He wouldn't have done anything outside the house. For appearances. [ He can agree with Jem about that, but it hangs obviously in the air: he would have done or said plenty at home. Max just didn't think she'd get it too. Didn't know it just took one inciting incident for Neil to explode. For it to become the new normal.
Jem kisses him and he feels the warmth of her, more comforting than even the heavy beating of the sun. ]
You're giving me too much credit. I was a real asshole. [ He tilts his head up, kisses the corner of her mouth. Laughs a little, corrects: ] Am.
You’re a softie under all of that, though. You picked me up on a horse.
[This is true. Whatever flaws that came before them are for the past. This Billy, the one kissing her jaw, who strokes her hair, who holds her at night, is something newer. Something reshaped, sanded down a little. ]
Did you still want to kiss Steve Harrington, after all of that?
Hey— I'm dying for something with more than one horsepower.
[ Somewhere in the multiverse, the Z28 waits for him. He wonders if he'll ever get his hands on a ride like that again. Plus, he really misses the memory of fucking Jem in the back seat.
Then his grin turns into a pained wince. ]
God. No. It's not like— listen, you were in a weird gay heaven with sugar mommies, free drugs, and collars for cannibals. Back home... [ It wasn't up to Billy. ] That town would've eaten me alive. He would've, if he knew.
[ At least, that's what he thinks. Hell, it's what he would've done given the reverse, if Harrington was a queer and Billy needed dirt... But, he wasn't. And home wasn't kind to people like him and Jem. ]
I mean, it sounds like he wouldn't have been much of a fight.
[Sorry, Steve. ] Y'know, I - where I grew up wasn't really a great a representation of the future. But it was legal, y'now. Gay marriage. Most people stopped giving a shit. Eudio was - exceptional. Paradise. But home, it wasn't always easy. So I get it.
[She noses in against him, pecks his mouth. ] My first kiss was my best friend, Lisa, before she went on holiday with her parents. I spent a week shitting myself that she'd never talk to me again when she got back.
[ See? This is why he loves her. She hasn't even met Steve Harrington, and she already knows he ain't shit.
But— no one's actually told him it's legal later on. He heard it gets 'better,' or whatever, but— he mulls that over. Doesn't act on it. Doesn't push her for answers or more information, just screws up his brow and thinks about it. He can't picture it, or— maybe he can, after living here. But not with men like his father in power.
Luckily, she makes it easy for him to grin up at her instead of staying dour: ] Yeah?
Did she talk to you again? Did she come back and want to practice kissing some more?
Yeah, she did. [This is followed by a pinch to his nose; a little mean twist before she adds: ] We were thirteen, and she didn't kiss me again until we were eighteen.
[She sprawls all the way over him. Folds her arms on his chest and rests her chin on their nest. ] Just that once. I wish I'd kissed her more than that, but I liked that she was my friend more.
[ He gets an arm behind his head so he can prop himself up, grinning smugly into her smug fucking face. She's sticky against him and his other hand finds her shoulder before gliding down her naked back. ]
Just promise if you ever meet a shitbag named Steve Harrington, you won't... tell him I wanted to suck his dick in a steamy locker room.
[The Hair is a distant memory. A blur of swooping brown against a forehead, a strong nose. A fuzzy detail in a life that was theirs, for a little while. A background character to a story that she misses so, so much. ]
I miss your car, I think. It smelled nice. Like - leather, cigarettes. Summer.
Oh, let me watch. I want to watch his heart break. Ball's are gonna crawl back up inside him.
[ He's snickering, brought back to pleased. That's something special about Jem. They always round back here. He loves being here.
His voice softens: ] You remember it?
God I fucking... miss it. It was like... That shithole my old man moved us to didn't feel like home. Home, California, didn't always feel like home, not after she left. But the Camaro always felt like home.
It was blue, right? [Faded blue, like the colour you might paint the sky. She remembers he drove like a maniac; she remembers sitting in the passenger seat on prom night with her hand in his, and that she can't really remember if they made it out of the car before things changed.
She listens, and remembers a little more. Thinks Billy was always a little more himself in the car than out of it. Protected, maybe.
She doesn't know, really, if she's the kind of girl Billy would have actually looked twice at. That maybe in reality she would have been faded into obscurity, maybe a little too weird and broken to ever really hit his radar. She says:] I think if you saw my real room you'd turn and run. But that's where I always felt the most at home.
Yeah. Blue. A Z28, dark blue, but not navy. [ He says Z28 like a lover says a pet name, he says dark blue, but not navy, with the affection of a doting boyfriend pushing his lover's hair from their face.
His hand runs over her side, feeling her warmth, the softness of her skin. He can't begin to imagine what she's thinking, not now, with her sweat and scent in his nose, on his mouth, with her so near.
He laughs though. ] Tell me about it. [ Then softer: ] I feel like you got a front row seat to all my bullshit. I should've seen yours, to even the playing field.
I was like - weird, I guess. Not goth, but close enough.
[Metal. Thrash metal. Screamo. She thinks about her room - the posters, the decor. She thinks about the music set up, the bongs, the excessive amount of skulls - and finds she misses it, but she also doesn't really know where to start. ]
I liked skulls. I still do. I had a lot of those. Candle burners, bongs - skull shaped. A bunch of posters of bands my parents hated. Crystals, photos - everything was black. [This is, obviously, unsurprising. She purses her lips, tries hard not to laugh. ] You would have thought it was weird. I can tell.
[ Skulls. He files that information away, tries to imagine what her room looked like. Posters, skulls, all sorts of bullshit. He knows it'd be swathed in black.
He makes a face. ] Nuh uh.
[ Well, maybe. Maybe it's fucked up that when he pictures her room, as described, he sort of thinks of like... a guy's room. Some metal head he'd buy weed off of. He wonders if Eddie's room looked like hers, and also guesses it might've looked a little like his, minus the skulls. The whole goth, dark mistress, Bauhaus-on-loop, white-matte-face thing didn't really do it for him. The memory of Jem in a Def Leppard cut-off does. ]
I don't know. None of the chicks I knew were really into... metal or thrash. I was into them if they were hot. [ His hand brushes up and down her shoulder. ] You can call me an asshole.
You're an asshole, but you're my asshole. [The phrasing is unfortunate. She won't change it. Instead: ] Some of 'em were ceramic. Or glass - there's a vodka brand, all their bottles are glass skulls.
- And some were, y'know. Sheep. Deer. I never kept any of the human ones - we'd burn 'em, in the early days. Some of the lads kept ... Parts. [She doesn't say: my folks would have never allowed it. She might have, though. Jem at fourteen was a different creature, desperate to fit in, to assimilate into the group. She wanted to be tough and strong so badly.
She hums, thoughtful. ] I had this bong, that was like ... A demon skull. Had these two massive horns on it, I honestly can't remember how I ever managed to smoke from it.
[ She says it so simply. Sometimes, Billy mistakenly thinks of Jem as... a girl. That girl in Hawkins, with ripped jean shorts and a cut-off, playing hooky with him and swapping cigarettes. His hand finds hers, finger pads toying with her skin, running over her knuckles. He thinks about her zombie problem, of dead, rotting bodies and a girl standing over them with a shiny Colt.
He also can't wrap his mind around... Neil would've skinned him if he'd come up with a bong after doing one of his random shitty ass inspections. The Hustlers were fine, the skimpy posters of tits. The other things weren't: the stray grams of weed, the cologne his old man liked to call perfume, the tinted ChapStick he swore a girl left in his car. ]
You did it with these, [ he says, hand drawing up to pinch at her bicep. ] How many reps you do with that bong, babygirl? [ He pictures her, head swimming, the bong as tall as he was. ]
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Jem kisses him and he feels the warmth of her, more comforting than even the heavy beating of the sun. ]
You're giving me too much credit. I was a real asshole. [ He tilts his head up, kisses the corner of her mouth. Laughs a little, corrects: ] Am.
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[This is true. Whatever flaws that came before them are for the past. This Billy, the one kissing her jaw, who strokes her hair, who holds her at night, is something newer. Something reshaped, sanded down a little. ]
Did you still want to kiss Steve Harrington, after all of that?
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[ Somewhere in the multiverse, the Z28 waits for him. He wonders if he'll ever get his hands on a ride like that again. Plus, he really misses the memory of fucking Jem in the back seat.
Then his grin turns into a pained wince. ]
God. No. It's not like— listen, you were in a weird gay heaven with sugar mommies, free drugs, and collars for cannibals. Back home... [ It wasn't up to Billy. ] That town would've eaten me alive. He would've, if he knew.
[ At least, that's what he thinks. Hell, it's what he would've done given the reverse, if Harrington was a queer and Billy needed dirt... But, he wasn't. And home wasn't kind to people like him and Jem. ]
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[Sorry, Steve. ] Y'know, I - where I grew up wasn't really a great a representation of the future. But it was legal, y'now. Gay marriage. Most people stopped giving a shit. Eudio was - exceptional. Paradise. But home, it wasn't always easy. So I get it.
[She noses in against him, pecks his mouth. ] My first kiss was my best friend, Lisa, before she went on holiday with her parents. I spent a week shitting myself that she'd never talk to me again when she got back.
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But— no one's actually told him it's legal later on. He heard it gets 'better,' or whatever, but— he mulls that over. Doesn't act on it. Doesn't push her for answers or more information, just screws up his brow and thinks about it. He can't picture it, or— maybe he can, after living here. But not with men like his father in power.
Luckily, she makes it easy for him to grin up at her instead of staying dour: ] Yeah?
Did she talk to you again? Did she come back and want to practice kissing some more?
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[She sprawls all the way over him. Folds her arms on his chest and rests her chin on their nest. ] Just that once. I wish I'd kissed her more than that, but I liked that she was my friend more.
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[ He gets an arm behind his head so he can prop himself up, grinning smugly into her smug fucking face. She's sticky against him and his other hand finds her shoulder before gliding down her naked back. ]
Just promise if you ever meet a shitbag named Steve Harrington, you won't... tell him I wanted to suck his dick in a steamy locker room.
no subject
[The Hair is a distant memory. A blur of swooping brown against a forehead, a strong nose. A fuzzy detail in a life that was theirs, for a little while. A background character to a story that she misses so, so much. ]
I miss your car, I think. It smelled nice. Like - leather, cigarettes. Summer.
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[ He's snickering, brought back to pleased. That's something special about Jem. They always round back here. He loves being here.
His voice softens: ] You remember it?
God I fucking... miss it. It was like... That shithole my old man moved us to didn't feel like home. Home, California, didn't always feel like home, not after she left. But the Camaro always felt like home.
I'm glad you met her.
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She listens, and remembers a little more. Thinks Billy was always a little more himself in the car than out of it. Protected, maybe.
She doesn't know, really, if she's the kind of girl Billy would have actually looked twice at. That maybe in reality she would have been faded into obscurity, maybe a little too weird and broken to ever really hit his radar. She says:] I think if you saw my real room you'd turn and run. But that's where I always felt the most at home.
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His hand runs over her side, feeling her warmth, the softness of her skin. He can't begin to imagine what she's thinking, not now, with her sweat and scent in his nose, on his mouth, with her so near.
He laughs though. ] Tell me about it. [ Then softer: ] I feel like you got a front row seat to all my bullshit. I should've seen yours, to even the playing field.
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[Metal. Thrash metal. Screamo. She thinks about her room - the posters, the decor. She thinks about the music set up, the bongs, the excessive amount of skulls - and finds she misses it, but she also doesn't really know where to start. ]
I liked skulls. I still do. I had a lot of those. Candle burners, bongs - skull shaped. A bunch of posters of bands my parents hated. Crystals, photos - everything was black. [This is, obviously, unsurprising. She purses her lips, tries hard not to laugh. ] You would have thought it was weird. I can tell.
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He makes a face. ] Nuh uh.
[ Well, maybe. Maybe it's fucked up that when he pictures her room, as described, he sort of thinks of like... a guy's room. Some metal head he'd buy weed off of. He wonders if Eddie's room looked like hers, and also guesses it might've looked a little like his, minus the skulls. The whole goth, dark mistress, Bauhaus-on-loop, white-matte-face thing didn't really do it for him. The memory of Jem in a Def Leppard cut-off does. ]
I don't know. None of the chicks I knew were really into... metal or thrash. I was into them if they were hot. [ His hand brushes up and down her shoulder. ] You can call me an asshole.
Did you find the skulls? Or buy them?
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- And some were, y'know. Sheep. Deer. I never kept any of the human ones - we'd burn 'em, in the early days. Some of the lads kept ... Parts. [She doesn't say: my folks would have never allowed it. She might have, though. Jem at fourteen was a different creature, desperate to fit in, to assimilate into the group. She wanted to be tough and strong so badly.
She hums, thoughtful. ] I had this bong, that was like ... A demon skull. Had these two massive horns on it, I honestly can't remember how I ever managed to smoke from it.
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He also can't wrap his mind around... Neil would've skinned him if he'd come up with a bong after doing one of his random shitty ass inspections. The Hustlers were fine, the skimpy posters of tits. The other things weren't: the stray grams of weed, the cologne his old man liked to call perfume, the tinted ChapStick he swore a girl left in his car. ]
You did it with these, [ he says, hand drawing up to pinch at her bicep. ] How many reps you do with that bong, babygirl? [ He pictures her, head swimming, the bong as tall as he was. ]