a real person.
 âYou.â Was all you said, booping his nose but still suspicious of him. Was he real?
 âUh, yeah. Itâs me. Itâs Fred, we sit next to each other in ASL class.â
 He looked like Fred. You still didnât believe he was human, squinting as your hands grasped at the back of the couch.
 âYou donât look so good,â Fred pushed the frame of his glasses up his nose, brows furrowed in concern, âLet's find somewhere for you to sit down for a minute. Or maybe a while. Man, what did you drink?â
 He stood up, offering you a hand and you took it but didnât pull yourself up. Fred heaved with all his might and managed to get you on your feet but he realized just walking you wouldnât be enough, and so did you because you draped yourself over him, one arm over his scrawny shoulders.
 Fred cursed under his breath but held your weight, leading you out of the populated living room and you watched a couple furiously make out on the couch cushions as you passed.
 âI hate parties. I donât know why I cameâwell, actually I do. I never got invited to these in high school, so I guess Iâm living out my fantasy now. In all honesty, Iâd much rather be watching Weird Science. So far tonight, Iâve seen three cheerleaders throw up and a baby being conceived.â
 âUh huh,â Was all you could get out, watching people swirl past you like shooting stars.
 âWould you count that as escaping the teen pregnancy statistic? I know theyâre out of high school, but weâre all still pretty young.â He commented as he led you up the stairs. You tripped several times and almost sent him flying down them but the two of you managed to make it.Â
 Fred was heaving by the time you'd shouldered him into the hallway wall, his face and hands clammy.
 âGood god, how did I pass P.E.?â The two of you paused there until he regained his breath while you plastered yourself against the wall, cheek pressed to it and hands stroking over the wallpaper. Eventually, Fred peeled you off of it and kept moving until he could find a place to put you.
 âYou like movies right? Got any favorite directors? Or favorite films?â
 âWall.â
 âHuh? Oh, youâre just admiring the wallpaper.â
 âGreat Wall of China.â
 Fred positioned you against the wall, looking a little annoyed. You didnât care, could only focus on the framed photo of the Great Wall of China directly across from you.
 âOh.â Was all he said when he spotted it. âStay right here.â
 Then he disappeared and you watched as the painting came to life, and the stones of the wall began moving, rippling. You didnât even know stones could move like that but now it made so much more sense.Â
 Fred appeared again, tugging you along into an empty room. You spotted a trash can and nearly threw Fred into the bedroom wall as you dove for it, retching everything out of your stomach. You could hear Fred gagging, but he was decent enough to make sure your hair stayed out of your way. When you were done, he helped sit you up on the bed, and nearly collapsed next to you.
 âWe did it,â he cheered with no real gusto. And you sat there, still feeling the earth orbiting. It was the most odd sensation, you could feel a spot on your brain pulsing, like a migraine but it felt so euphoric to close your eyes.
 âHere,â They snapped right back open and you glanced to your side to see Fred offering you a handkerchief. Of course Fred Benson carried around a handkerchief. How amusing.Â
 âThank you,â You gave the three versions of him you could see right then a smile and used the handkerchief to wipe your mouth, eyelids fluttering close just as the sound of thunder filled the room, and a flashing of lightning accompanied it.
 âHuh, a rainless thunderstorm, looks like the angels are bowling.â You heard him muse next to you.
 And it brought another smile to your face, âMy mom used to say that.â
 At the mention of her, your brain conjured up all the happy feelings and memories of her, huddled on your couch, in your old home watching black and white horror films. They didnât scare her, so she could tolerate them. You missed her. She made you feel so light, so seen, soâno.

 Something was wrong. Something felt very, very wrong.
 Your smile faded and you felt your belly sink as you opened your eyes.
 âDoes that feel good?â
 You didnât want to, but you looked down to see Fredâs hand on your breast. Your breathing picked up and Fred let go of you to grab your wrist and force you to touch his crotch, âWell donât just sit there, help me out. Finish what you started.âÂ
 Anger filled you and you yanked your hand away, âNo.â
 Fred opened his mouth as you got up, rushing away from him and stumbling back out the way you remembered while he yelled at you.

 You had to get out, had to get away. Had to be safe, feel safe. You banged against walls as you went, desperate to get out of the house, away from Fred, from everyone, and to safety. That was your only concern as the drug really hit you.
 All you could remember was seeing colors, hearing and feeling the wind against your sweaty skin, leaves blowing with it and gusting around you.
 You had no idea how you escaped the mad house, how long youâd even been walking or how you actually got there, but you found yourself in front of the cemetery, a flash of lightning illuminating the gate.
 To anyone else, a cemetery would have been the worst place to find themselves on a night like this, but youâd already been to hell so you trudged forward, feet taking you to him. Even in your drugged state, you were able to find your way to Eddie. Always would be.
 Your knees dug into the grass as you collapsed in front of his tombstone, fingers reaching forward to trace over MUN and 1986 before your body curled around the large stone, hugging yourself to it. Electric blue tears slipped down your cheeks, staining them with your mascara.
 âI wish I was with you.â You whispered, hating everything, hating this town, hating the people, hating Fred Benson, hating Carol, hating Laura Cunningham, hating how your mom wasnât alive, hating how the one person youâd unknowingly sought for comfort was someone youâd never met before who was six feet under the ground. And you hated how you werenât down there.
 You laid there, hugging his tombstone for hours under the thunder and lightning as the PCP slowly left your system.
 When you were able to stand up on your own, you gave the tombstone another kiss, rested your forehead against it and quietly thanked him for helping you find your way home before you left, following the path youâd made during all of your visits.
 The house was quiet when you got in, and Chrissyâs car hadnât been parked in the driveway when youâd walked up so you figured she was still at the party. Sluggishly, you made your way up the stairs, falling into your shared bathroom. Your hand searched the wall, struggling to find the switch. Once your fingertips made contact with it, you flipped it and squinted as the room was flooded with the warm light. It was still too much for your eyes but you kept it on and walked towards the mirror
 The girl looking back at you was not the same one youâd last seen in it. This girl had blue smudged all around her eyes, faint trails of it over her cheeks and a rats nest for hair. Her eyes burned, not from the light, but from a fury within.Â
 She was stuck in a life she didnât want to live and couldnât do anything about. As a large strike of lightning flashed from the window positioned at the back of the bathroom, towards the back of the house, you decided to put her out of her misery, picking up a blow dryer and smashing it against your reflection with a yell.
 You stood there, chest heaving as you stared at the broken reflection. Then you tossed the blow dryer onto the counter, and went to bed.
 Your dreams were much more pleasant than your reality, eyelids fluttering open to the ceiling of your old bedroom. A glance to your side confirmed your motherâs photo was at your bedside, next to your alarm clock on your old bedside table.
 âWell?â Her photo asked, shooting you that gorgeous smile of hers, âWhat are you waiting for? Go get him.â
 Your confusion was momentary, your mother raised her chin in a direction and you knew what would happen, you were giddy for it as you looked down to see yourself wrapped in the most beautiful wedding gown youâd ever seen.
 You rose from the bed into a sitting position, picking up the bouquet on the pillow next to you. Your dresser mirror was directly across from your bed and you took a moment to admire the beautiful girl staring back at you. Where you last remember seeing trails of tears were diamonds, glittering against your skin. Her eyes sparkled with a joy youâd never known. You bid her one last smile as you turned your head to the figure sitting on the edge of your bed, dark curls cascading down his neck, past broad shoulders with his back to you.Â
 His right arm was out, palm up.
 He was waiting for you.
 You shifted until you were on the edge of your bed next to him, staring straight forward just as he was.
 Without looking, you knew exactly where his hand was, and you placed your left one over it, feeling the warmth of his skin against yours. Slowly, the two of you leaned towards each other, until your head was on his shoulder and his cheek was pressed against the top of your head, his fingers curling around your hand to ground you. You sighed, all the tension and weight of the world leaving you.
 âSissy. . .â
 âSissyâŚâ
 âSISSY!â
 You groaned as Chrissy shook you awake, eyes prying through all the mascara that had crusted over your eyes. It took a couple of blinks until you regained your clear vision, gaze locking on Chrissy leaning over you. Her face was clean of any makeup, skin glowing and hair wrapped up in rollers.
 Sheâd gotten home later than you and had still been able to look perfect.Â
 What the hell?
 âYou better get up, sissy. My momâs losing it over the bathroom mirror.â
 You were confused for a second until you remembered smashing it with a blow dryer last nightâor this morning. Well, it definitely would have broken at the sight of you now, anyways.Â
 You frowned but made no move to get up so Chrissy tugged your blanket off of you, giggling when the both of you realized you had your hand in your underwear. Hastily, you yanked it out, and threw the blankets back over yourself.
 âItâs okay, Sissy. Everyone does it. Itâs natural.â
 âOh my godâŚâ
 âSo, what happened last night to bring this on?â She wiggled her eyebrows and you stared at her for a second. Part of you wanted to yell at her, berate her for letting you stumble around while high on a drug youâd never taken before, the other half knew in Chrissyâs World, it was all rainbows and sunshineâat least, it had been since sheâd forced her mother to respect her boundaries. Chrissy didnât expect the worst in anyone, didn't expect anyone to take advantage of you and certainly didn't expect you to wind up walking to the cemetery and then home on a bad trip. No, in Chrissyâs World, youâd probably spent the night flirting with someone, probably Steve, maybe fooled around in his car before he drove you home.
 You didnât see it necessary to shatter her world so you groaned instead, the full force of your migraine hitting you now that you were out of sleepâs clutches, and covered your hands with your face.
 âOoh, your kneesâŚâ
 You glanced down to see what she was staring at and sure enough, your knees were scratched up from kneeling at Eddieâs grave, but in Chrissyâs WorldâŚ
 âI fell.â Was the only excuse you could come up with and Chrissy smirked.
 âMe, too.â Her eyelid dropped in a wink just as Laura yelled upstairs for you, so, begrudgingly, you wrapped yourself in your robe and headed downstairs to receive your punishment.
 Just as you suspected, Laura had attacked you with allegationsâthat were true for once, you had smashed the bathroom mirrorâand your dad looked like he could care less.
 âYou know,â She stated, fixing you with those unnaturally blue eyes of hers, âYour dad wanted to give you the benefit of the doubt. See the good in you, but I knew. Iâm an Intuitive Person, you know. An IP. Theyâve got seminars for people like me.â
 Your mind flashed to How to Handle a Narcissist.Â
 âLauraâŚâ Your dad warned and Laura inhaled sharply, displeased that your dad was sticking up for you. For once.Â
 âDid you know there was a tornado last night? It hailed. Wind blew the fence over. The yard is covered in debris, and now I have to focus on repairing the bathroom, too. I donât think thatâs fair.â She huffed and Chrissy spoke up from her place on the couch.
 âIt was a tornado watch, mom. Not a real tornado.â
 âActually, Chris, the weather was downright crazy last night. I mean, it was really something, I saw green lightning. Big balls of it in the sky.â
 You and Chrissy shared secret smiles at hearing your dad talk about big balls.
 âLove muffin, could you swap out being a weatherman for being a father, right now?â Laura gritted out through her chemically whitened teeth.
 âItâs a Meteorologist,â You mumbled and her head snapped over to glare at you before she was speaking to your father again.
 âHoney, your daughter is a vandal. Sheâs got a taste for vandalism, and she is deliberately vandalizing and destroying property. First, it was my collection of Precious Moments figurinesââ
 âThat was an accident, you didnât wrap them in bubble wrap and I dropped the box when I tripped over the front steps.â
 âMother,â Chrissy chided, hands crossing over her robe. âBe. Nice.â
 âI am being nice,â Laura hissed, glare never leaving you, âBut I refuse to coddle her. Sheâs headed straight to the nut house with this behavior.â
 You frowned, wiping away some of the dried mascara under your eye, âCan you say that if youâre a Psych Nurse?â
 Laura had the decency to look embarrassed before whacking your fatherâs arm. He sighed, putting his newspaper down, âSweetheartââ
 You clocked the twitch in Lauraâs eyelid at the affectionate name your father used to refer to you.
 ââYouâre gonna clean your bathroom, alright? Sweep up all that glass.â
 âAnd?â Laura pushed, still staring at you.
 âAndâŚ..um. Pay for the mirror, I guess.â Laura turned her nose up, hurmphing.Â
 âThatâs fine, can I get ready for work now?â
 Your dad nodded and Laura looked like she wanted to protest but you turned your back to her and made your way upstairs, hesitating at the top when your fathered turned the volume of the TV back on and you heard the news reporter reporting from the cemetery, talking about a grave, under a tree, that had been struck by lightning.Â
 You wondered if it had been Eddieâs. Thereâs no way youâd be able to check today, youâd get home from work too late, so youâd have to check tomorrow.
 You tried to stay busy during your shift at the local tailorâs. You didnât really have a passion for it, but you were relatively good with a needle and thread. With the magnifier headlamp, you were practically unstoppable, altering coats, dresses, blouses, shirts, all with minimal finger injuriesâthough luminol on some of these clothing items would no doubt reveal traces of your blood.
 But heyâyou now knew what it meant to work so hard you put your blood into something and you always had band-aids on you, in case anyone needed one.
 You were so invested in your work, you hadnât heard the bell above the door chime when it was pushed open, and didnât notice Steve leaning against the counter, watching you work until he cleared his throat.
 You jumped, head swinging around to see your crush smiling at you and you raised the magnifying glass portion of the head lamp off your face, feeling embarrassed that heâd seen you with the headgear on in the first place.
 âHey! I didnât know you worked here.â
 You let out some nervous laughter, mind racing for ways to make this seem cool but you came up short. âYeah, Iâemployed.â
 âI can see that,â He chuckled, amused by your lack of verbal sparring.
 You didnât know what to say after that so you stared, fingers twisting and pulling the thread youâd been working with, desperate for him to say something or get out.
 âOh! Uh, I heard you guys also get rid of stains? Iâve got this one on my panââ
 âTHAT WE DO!âÂ
 You sighed, eyes slipping shut as your moron of a boss came bursting out of the office.
 âWhat can we do for you, Harrington?â Murray asked, leaning against the counter, causing Steve to lean back, smile now less than thrilled.
 âMurrayâŚI forgot you worked here.â Steve said it in a voice that made you think he would have avoided the shop had he known who it was that was currently in charge of running it.
 âYup, got me this sweet little gig. And no radios.â He gestured around to the shop, void of any technology save for the cash registerâand he made sure it was never him operating it, âWould like to see the government try to control me now.â
 âRight, I just came here to drop off my pants, spilled something onâwell, it doesnât really matter, I just spilled something on them.â Steve placed the folded pair of pants on the counter and Murray immediately unfolded them, searching through the fabric until he found the stain by his crotch. To both your horror and Steveâs, he lifted the strained fabric to his nose, sniffing deep.
 âMm. White wine?â
 It took Steve a moment to find his voice and close his jaw, âCrush. The soda.â
 âSame thing. Weâll get this right out, my man.â
 You and Steve shared one more look of disbelief before he slowly backed away, the bell above the door sounding as he left.
 âHeâs a nice guy,â Murray commented and you shrugged your shoulders, wanting this conversation to be over, âIâm surprised you know him, little loser.â
 You shot him a glare.
 âOh, câmon, lets not pretend youâve got an active social lifeâif I call you in for a shift, youâre available. Nothing wrong with being a loser. I was one throughout high school and look at me now. Who got the last laugh?â
 You were positive the look of pain on your face should have told Murray that anyone other than him got the last laugh. He was a forty something year old, afraid of technology, convinced the government was watching him, who tried to befriend teenagers.Â
 Youâd have to kill yourself if you were anything like him.
 When he disappeared back into the office, because of course youâd have to get rid of that stain for Steve, you snatched the pair of pants off the counter. Glancing around to make sure there werenât any eyes on you, you pressed them to the side of your face, imagining yourself hugging Steve instead of the pants. They smelled like him. It was bliss.
 Then your eyes snapped open.
 Oh, god. You were a loser.
 After your shift, youâd gone straight home. Normally, youâd stop to grab a bite or something, you still had to pay for the mirror you broke so fast food was off the table for a couple of weeks, but on your dining room table when you walked into the house.
 A pizza box. Your stomach growled as you imagined the slice of cheese waiting for you.
 âIs there any left?â You asked, already making a beeline for it.
 âShould be a slice left,â Your dad mused and as you tossed the top of it open, all you wanted to do was maybe beat him with it.
 There, on the parchment liner of the pizza box, was the skinniest and tiniest slice of pizza to ever be cut. Not even the width of two of your fingers.
 âWant me to order another one, sweetheart?â Your dad asked and Laura immediately inserted herself into the conversation.Â
 âShe can eat it, love muffin. Besides, weâve got vegetables in the fridge if sheâs still not full.â
 âI said we should have ordered two, but my mom had a coupon she wanted to use.â Chrissy didnât sound impressed.
 âYes, we got a free soda!â
 Chrissy ignored her mom, âSissy, weâre going to the movies! You could get something there, they sell pizza and nachos, right?â
 You knew she was trying to find a solution for you, but your bullshit meter for the day had already been capped. You didnât want movie theater pizza or concessions, you wanted a reasonable slice of this pizza, not some scrap your step-mother had saved you. It was obvious she was implying that she, your dad and Chrissy were the perfect sized family and you were simply an afterthought. Unwelcome.
 âYeah, Iâm passing on the movie.â
 Before you could stomp upstairs, Chrissy caught your hand.
 âSissy, please? Weâve got to bond as a family, itâs crucial. If it takes two, how can I do it as one?â She pulled you into her side.
 âReally, Chrissy, Iâm super tired.â
 âYouâre tired?â Laura asked, incredulous. Here we go again.
 âAll you do is work with a sewing machine for hours like some old spinster, I can hardly imagine that being tiring, but my Chrissy just got back from a five hour long cheer practice. They were throwing her around like raggedy ann and she stuck every landing.âÂ
 âMom, stop.â Chrissy blushed, but you could see how proud she was of herself, âIâm sure Sissy pokes herself with those needles all the time, and it hurts, Iâve been prodded myself during all of my custom fittings.â
 âI have finger calluses so I donât even bleed anymore,â You begrudgingly admitted, âI can take it.â
 âI bet you can.â
 After theyâd left for the movies, youâd gone upstairs, showered, put on your comfiest pajamas and fuzziest slippers, you grabbed a bowl of chips and set yourself up in front of the TV to watch Dawn of the Dead. You had to give props to all these zombie actors, you couldnât imagine having to act out being one of the walking undead, imagined it felt pretty stupid but the paycheck and experience must have been cool.
 You popped another chip into your mouth just as someone knocked on the front door. As you placed the bowl of chips on the table to get up, the knocking got louder, more aggressive and you hesitated, fear beginning to swell up inside of you.
 Maybe if you ignored it, theyâd go away.
 You turned your attention back to the tv, picking up the remote to lower the volume and hopefully hide your presence in the house.Â
 Then, much to your horror, you heard the distinct sound of a pained, gurgling groan. It sounded very similar to the ones youâd heard the zombies making on your tv, but this one was louder.Â
 And it was coming from outside your front door.
 You crouched, duckwalking to the foyer where one of the house phones was placed. Youâd just picked it up from the receiver when a shadow from the living room window caught your eye. You barely had time to turn your head when something came crashing through it, breaking the glass and yanking the curtains from the rod.
 Shocked, the phone slipped from your hands, banging against the hardwood floor of the foyer and you let out a scream at the same time as the person on your TV, running away from the figure invading your home.Â
 You made it to the dinning room. Literally scrambling across the table to put an obstacle between you and the strangerâno, creature. Tall, caked in mud, leaves and stems, it resembled the Swamp Thing. It grunted, groans low and reverberating off the walls.
 âUuuhhhnngâŚâ
 This couldnât be happening to you, you couldnât die like this!!!! It was supposed to be by your hand or nothing!
 âSTAY AWAY FROM ME!â You shrieked, picking up the decorative plates from the table to throw at the creature. You nailed it a couple of times, watching it stumble as the fine china shattered against it. When you ran out of plates, you bolted from the dinning room, screaming as you scrambled up the stairs, and lost one of your slippers in the process but to hell with it! You had to get out of there. Hopefully, one of your neighbors heard your shrieks of terror and called the police.
 You peaked over the railing at the top of the stairs, to see the creature analyzing your slipper. While it was distracted, you locked yourself in your room and made your way to your bedroom window, pulling it open.
 âOkay, okay. I can do this, no big deal. Stunt actors do it all the time.â You climbed outside of your window, body nearly convulsing as you almost slipped down the roof, âNonononono.â
 You tried to grip onto a couple of shingles but they gave away, slipping right off the house to shatter against the concrete walkway and you realized Laura had no fucking idea what she was doing when it came to house repairs, the dumb bitch had just laid the shingles out without securing them.
 âOH MY GOD-IâM GONNA DIE! HELP!â
 Your body slipped further down the roofing, until you were forced to grab the gutter, gagging when your fingers squelched against whatever was in it. You dangled a good six feet off the ground, and while it wasnât exactly a ten story fall, with your luck, youâd land on your head and break your neck.
 Whimpering, you tried to pull yourself back up the roof, but it was no use. You had nothing stable to grab onto as you yanked yet another shingle clean off. You glared at it and muttered a goddammit before tossing it somewhere behind you as you went back to hanging on for dear life.Â
 âOh, no.â You mumbled, terrified as your fingertips began to lose their grip, wet with the mystery sludge from the gutter. âNo, NO!âÂ
 You lost your grip, plummeting down but you didnât meet the concrete. No, the Creature broke your fall and you were now face to face with it. The pressure of you landing on it, made it spit up into your face, green sludge, and you gasped before breaking out into screams again.
 Pushing yourself up and off of it as you ran around your front yard, nearly blind. You were not opening your eyes to let that bacteria infested swamp slime, water, whatever the hell it was, into your eyeballs.Â
 You could hear the Creature stomping around behind you as you bobbed and weaved, could feel his presence and you could not believe you were actually gonna die fighting off a swamp monster in your front yard while blindedâin clear and plain view for your neighbors to see, by the way, and unbeknownst to you, an elderly couple was watching you, not even a little concerned about your well being or the creature chasing you around.
 âStop it!â
 âLeave me alone!â
 âGo away, Iâm just a girl!â
 The timed sprinklers went off and you were soon assaulted with them as well. With just about all your senses done for, and the sprinklers washing the guck away from your face, you made a run for the house, slamming your back against the door and locking it behind you.
 Your chest was heaving, wet body pumping with adrenaline as the back of your head thumped against the door. You werenât done yet. That creature was still out there!!!
 You dove for the phone on the ground, hanging by its springy cord and shouted out hopefully loud enough for it to hear, âIâm calling the police, so if you donât want your ass riddled with bullets, Iâd suggest you leave! They shoot before asking questions!â
 You frantically dialed 911 but there was no ringing, instead, you could still hear buttons being pressed on the other line.
 Bleak, and accepting your fate, you put the phone back on the receiver, and turned towards the living room, where the other phone was located.Â
 On the chair, next to where the table the phone normaly rested on, was The Creature.Â
 You grabbed one of the lamps, ready to use it as a weapon but it didnât attack you, just turned the phone receiver this way and that, as if admiring it.Â
 Despite your fear, you took a reluctant step forward, casting the creature in the glow of the lamp you clutched and for like the billionth time that night, you gasped.
 The sprinklers had washed some of the filth off of it, too. Before, its head had been caked in a mud helmet, but now, you could actually see itâs head. It had long, disgustingly dirty curls, and wore a leather jacket, jeans and tennis shoes, all covered in grime.
 When it craned its head up to look at you, you readied the lamp, poised to throw it at itâhim. It was a guy. Big brown eyes, stared up at you and he made no move to attack.
 Slowly, you lowered the lamp, and crouched down a few feet away.
 His attention returned to the phoneâshoe shapedâin his hands and shakily, with stiff limbs, he put it back on the receiver.
 âItâsâŚItâs cool looking, right? The-The shoe phone.âÂ
 He glanced over at you and then the phone again as you mumbled out an explanation,Â
âOur neighbor in our old town cheated on his wife and she threw all his stuff out the window at him and my dad snatched the phone.â
 âMerrrruhhhhh.â He moaned out, picking up your slipper and offering it to you. When you just stared, he dropped it and you moved the lamp to the side, crossing your legs.
 âIâve never seen a zombie before.â You marveled, then squinted, âYou are a zombie, right? An undead?â
 It took him an entire minute to choppily raise his shoulders, you realized he was shrugging. Or trying to. Every movement he made was choppy. Reminded you of how stop motion was made, except his scenes werenât being played fast enough to have fluid movements.
 He tried to get up and promptly slipped, accidentally elbowing the mini sound system at his side. It turned on, Sinead OâConnorâs Drink Before the War playing. Youâd been the last to use it.
 You watched as his head tilted in interest as Sinead began to croon out lyrics.
 âDo you like music? This is Sinead OâConnor. She makes music that heals souls.â
 He raised his wrist to his chest and you inhaled sharply as you realized he was missing the hand on it.
 âUhm, noâI donât think she healed your soul. I meant like, figuratively. Her music makes people feel.â You placed your hands on your own chest, trying to convey your meaning, âSheâs one of my favorites.â
 A surprisingly comforting silence fell over the two of youâthough he sometimes made his quiet dead guy gross soundsâas you stared at him, taking in the green-gray tint of his skin beneath the dirt all over him, cheeks sunken in. You had a feeling if you touched his skin, itâd be hard, maybe waxy and it was a bit unnerving how human his eyes were, but duh! Of course they were, he was a human. Just. A dead one. At least he wasnât a skeleton.
 Man, Hollywood wasnât too far off with their interpretation.
 âCâmon,â You stood up, eyes taking in the state of your home and all the dirt the two of you had dragged in, âI gotta hide you, new dead friend.â









đđđđ˘đ đŚđŽđ§đŹđ¨đ§
eddie would be the boyfriend that can be motivated to do absolutely anything if you flash him your boobs. heâs like scooby doo with the scooby snacks.




The same pictures strike again
i canât wait to know my s/oâs patterns, they way they fidget, the way their mouth moves when the say certain words, their facial expressions
i canât wait to know them






stranger things + incorrect quotes // argyle

Eddie wants to keep you calm
i think about him every single day of my life




i think about him every single day of my life






you're not "fantasising" about your "dr" you're thinking about your life. you're already there. it's all already yours.
By the way, this is exactlyâif not, similar toâhow Eddie walks you to your house, and you canât tell me otherwise! <3
Forever a handsy and touchy boyfriend!






FINALLY got my stranger things bath and body works order !!!

Just take a moment.
Think about your DR. Or your desired life. Feel the emotions that come with it. Think about how you "aren't there yet".
Now think of the moment you realize you have it. Maybe you wake up in your new bed. Maybe you see your S/o.
All of the hours you've spent scripting, meditating, whatever have worked. You have achieved your desires. Right now.
Now bring your focus back to your current reality.
Guess what? What you just imagined is real. Your mind just showed you a picture of the reality you're meant to be in.




sunshine personified đ
(Creds to the video from @joejoequinnquinn)


JOSEPH QUINN as EDDIE MUNSON in Stranger Things
Shifting for a dead fictional character because I cannot accept his death and I need him to feel the love he deserves .