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    ✶ ┄ FIX IT !

    summary: you thought you were over it, the whole steve-and-nancy thing. spoiler alert: you aren’t.
    pairing: steve harrington / f!reader
    word count: 3.5k
    warning: angst. gut wrenching angst. with a sort of happy ending.
    a/n: i’m such a sucker for angst it’s gotta be unhealthy at this point. anyway, shout out to all my angsty fic enjoyers. let’s read this and cry together <3

    Having four roommates and only two bathrooms was worth it if it meant getting out of Hawkins. The apartment was a quaint little thing just outside of Indianapolis — up four flights of stairs with no elevator, cracks in the walls, and a stellar view of an alleyway.

    But it was nice to have a place all your own. Sharing it with all your best friends was even better. That was the dream after all, wasn’t it? And being with Steve — that was just the cherry on top of it all.

    So you weren’t going to let your mean, green, and envious heart ruin the new life you and your friends were trying to build in this tiny apartment.

    You didn’t even think yourself the jealous type. Not until you realized that Steve was going to live under the same roof as his ex-girlfriend. It was dumb and it was irrational and you just couldn’t shake it.

    It was probably a whole lot harder for Steve than it was for you, really. Besides, it had been years since they were together. Both of them had moved on, both of them had new and blossoming relationships.

    Jonathan was good to Nancy. And to you, Steve was… well he was perfect. More importantly, he was yours. 

    So it really shouldn’t bother you.

    And it didn’t. Not for a while. 

    Not until Nancy and Jonathan broke up out of nowhere and he’d announced to all of you on movie night that he was moving out.

    He said that he missed California too much, that Argyle was getting lonely all the way out there, and that he had a spare room at his place. You couldn’t tell if that was the truth or just some bullshit excuse.

    Maybe both.

    What made it worse is that Nancy hadn’t seemed all that upset about it. Hell, you were more sad about him leaving than she was.

    She told you as much during your weekly designated wine night (the one where you and her and Robin got drunk on cheap wine, while the rest of the boys fucked off and got drunker on cheaper beer).

    “It didn’t hurt as bad as I thought it would,” she’d confessed with a shrug, only slightly tipsy and cheeks pink with it. “We… drifted apart, I guess. Just felt right to end it.”

    You and Robin spent the rest of the night comforting her, anyway.

    She loved Jonathan, everyone knew that. It sort of came with the whole shared trauma thing. She had to be at least a little bit sad that her person was gone, but she hid it away from the rest of you like it was her job.

    But when the days got really bad, and she found herself missing Jonathan more than she liked, she sought refuge in Steve. Your Steve. 

    And it made sense. He knew her better than the rest of you.

    But it didn’t mean it hurt any less.

    A sick feeling twists in your stomach when Steve accompanies the girl on a liquor store run without her having to ask. You watch with your heart in your throat when he leaves with her in the dead of night — a swirling bubble of jealousy in the pit of your chest with an ache so palpable you can taste it.

    You spend the next several minutes trying not to look as sad as you feel while Eddie can’t stop debating on what the two of them might be talking about.

    Nancy had been more reserved as of late, carrying a rain cloud over her as she wandered through the apartment like a ghost — he concludes they’re just going out to spill some hot goss. Robin makes him promise to never say those string of words ever again while you quietly dismiss yourself to your bedroom.

    Nancy and Steve have been gone for an hour.

    Lying in the dark and staring up at the textured, water-stained ceiling, you start to do the math. Fifteen minutes there, fifteen minutes back with traffic — but the streets are usually bare after nine o’clock. Either way, that leaves a half hour spent trying to choose what alcohol to splurge on.

    You’ve seen Nancy try to pick out wine, she’s indecisive and a perfectionist to boot. She could spend hours dissecting each bottle to find the perfect one, if Robin wasn’t constantly over her shoulder rushing her.

    Maybe that’s why Nancy had declined when the girl offered to tag along with them.

    Or maybe she just wanted to be alone with Steve—

    You have to physically shake that thought from your head. But even when you shut your eyes, it’s like the image of him and Nancy making out in the back of her Station Wagon is ingrained in the depths of your mind.

    You curl into yourself and bathe in the depths of the dark abyss you’ve created in your bedroom, trying to see your way out of your handcrafted turmoil like a bad cold.

    When Nancy and Steve return, they come cradling paper bags in their arms like babies.

    Robin relieves the latter of the load in his hands and follows the darker-haired girl into the kitchen connected to the living room, no larger than a decent-sized closet.

    Steve notices the lack of your presence as soon as he walks through the door. When he’d left, the three of you were pregaming — a feat that often led to Eddie breaking out his guitar and you and him singing terribly off-key to whatever was playing on the radio.

    Now you’re nowhere to be found, and he feels it like a missed meal. He feels the ache of your absence like an empty stomach.

    “Where’d she go?” Steve asks Eddie, who’s lounging on the couch and taking up the entire space — legs spread and arms thrown over the back.

    The curly-haired boy takes a noisy sip of his nearly gone beer. Then exhales rather dramatically when he sits the can on his thigh. It leaves a damp ring on the denim. “Hey, buddy… Just blow in from stupid town?”

    “…What?”

    Eddie rolls his eyes, already annoyed and knowing more than he lets on. “She’s in her room, dingus.”

    “She okay?” Steve wonders with furrowed brows, uncaring of the use of the stupid nickname because there’s bigger things to worry about apparently.

    It wasn’t like you to miss a night of drinking. He gets momentarily fearful that you’d gotten sick while he was away, that he wasn’t around to help you if you had.

    “Why don’t you ask her?” Eddie lilts with wide eyes, like it’s a bright idea that neither of them would’ve thought of otherwise.

    His sarcasm makes Steve roll his eyes, but he heeds the boy’s words anyway.

    Through the short hallway and the last door on the right, he finds you in the darkness of your shared bedroom, illuminated only by the orange streetlight that filters through the blinds. You’re hid beneath the covers, a little lump on the mattress. 

    He idles in the doorway and waits for you to react to his presence.

    You don’t.

    “Hey, babe,” he greets cautiously after concluding you just hadn’t heard the door squeak open upon his arrival. “You feel okay?”

    You mumble something he can’t quite make out. He takes the raised infliction as an affirmative and shifts his weight on his feet because it’s unlike you to be so one-note with him.

    “Well, I, uh— I bought some of that wine you like… I couldn’t remember if you liked the blackberry or blueberry, so I ended up just getting both, you know, just in case.”

    “Okay,” you respond after several agonizing seconds. Your voice sounds so fragile in the still darkness. Like he didn’t already know something was wrong.

    He so desperately wants to pry but chooses to err on the side of caution for now, out of fear of turning the bad, worse.

    “You wanna come down and try it with me? If you don’t like it we can always go back—”

    “I’m okay,” you interrupt gently, with a tone so soft and coated with so much emotion that it makes his heart sink. You’re anything but and he knows it.

    “Okay,” he nods anyway with the hope that he can pull you from this funk you’d managed to fall into. “Do you, uh… Do you want me to stay in here with you?”

    He hears your deep sigh and sees the way the wad of blankets rises and falls again. A telltale sign of your annoyance. He knows then that he’s overstayed his welcome.

    Your voice remains quiet but loses its kindness when you tell him: “You can do whatever you want, Steve.”

    He’s hurt by the way you’re so suddenly short with him, then angered because he didn’t do anything to deserve it in the first place.

    “Okay, what’s wrong with you? What did I do?”

    You don’t answer. You just sigh again, the same really big, dramatic one that’s more to showcase your irritation with him than anything else.

    You’re more than keen to end the conversation right there, but Steve isn’t. Not when something’s eating you away from the inside out and he can’t do anything to help you because you won’t let him

    “Babe, c’mon. I get it, alright? You’re mad at me. Just tell me what I did wrong so I can fix it.”

    “You can’t fix it,” you monotone, stifled beneath the covers.

    “I can’t fix it?” he repeats with furrowed brows. “What do you mean, I can’t fix it?”

    You use your silence as an answer, as a weapon. It’s almost worse than any silver-tongued reply you could’ve given him. The quiet forces him to think for himself and imagine all the things he could’ve done wrong that he can’t take back. It feels like quicksand.

    Did he forgot to kiss you good morning? Of course, he didn’t — actually, he gets mad at you for forgetting — and you were golden before he left. Eddie probably said something stupid, that was likely. Or maybe Robin made a joke that upset you, that was even more likely. 

    He figures it’s something in between all those. Something silly that feels like the end of the world. He can make it better. He always makes it better.

    Steve lifts the lump of covers you shield yourself with and crawls beneath them with the intention of pulling you out of the void you’ve sunken into.

    It’s not so comfortable, lying in bed in socks and jeans and a collared shirt, but he doesn’t need to feel good right now — you do. He’ll be content if he can just hold you in his arms for a couple of hours, the rest of the night if that’s what you need.

    But he can’t even do that.

    He reaches for your arm, fingers just barely trailing across the warm skin there, and you jerk away from him like he’s shocked you.

    It startles him, how quick you are to avoid him. It has him jerking back too, because you’ve never denied him the opportunity to touch you. He becomes the same sort of storm cloud that you are now, because he doesn’t know what he did to deserve this. Any of it.

    “Why are you doing this?” he asks you, less soft than he’d been before.

    You sniffle. “I told you I didn’t want you going out alone with Nancy anymore,” you mumble, face still shoved into your pillow. The words are slightly muffled but he can hear the tears that coat your voice. 

    “That’s what this is about?” he wonders, not as empathetic as you’d hoped he might be, but genuinely confused. With your back to him, you don’t see the smile pulling at his lips while he shakes his head, like it’s funny to him. “Babe, we were just getting drinks. It’s no different than you going out with Robin.”

    “It’s totally different! Because I was never in love with Robin. She was never in love with me—”

    “Well, I beg to differ,” he murmurs in a soft laugh.

    “It’s not funny, Steve,” you retort wetly and then sniffle again. When you turn to face him, he sees for the first time what he’s done to you.

    The orange of the streetlight lamp outside bathes you in a sunset shade of neon — your eyes are glassy with tears that gather at your lashes. Emotions glow at the tip of your nose and your cheeks. Your skin would be hot to the touch if he felt you now.

    “Do you know how weird it is for me? To watch my boyfriend and his ex go fuck around with me?” you ask him with a scrunched nose and brows, like your trying to keep yourself from falling apart in front of him.

    “It’s not like that and you know it,” Steve scolds. “She just wanted to get alcohol for tonight and had some shit to get off her chest. I mean, she’s been having a really hard time lately—”

    “It’s not your job to take care of her, Steve!” you shout before you even realize you’re shouting. You take in a shuddered breath and let it out in a trembling sigh, shining eyes flitted away from him and towards the ceiling as you calm yourself down.

    When you start your lament again, you’re quieter.

    “You can’t just be this, like, emotional crutch for her every single time something’s wrong. She’ll just get invested in you all over again and…”

    Steve watches from beside you, propped up on his elbow, as you trail off. The frown between your eyebrows deepens, a great and inquisitive crevice, while your eyes widen and your mouth falls softly agape — like you’ve discovered something in the midst of your rant.

    “Is— Is that what you want?” you ask him then. “Do you, like, need her attention to feed your ego or something?”

    He’s too offended by your words to tell you all the ways they aren’t true. “What? No! Why would you say that?”

    “Because it’s embarrassing, Steve.”

    “What is?”

    “Watching you and her together!” you admit through a tightening throat. You rise from where you’d been laying down and Steve follows you, settling in front of you as you wrap your arms around your knees. “When I have to sit here, by myself, while you guys spend time alone. When she always knows what you’re up to, and I don’t—”

    “I’m sorry,” he apologizes quietly, because he doesn’t know what else to say.

    “—It’s not fair. She’s not your girlfriend, Steve, I am. It’s your job to take care of me, not her.

    Steve deflates like a popped balloon. His chin falls to his chest and his eyes squeeze shut at the weight of your words.

    It’s like you’re reminding him that he’s supposed to be in love with you and not someone he cared for a long time ago. Like you felt the need to remind him because you thought he’d forgotten somewhere down the line.

    It hurts him too. It feels like you’ve got his heart in your hands and you’re wringing it in your grip.

    “You’re right,” Steve concedes with a nod. “I just… I guess, I never thought about it like that.”

    He feels the same way, too, sometimes. When you and Eddie go all buddy-buddy mode and want to spend time together.

    When you’re out all night with him at band practice. When you’re attached at the hip and having sleepovers in his room to talk about everything and nothing for hours until you fall asleep when the sun rises. When you both come down at one in the afternoon the next day for breakfast, giggling about the thing you said the night before.

    It makes him feel like he’s missing out. Like you’re sharing parts of yourself with someone else and he isn’t allowed to see it.

    And sometimes he gets irrational — keeps himself up all night as he imagines you and Eddie making out on his floor after going through all his new tapes or fucking in his unmade bed while he keeps a hand on your mouth to keep you quiet.

    Steve concocts waking nightmares for himself whenever you’re not beside him.

    But even then, it’s different. Because he used to do all that shit with Nancy. They fell in love, made out for hours because they didn’t want to stop feeling each other, had sex on a twin-sized bed and tried to keep from falling out of it while they did.

    You’d never done that shit with Eddie — or with anyone you’re now sharing a home with. Besides Steve.

    Because he’s yours now. And you’re his.

    But you can’t stop thinking about how he used to be Nancy’s too.

    “I don’t need you to tell me that I’m right,” you murmur with the childlike shake of your head, slow and lazy, as you wipe your wet cheek on your shoulder. “I need you to do something about it— I needed you to do something about it a long time ago.”

    “I will, okay? I will. I promise. I’ll fix it,” Steve assures you quickly, with wide and hopeful eyes and a nodding head that makes his hair flop against his forehead.

    He can see you losing hope in front of him, like a flame going slowly out. You’re slipping away. He keeps fighting to keep a hold of you.

    “No.”

    “…No?”

    “You can’t,” you sniffle. “You can’t fix it.”

    “Baby—”

    “It’s not fair. To either of us,” you tell him, looking at him through clumped together lashes and heavy, sparkling eyes. “And it’s not your fault, okay? But I can’t keep feeling this like. It’s not healthy— this isn’t… this is what a healthy relationship is supposed to look like. It shouldn’t feel like this.”

    Steve blinks back stinging tears. He brings his hand to his face and rubs the back of it against his burning nose. He feels a bit like you do now, hopeless. You’re slipping away and he is too and you both just keep on slipping, just going going going.

    “You’re not even—” he clears his throat when his voice breaks halfway through. “You’re not even gonna let me try?”

    You shrug weakly. Tears burn as they gather at your waterline. You revel in the sting because it’s better than the hole ripping through your chest.

    “I don’t know. I think… I think it’s too late.”

    “Why would you say that?” Steve agonizes with the shake of his head, looking like a wounded puppy as he gaze at you with brown eyes full of hurt. “Don’t say that. Don’t.”

    “Steve—”

    “No,” he interjects firmly, stopping the spiral before it can start again.

    He positions himself so he’s sitting further ahead of you and holds your arms in his numbing hands, ducking down to catch your gaze when you try to look away from him.

    “I love you, okay? I’m an idiot and I’m sorry and I’m stupid, alright? I wasn’t thinking. But we can’t just… It’s not too late. I can fix this. I promise I can fix this.”

    Your chest aches at his plea, at the way he still doesn’t understand.

    It’s not his fault you feel this way, not entirely. It’s not anyone’s fault and that’s what’s so scary. There’s no one to blame the pain on, no root to cut out and put an end to it. You’re frightened that it’s always going to be there, constantly in the way, forbidding either of you from ever moving on.

    “Steve…” you murmur through tears while the boy gathers you in his arms. You try to stop him but your voice gets caught in your throat halfway through. Because you don’t want him to stop. Not ever.

    He nurses you into his velvet hold, wrapping a pair of strong arms around you to cage you against him. He presses his nose into your temple while he rocks you back and forth. “I promise. Everything’s okay. I’ll fix it.”

    He repeats that like a mantra while you keep your head pressed against his chest — everything’s gonna be okay, I can fix it, I love you.

    It’s a promise. One that he’d rather die than break. 

    You stay there, curled against his chest, while dark feelings ebb and flow in a constant and bitter cycle.

    You hope he’s right. That these big feelings are just big stupid feelings that’ll pass come the pink and blue sunrise. That everything really is going to be okay and that he really can fix it. 

    Because even now, all hopeless and full of doom and gloom, you feel soothed in his hold. You’ve never felt safer anywhere else. You’ve built a home in the peace of Steve’s arms and you want to keep on living in them.

    “I’m gonna make it better,” he whispers against the crown of your head. If you’ll let me.

    He feels you nod lazily against him. “Okay.”

    1. daacherrybomb reblogged this from lovebugism
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    4. lovebugism posted this
      summary: you thought you were over it, the whole steve-and-nancy thing. spoiler alert: you aren't.