#gosh I love Juni
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panzershrike-pretz · 10 months ago
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✨ 💼 🎹 for the OC asks!! 🥰
HELLOOOO! :D thank you so much for the ask!!
Here aee the answers! I decided to go with one of my characters I haven't made a post about yet, Juni! Because I love her!
✨- How did you come up with the OC’s name?
Her whole name is Juni Sharma!
Originally, her name wase meant to be Juniper, actually, but I ended up calling her Juni way more. Story-wise, she's of indian-secandinavian descent (her dad came from india, while her mom is finnish; they met in the US and she Exists). From what I found on good ol' internet, Juni means lovable, young or born in june.
While Sharma, her surname, came from her dad. It means "bliss", "happiness" or "warmth".
If I may be jonest it's been a while since I named her and I don't fully remember my intention with the name, so theresearch about the meaning was done now again. It certainly still fits her!
💼 - What do they do for a living?
Piracy! Juni joined the crew alongside Natasha, her best friend, so she wouldn't be left behind.
Due to her blindness, Juni prefers not to get involved in physical combat - instead, she works with Darty as another of the ship's musicians! That, and she also cares for the children.
Rarely she works as a spy as well, guve that her power is of enhanced hearing.
Begore that, she was a stundent and part-time worker at a restaurant, as a waiter. When she was able, she'd play as well for an extra money.
🎹 - Do they have any hobbies?
Juni isn't fully blind, she still loves to write poetry. It's one of her favorite past-times, even if she finds it very hard. Her boyfriend, Millard, loves to help when she asks and they both enjoy to read together as well.
She plays the violin; she got classes from a very young age and while her vision was deteriorating due to glaucoma, the violin was her best friend. She had a hard time adapting, especially since she was so young when she started to loose her vision, and it's still hard for her to fully deal with it but she's doing better now. And the violin stuck around.
Finally, Juni is a lover of horses! She always loved to ride them on her uncle's farm and had riding classes up until she disappeared (fucked off; her family thinks she's dead). This love for the animals stuck with her as she grew. Now, she rides whenever she gets a chance to visit Andy and Ted's ranch.
I'm debating on giving her own horse as well. Maybe?
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redr0sewrites · 4 months ago
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some recent dc art ive made! i havent posted art in a hot minute lmao- one day i will get good at digital art but that day is probably not very soon
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(pls click for full photo + better quality)
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yuriyuruandyuraart · 1 year ago
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paperd's ask reminded me that i am married to your fem lust and i am so happy <33
-juni (@jun1per-t33th wow i actually realized that since i cant send asks through my acc i can just. tag myself. woah. im so smart ahaha)
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so happy indeed HHGGSHG<3333
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angeart · 2 months ago
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Well now I just wanna know even more about your ocs and their story! xD Even before all the spooky stuff, Raven being placed in the middle of someone else's life and there's pressure to remember people and things he doesn't... And the watch, is that significant, what happens if Raven makes it to new years (hopefully with his sanity intact)? And what is up with this universe's Raven that just 'ah the amnesia hit him again' ?
And what did Rei do to get people that pissed at him? And but is he still trying to look out for Raven even if he acts like he's not?
-🎀
ribbon anon, you have no idea how happy these questions make me.
there's not a lot of pressure on raven to remember things he doesn't, because everyone around knows he gets these amnesia spells. it's still tough on him because he has to navigate this world anyway, and it lets people be dismissive of him. because—there's no reason to make friends with someone who's bound to forget you in a couple of weeks or months anyway, right? (it also gives a green card to be a shit. he won't remember!) (fun morality dilemmas right there.)
he's entirely lost, made to "play family" with people he doesn't know, live in an appartment that's wholly unfamiliar to him yet he's meant to call it his home, and whenever he steps outside, he has to deal with all these strangers looking at him knowingly while they don't know anything about him, actually. and on top of that there's the voices and shadows and mirror reflections...
add in him being worried about evia as she gets close to rei, because he isn't yet sure what kind of person rei is. and then later on kye telling him he needs to stay away from rei. (that they both do; him and evia. especially evia.) that raven should help them bring rei down—
except. kye's words come at a time when raven's already experienced the cracks in rei's masks. they come at a time when raven's beginning to be acutely aware that rei cares and he's hurting.
and now raven has to decide who to trust and side with, caught in the middle of it all.
... so let's talk about rei.
rei is meant to be a troublemaker, this uncaring character who only cares only about himself... and yet this caregiver role is thrust upon him, where he has to also (begrudgingly) make sure raven's okay whenever he forgets things, right? he's tired of this cycle. tired of doing the same things over and over pointlessly.
i had lots of notes on their childhood and young rei leading to how rei got to be like this, and why. but if you want to know about The Incident that so fiercely set nick against rei... well.
rei used to have a girlfriend. and they were young and stupid, and it was a little bit toxic.
ok, very toxic.
see, rei often felt like he's not paid a lot of attention, and he isn't as loved as raven is. that he has to actively take, whereas it always felt to him like raven is just given things. like he always had something to compete and fight for.
and so when he got into this relationship, he really just dug his nails into the idea that he's now wanted and needed. that this was his.
it was possessive, and controlling, and bad.
it ended on a cliffside in a tragic accident.
rei was trying to prove something. like an idiot that he was. she was trying to leave, and he was trying to insist she needed him, cornering her near the edge as they fought.
he tried to grab her, but she fell anyway.
kye and nick were witnesses, and from far away, it looked like rei pushed her.
from kye's recounting of events, it isn't clear if she survived or not. what is searing, though, is the idea that rei never got any kind of backlash from it. he never got punished. he never stopped treating people like shit, making him a ticking time bomb until it happens again. because he hasn't learned his lesson.
nick wants to teach him that lesson, by any means necessary. even if those means are equally as bad as what he thinks rei did. (to be fair, nick is also a little psycho who enjoys people's suffering and power, soo—) (it's kye who's going into this thinking they can do it right.) (it's kye who's begging raven to help them. to go against rei. to let rei feel some consequences; to teach him that people aren't toys or possessions.)
(rei knows these things.)
here's a fun little note i have on rei:
Rei’s choice to be a troublemaker (to fight, physically, with the world around him) was his way of dealing with the things inside of him. But he never wanted that little sphere of destruction to reach anyone else. He never imagined it would ever affect anyone but himself.
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mymelodyisme · 10 months ago
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🥹♥️🩷
You’re much too kind to me I love you!!
🗣️Happy friendiversary 😭
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One year ago today, @mymelodyisme drew Junie for the first time. We didn't know it then, but that little doodle would be the start of a beautiful friendship. Our mutual love for Stardew Valley turned into something lovely. It's hard to imagine my day to day life without her in it to brighten it up. She's also the one who inspired and encouraged me to experiment with my art style, and one of my biggest supporters. So, cheers to one year pookie, and I look forward to many, many more. 💖💖
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zahri-melitor · 4 months ago
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Newish Comics:
Batman #150: oh look, we're pulling through elements of Gotham War here for payoff! And we have some commentary on what it means to be a henchperson in Gotham and its effects on not only that person but their family.
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Birds of Prey #11: Dinah and Mari discussing not having your powers at your fingertips...yeah Mari, Dinah gets that.
The art on this remains spectacular, and I hope Constantine really was off to find Xanthe Zhou.
Shazam! #13: aww yeah we finally got a Freddy viewpoint and voice, and we are on track to get Freddy powers back. Very solid time spent in the Shazvan on characterisation.
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Love your work, Josie Campbell.
The Boy Wonder #3: oh gosh, this was right on point for Tim and Damian. I particularly enjoyed how tech focused it was in terms of devices (making that a point of difference from other issues), and in how it both had Damian completely misread Tim's motivations and be convinced Tim was Up To Something, but also have Tim outright explain to Damian that he has problems trusting Damian because of past events and that he finds Damian hard to read. It felt very in conversation with Red Robin period between them, and the impact Spook's beheading had on setting their initial dynamic. Justification! On both sides!
Juni Ba clearly gets their dynamic, which is something I really appreciate.
The Warlord #59: This week in Skartaris the kids including Joshua sneak into the dungeon and see what they think is a demon. Joshua gets trapped inside as the rest flee, and ends up talking to Travis.
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As you can see, bondage is still in effect.
Joshua finds out Darvin is planning to kill Travis, and decides he wants to let Travis out - and in the process of unlocking the chains Travis feels the watch on Joshua's arm!
And....end of issue, before the reveal!
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orchidsangel · 9 months ago
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hello ml!!
i was curious abt how big of a reader you are. like, if books ever interested you or if it’s just fics of tumblr mby?
and if books for you, what are your favourite(?)?!
hi robin!!!
oh gosh, i used to be such a massive reader. like genuinely addicted to reading, could knock out multiple books in a day. i remember one time when i was in elementary school, the book fair came around, and i asked to go to the nurses office so i could get out of class and look at the books.
i think sometime in middle school, i stopped reading as much, and by high school, i almost completely stopped outside of stuff assigned for class. and even then, i would skim over stuff and just quit a few chapters in.
i've got adhd so my attention span is really short, and my brain just won't function normally when i read, so i find myself rereading the same sentences over and over again to make sure i understand them, which just gets really frustrating. so idk, i stopped reading full-blown books bc of it. which is crazy because i do still love reading, i just hate that my brain's a little wonky and won't let me do it in peace.
a couple years back, i had to take english over in summer school, and it was basically a free reading period, so i ended up reading three entire books that summer, which may not be a lot for some people, but for me, at the time, it was really big. and last year, i finally finished a book that i had started two years prior but put down because it was just fucking insane.
i hope to read more this year, and literally, just last night, i raided my mom's classic lit shelf. planning on reading dracula or the picture of dorian gray!
as for my faves, it's hard to say because every book that's really stuck with me was something i read 2+ years ago, but the party by robyn harding was one i really loved. i read it in 8th grade, and it definitely wasn't for kids, but idk, i've never been one to stick to my age group. emergency contact by mary h.k. choi was a big one for me. i read that in 9th grade as a freshman in high school, i believe, and i followed it up with permanent record also by mary h.k. choi. i really loved both books, which was surprising for me because i'm not really into romance, but what i liked about them was how the entire plots weren't focused on the relationship, like it was more than that.
when you reach me by rebecca stead was a book i read when i was 10, and i still think about it to this day. i get the urge to reread it because my ten-year-old brain couldn't fully understand what was going on, but i did really enjoy it. during that same time in my life, i read the books absolutely normal chaos by sharon creech and a crooked kind of perfect by linda urban. both are books i think about often, especially a crooked kind of perfect, i reread it multiple times.
the most recent book i finished was credence by penelope douglas which…no comment. (literally put it down for two years before picking it up again and then had to put it back down for another six months)
my most recent fave was beware that girl by teresa toten, which i really really loved. although, the ending was a little lackluster, so i choose to ignore it and focus on the parts that i loved, which was pretty much the entire rest of the book.
i also enjoyed we were liars by e. lockhart, which was recommended by booktok before they became a bunch of smut fiends. i really did like that one, i didn't expect the end, and it was a good read to me.
there's definitely more that i've read in my life and enjoyed. i was a big geronimo and thea stilton lover when i was a kid, along with junie b jones and any iteration of a diary that could be found (dork diaries, dear dumb diary, diary of a wimpy kid). but lately, all i read is fanfiction, and i don't even read that much anymore.
i suppose the best way to exercise my brain muscles and get back into the habit of reading is to pick up a book and read, but ahhh, my eyes get so tired, and i already spend so much time staring at words while writing and doing homework. but i do really miss the feeling of being thoroughly enthralled in a book and not being able to put it down.
speaking of a book i forgot, the cheerleaders by kara thomas was a book i read the summer before my freshman year of high school, and it's the book that made me realize i thoroughly enjoy murder mysteries set in high school.
anyway, sorry this got so long. thank u for the q; made me really happy to answer it!
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humblegoat · 11 months ago
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🎨🖌️ Artist wrapped 2️⃣0️⃣2️⃣3️⃣🎉: 1, 5,6, 7, 11, & 18
Love your stuff :3
Tysm!!!
How many works of art have you made this year? Oh gosh...So many. On top of art freelance being my full time job, I do my best to draw every day and post my work daily as well - though sometimes my daily sketches are WIPs that pop up again later as finished pieces, I'd have to say I'm still well over 300.
5. What work are you most proud of (regardless of likes/reblogs)? I'll choose a different one from my last answer, since like I said there, I've got a lot of favs!
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(con't under the cut)
I'm very proud of this piece done for a podcast called Ten Very Big Books, because I don't do a lot of still life, or semirealistic painting, but this ended up coming out really well despite it being out of my usual wheelhouse!
6. What work of yours has the most likes/reblogs/notes this year? My highest note count is actually by far the image of Juniper with the tigers that I shared in my last post; my second most popular is actually this character sketch commission for my good friend River!
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7. What work of yours got more feedback than you expected? I don't know if it got my MOST feedback, but the fervent attitude of the feedback for this piece really brightened my day:
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11. What pairing/character/subject did you create the most for this year? I was kinda low on ship art this year, come to think of it. By sheer volume, I believe my OC Loch was the leader. I spent almost two months just sketching him a whole bunch to stretch my design and repetition muscles.
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But the character I THOUGHT about the most was probably Juni, whom we've seen several times lol
18. What work of yours do you go back to admire again the most?
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This piece, I think! It was a very different process than I usually do for my digital paintings, but the softness and shapes really delighted me. Very happy with this one.
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dezmondmyles · 9 months ago
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Tagged by @schmooplesthesecond oh boy here we go
5 Songs (from my 2023 spotify wrapped playlist lol)
A-Ha, "The Blood That Moves the Body
My Chemical Romance, "Cancer"
Megadeth, "How The Story Ends"
Des Rocs, "Used to the Darkness"
Disturbed, "The Infection"
Questions
1. Three ships you like:
Almond, duh of course who else would be here
My own OCs ships thank you lmao
Vulpes Inculta/F!Courier, but my courier in particular 'cause im a trash mammal
2. First ship ever: maybe Ash/Misty?? Probably??
3. Last song you heard: More like album, but "Paradise Theater" by Styx
4. Favorite Childhood Book: Holy shit I also actually really loved Bunnicula as well haha. My faves were all in series though, so like Magic Tree House, Junie B Jones, Tales of a 4th Grade Nothing, Captain Underpants.
5. Currently Reading: I used to read... Those were good times...
6. Currently Watching: That's not a twitch stream or youtuber? Uh- Oh! Well I am loosely watching Quantum Leap, trying my best since they moved the days and time it airs on, but I genuinely love it.
7. Currently Craving: Sweet relief
oh my goodness who will i tag in this? oh gosh ok i guess i will tag @wolfofwhat @seventhstrife @leonleonhart @punkasshunter and uh whoever else wants to do it and tag me as tagging them i guess idk idc im not your mom
okay thanks bye <3
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lo-sulci · 1 year ago
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tagged by @itshighjuniper to share 5 songs i've been listening to recently!! thank you juni ^u^ i am not including songs that are on the playlist that plays at my work (which I have been listening to ad nauseam but not by choice) or songs from the OSTs of stuff, just because those would probably dominate the list (that said, some of the OSTs I've been listening to lately: Across the Spider-Verse, Revue Starlight, Gatchaman Crowds, fanmade g witch covers). anyways!!
- PRESSURE BOMB 2!!!! by Jhariah: have been listening to a LOT of jhariah lately, super super cool style and I always always always love narrative albums. this song in particular just makes my brain happy and also, like, vibrate aggressively. it's nice!!!! other favorites include ENTER: A BEGINNER'S GUIDE TO FAKING YOUR OWN DEATH (the opening track off the album A BEGINNER'S GUIDE TO FAKING YOUR OWN DEATH), Promises, Needed A Change of Pace, and Flight of the Crows
- Riptide by the Scary Jokes: been a fan of the scary jokes for a whiiiile now, and this has been one of the songs from their newest album that i've been listening to the most (other two favorites from the album probably being Forever In You and Rage). Burn, Pygmalion!!! is still an all timer to me tbh (MEANWHILE ON THE ROOF JEANNIE CONSIDERS THE VASTNESS OF THE COUNTRYSIDE THE DARKNESS OF THE MOUNTAINS-) but I am also enjoying RB and bonus points the cassette looks SICK AS HELL
- Love Me Dead by Ludo: introduced to by way of a podcast and thoroughly wormed its way deep into my brain along with Tick Tick Boom by The Hives, Electric Version by The New Pronographers, and Picture, Picture by Harvey Danger. anywhays, god DAMN that chorus kicks ass. also, the video is pretty fun!!
- Venus Ambassador by Bryan Scary: song that I actually found ages ago and only recently checked out the rest of the album for- it's really good!! i think there's a narrative going on here even if I havent quite figured it out in its entirety but in the meantime gosh the music is good and the vibes are exquisite. other favorites off Flight of the Knife include La Madame on the Moon, Mama Waits, and Son of Stab
- A Better Place, A Better Time by Streetlight Manifesto: Streetlight Manifesto singlehandedly made my opinion of ska as a genre do a 180. one day while cleaning/organizing stuff in my room I decided to listen to, like, almost if not all of their discography, and this one was my favorite. made me cry the first time I listened to it!! anyways, my personal recommendation is to do what I did and listen to the entire Streetlight Manifesto discography just fuxking do it
anyways, tagging @theclairewitch @plaintivemeow @lvnarsapphic @sg-x00-airgetlam @destructix (absolutely no pressure tho yall lol) and, like, anyone who sees this and wants an excuse to do one of these!!
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ashlee-bonfamille-lyons · 1 year ago
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ASHLEE"S LAST SUMMER IN SWYNLAKE (SUMMER MEMORIES TASK)
Family:
When I first got Ashlee, I never thought her story would be so focused on finding family and what that meant for her. Of course she always was a found family type of girl with the Ashleys, but to move on and find out that it wasn't healthy and make those steps to find the family that was meant for her is an aspect I'll always be so proud of for Ashlee. So this page is all about the family she had made, the way Simba smiles at her, the way Berlioz does. The fact their home is filled with such love that this page just radiates happiness. The pups and Juni because they are equally family and honestly who even knew Ashlee would get a pet if it wasn't for living with all the dogs in the Simber house. And of course smack dab in the middle, a picture that Ashlee would be so embarrassed by, but I like to think Simba took it and while she will pretend to be embarrassed, she remembers the love and it creates such a special moment for her that it ended up in a scrapbook.
Michael:
Ughhhh, I did not expect this one to hurt as much as it did. Michael was the perfect relationship for her. Someone so gentle and so kind. Someone with such big ambitions like herself and gosh darn it, she really did deserve this happiness before she left and that makes me so happy. Even if the ending was sad she would do it all over again because the heartbreak was worth it.
I like to think this summer they used their time wisely even before everything started to fall apart. They made moments happen although fleeting and took a number of pictures Ashlee could post on her Instagram and a lot of pictures Ashlee could just keep to herself. I love to think there's a note written from Michael that she has taped in there as well, Plus dried flowers that he had given her. This page might bring her a little heartbreak but she would have wanted to give him the proper space he deserved.
Nemo:
I originally put him with the friends but honestly, Tiny Dancers has been the biggest relationship Ashlee's had while in the group. From her first day (minus a week?) to her last, Nemo has been such a good influence in her life and it was probably one of, if not my favourite friendship to date. They went through so much and yet never for a second did I doubt they would come out of it stronger. There has always been something about Ashlee and Nemo where they were so intertwined I couldn't imagine the story I would have told without him right there.
The pictures I used were of course some of Kaycee and Sean but it's also about being passionate and just plain goofy. Nemo is one of her safe places and he's definitely seen so many embarrassing and silly moments of hers, the same way she has seen him be silly and loved it about him.
Friends:
A couple of these are just just pictures of Ashlee's fc with her friends, but it felt important to me to show just how far she had come, from becoming friends with Ian, despite their past, or finally willing to be vulnerable with Eilonwy and to trust her, the relationships Ashlee has created in the past couple years have such a special part of my heart. Because of her past so many people had to trust her and Ashlee had to return that feeling despite how vulnerable that made her. I'm just so glad she was able to create those moments and connections
I like to think EIlonwy celebrated both Ashlee's wins of a new job and her wins of the showcase and one of these could be it. Or maybe its after the showcase and Ashlee has gotten Eilonwy flowers. Ian's is all about animals and maybe just making time for each other in anyway including stopping at his work and being introduced to the animals that are there. She definitely would have taken a pic in the moment and when he wasn't paying attention. I also include Jenny in a way to show her growth because Jenny should have caused her anxiety, Ashlee should have disliked her as a girl coming into her space that would take Simba and Berlioz's love, instead Ashlee liked her, they hung out and well that was a huge step for her.
Summer Showcase:
The Showcase is the one I had to end on, I've done endings for characters before but there's something about this showcase, leading up to it, getting it ready from just an idea that makes it so special. Including all the people that volunteered for it. While it hasn't happened in canon and I could wait to post this one but I can't hold onto this task that long and so this is me predicting the moments in it. You have Ashlee and Nemo with mics because they are leading the event and presenting people. You have the art auction and the flowers Ashlee is giving everyone. You have a moment on stage that someone snapped and Ashlee needed a picture of it.
Over all this task is about Ashlee making her last summer be the best one it can be before she leaves and taking the most pictures because she wants to remember everything.
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flowerliker · 2 years ago
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Daffodil and Taro for the ask game
@kits-blossoming-days
daffodil ⇢ do you have siblings? if yes, in what ways do you think you’re similar to or different from them?
i have an older sister! her name is juniper but she always just went by june except to me, i always called her junie. i have mentioned this before but we have not talked in a long time though...
in any case though i think we have always been very different people. when we were little i really really admired her for being so brave. junie always said exactly what she thought and would stand up for what she believed and she used to get herself into all sorts of trouble on my behalf standing up for me when i was too afraid to do anything myself. she was always such a strong person in ways that i do not think i ever could be. she always liked battling too in a way that i never did, and she was always more focused when it came to really just about everything, i was a really flighty and fickle kid hehe but junie always knew exactly what she wanted and she stuck right to it!!!
the thing we really had in common though was that junie just had so much love in her to share and i would like to think maybe that is true of me too. junie had a harder time with it i think, and i think maybe other people did not always realize because junie was so brash, but everything she ever did she did because she loved somebody. she did so much to take care of me when we were kids.
it is hard to keep thinking of ways we are similar... like i said junie and i were always very different people. i think we were both really really lucky to be able to love each other so much despite that though.
taro ⇢ if someone called you right now to catch up, what’re the things you’d tell them about?
oh my gosh i feel like if i was asked this question even a month ago i would not really have a good answer because i do not do much with myself hehe, but i have all kinds of nice stories now!!!! i would want to talk them about amy and tom's visit, and how amy and i celebrated tu bishvat by which i mean amy thought they had to buy a tree for me for some reason hehe, and i would talk about how i have invited tom to join me at the upcoming festival for purim and how we are getting our costumes ready. i would want to show them the planter alexander made me, and i am getting started on my spring planting so i would maybe want to talk about my plans depending on who called and if they were interested. and i could tell them about all the pokémon i am taking care of now too!!! of course there is bouton and there are the foster cacnea, but there is buckwheat too, who is so far outside my usual specialties and might even become a permanent pokémon here if everything goes well, which is so exciting and strange because soleil has been my only pokémon for such a long time!!! i would want to talk about vanilla extract who is doing such a good job of keeping the plant nursery nice and cozy warm and how bouton keeps trying to befriend him even though he is in the heater hehe. and even though of course beetroot belongs to amy and i am only babysitting her for a little while hehe she is still in my care for now and i would want to talk about her!!!!
i think if someone did call me to catch up i would worry about talking too much hehe... it is different to have so much going on but it is exciting!!!
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wretchedbeastt · 2 years ago
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music ask: 5, 9, 17 (for us specifically), 20, 28, 30 💕💕
thank you juni for all the questions!! love you!! 💚
5: A song that needs to be played LOUD.
Oh gosh, this is my entire library, how do I pick one? "Ecocide" by To The Grave is probably my favorite heavy/ fast paced metal song of all time.
9: A song that makes you happy.
Right now, i'll say "Creep" by Stone Temple Pilots. I recently remembered how I used to love them in High School, and this time period is very near and dear to me. The song has been on repeat the past few weeks.
17 (for us specifically): A song for a karaoke duet with Juni.
Hmmm, let's do "Superbeast" by Rob Zombie. Or for something more sweet n sentimental, or "24 Hour Drive-Thru"
20: A song that has many meanings to you.
Okay so i'm incapable of being normal about songs, every song Iike has to be blown up into this big special ordeal w/ a special backstory- so this is all of my songs. Let's go with "The Great Below" by NIN because that song kinda ruined my life.
28: A song by an artist with a voice you love.
Why who else than the best voice of all time, Layne Staley, and his best song "Man in the Box" but SPECIFICALLY THE ISOLATED VOCALS VERSION ON YOUTUBE. It makes me BAWL.
30: A song that reminds you of yourself.
"Dead Souls" by Joy Division. It's a dark, edgy, dad rock classic about fighting the ghosts of your past. I mean cmon, it's perfect.
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k-yurieee · 14 days ago
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I finished reading this fanfic a week or so ago and I have not been able to stop thinking about it ever since. It is hands down one of my favourite Eddie fics I've read so far.
It is filled with wonderfully wholesome, precious and sweet moments that continuously brought a smile to my face while reading. I appreciate that there were parts that focused more on some of the struggles/stress that the reader-insert character was dealing with, as well as the love and support that the people who care for her and little Junie offer to help them get through it.
Speaking of Junie, oh my gosh – Junie, Juniper, lil Junebug🥺 – is just THE most ADORABLE little bundle of joy ever, she is so lovely and precious, she is just... she is EVERYTHING 😭💖
I don't wanna ramble too much since I need to sleep in a bit (it's pretty late where I'm at rn) but I just want to say thank you so much to @luveline for writing and publishing this fic, and for all of the love, time and effort you put into it!! ♡♡♡
Reading this fic was such a delightful experience, so I rlly hope more ppl give it the attention it deserves! 🌸 <3
𝐣𝐮𝐧𝐞 𝐛𝐚𝐛𝐲 | 𝐞𝐝𝐝𝐢𝐞 𝐦𝐮𝐧𝐬𝐨𝐧
part six | chapter list
summary you’re a not so single mom living three trailers down. eddie thinks you’re the prettiest girl he’s ever seen. queue movie night, a good sandwich, a better cry, and the best birthday party ever. [23k]
warnings afab!reader, fem!reader, mom!reader, mention of implied period/menstruation, money worries, unhealthy eating habits (not finding the time), food insecurity, physical/emotional fatigue. fluff heavy, love confessions, emotional hurt/comfort, idiots in love, slight angst.
𓆩❤︎𓆪
Eddie's carrying so much stuff he can barely see over the top of it, let alone open your front door. He stands fumbling at the top of the porch steps, hoping you'll hear the sounds of his arrival and come to help. 
You must be in your room or the bathroom, as no one comes to save him. Eddie can hear the echo of the TV from the living room, kid's cable or one of Junie's VHS tapes, as well as the pulling sound of the pipes under the trailer. A faucet must be running. 
When he finally manages to open the door, he's expecting to see you in the kitchenette with your back to him, humming as you clean the dishes and in your own little world. 
You're not there, to his surprise. 
Eddie puts all of his things on the kitchen table, takes off his shoes, and goes looking for you. There aren't many rooms to search, only your bedroom and the bathroom. He can hear running water the closer he gets to the bathroom, so he knocks on the door. 
"Sweetheart, you in there?" 
The tap turns off abruptly. The door opens, and Eddie frowns at the lack of you, finding only empty air. He looks down to find Junie standing there in the gap, short and small and completely soaked.
He can tell immediately what she's been up to, some mischievous playing while you're distracted elsewhere. She has a look on her face like she's both thrilled to see him and sorry to be caught. 
Eddie bends down. “Hi, sweetheart. What are you doing?" he asks.
"Cold!" She giggles, wielding her wet palms at him threateningly. 
He takes her little hands in his. "Freezing!" he agrees. 
Eddie pulls a towel off of the hand towel rail and quickly rubs it up and down her wet arms. She's still in her clothes from daycare, which isn't necessarily unlike you. If she's having a shower tonight, you'll be waiting until after to change her into her clean pyjamas. 
He checks his watch with a frown. It's well past bath time. 
"Where's mom?" he asks. 
"She's sleeping," Junie whispers, bringing a finger to her lips. "Shh." 
Ah. That makes sense. He hangs the towel back on the rail and takes one of Junie's still-cold hands in his, walking her to your bedroom, where the door is closed. You wouldn't have closed it, not while June was in another room. 
Eddie squeezes her hand fondly. She's becoming quite the deviant. He wonders if it's his fault. 
He opens the door and sighs when he sees you, feeling sorry for his girl, all curled in on yourself sitting on the bedroom floor with a pile of unfolded laundry in your lap. He can imagine the ache brewing in your back, worse than the usual and persistent twinge you've mentioned between your shoulder blades.
Eddie kneels down beside you. Junie follows suit without instruction. Even her socks are wet, her soggy heel cold against his thigh. 
"Y/N," he says softly, easing his hand under your chin. 
He hooks his fingers behind your ear and lifts your heavy head, leaning forward to straighten you up. You rouse with a frown. 
"What time is it?" you ask after a moment. Your voice barely comes out. 
"Nearly seven. Are you feeling okay?" he asks, pushing your shoulders against the bed behind you for support, his hand falling to the juncture of your neck. Your skin is clammy. Your brow twists. "You coming down with something again?" 
 "Just tired," you mumble.
You close your eyes and cover them with one hand. 
There's something to be said about it, how that, a few months ago, you would've sprung up to finish what you were doing, explaining to him in rushed tones that you don't usually fall asleep like that, you would never leave Junie unattended: he knows already. You're a parent, not a superhero (though sometimes he thinks you're both) —you aren't infallible. You get tired, and you try your best. Eddie wouldn't ever think that you don't. He certainly wouldn't think you're a bad parent for falling asleep sitting up in the middle of a chore, and you know that now. You know you can sit there and gather your bearings without explanation. That he'll look after you and Junie whenever you need him to. 
A little shimmer of pride brims at the realisation. 
He rubs your throat with his thumb before sitting back. Junie climbs into his lap and leans her soaking front into his chest, cold enough that Eddie quickly covers her with his arms in an attempt to warm her. 
"What have you been up to?" he asks her. 
She hums, pleased, and babbles about the water. "It dwas… it was cold and fast," she emphasises. 
"You're not supposed to be in the bathroom without mommy." 
"She's sleeping," Junie says quizzically. Like the rules don't apply when you're not awake to uphold them. 
"I'm not sleeping," you say.
"You're still not supposed to be in there without me or mom," Eddie says, giving her a playful glare. "Now you're all wet." 
Junie buries her face in his neck, hiding from his mild scolding and possibly trying to soak up some of his warmth. You rub your eyes. 
You're in your work uniform with dishevelled hair, but you look cute anyhow. 
Eddie pats Junie's back, unperturbed by her damp clothes. She's warming up the longer she sits there. 
He supposes her willingness to simply sit and be cuddled is a conditioning of your unending affection. You're always praising and kissing and stroking her hair out of her face, always carrying her around when she could easily walk. You're ridiculously touchy, like a sponge for love. You want it just as often as you give it. He and Junie are both happy to humour you.
Eddie takes the initiative. He gives June a toss to the middle of your made bed and smiles when she giggles, grabbing a change of clothes for her from the wardrobe, and then a change of clothes for you. He's almost completely familiar with your wardrobe these days, having made multiple adoring contributions to it. Selfishly, maybe, he grabs a shirt he knows he got you, as well as a newer pair of pyjama pants. 
You still haven't managed to stand when he finishes, but you've turned to see Junie, making kissy faces at her as you tickle the sole of her foot. 
"My girl's all wet," you're saying, not a lick of tiredness in your voice. You hide it from her easily. "What trouble have you been up to while mommy slacked off, huh? You're soooo bad, I'm gonna have to lock you up." 
Junie giggles thickly as she crawls toward you. You can't reach her foot when she turns but you aren't bothered, tickling her arms and sides instead. You and Junie stay like that for a second, eye to eye, Junie on her front and you hiding your mouth in the sheets like a cowboy shootout, waiting for someone to give in. 
Junie shrieks with laughter and you sit up in time to stop her from headbutting you, gathering her up into your arms to kiss her forehead. 
"Sorry," you say, to Eddie's displeasure. "Mommy's silly, huh, falling asleep when you're still awake?" 
"She's human," he corrects lightly. 
"Baby," you say, like you're going to say more. You don't, you just smile at him. 
"Do you want me to have her? You can shower by yourself, have some 'me-time'?" 
"No… she needs a bath. Don't you?" you ask her.
"Do you want me to–" 
"Eddie," you say, struggling to stand with Junie in your arms, "I don't want anything. Except…" 
He bounds the two steps it takes to get his arms around you both and plants a huge kiss on your cheek. You visibly relax, better when he presses a much softer one against the corner of your mouth. 
"Except a kiss?" he asks into your skin. 
You sound flustered, "Except a kiss. Another one. Please." 
He pulls back enough for you to turn into his kiss and align your lips properly for a chaste peck. 
"Hello," he says. 
"Hi, baby," you say, shy even now. 
"Hi." He steals another kiss. Junie makes a noise of offence and he dots one on her appled cheek. Her lips perk into a smile. "Girls. Let's get our movie night back on track. I brought presents." 
You groan and Junie cheers. Finally getting to grips with certain words even if she hasn't said them aloud yet, Junie is well aware as to what presents are. She gets enough of them (to your chagrin). 
"What did I say? Presents are for special occasions," you say mildly. 
"Movie night is–" 
"Not a special occasion."
"Kind of is. Especially if we make it a tradition. If you really don't want them then I'll take them back," he says. He really means it, no guilt trip involved. 
You look down at Junie, back up at him, and puff out a theatrical breath. 
"Sorry, I've made it hard to say no," he says. 
"Don't be sorry. Thank you for the presents, really. We'll look after a shower, okay?" you ask, darting up to give him a quick kiss and then nudging him aside. 
"I'll make dinner real quick while you shower and you can open your presents after that." He catches your sleeve. "Deal?" 
"Deal." 
Another round of kisses are exchanged. Kisses like a first love, excited and quick and wanting a little bit more each time. 
You leave for the bathroom to set up Junie's fold out baby bath in the shower and fill it with water. He smiles on his way back down the slim hall to the kitchen at the sound of her laughter, hidden beneath the hurried rain of the shower head. 
Eddie makes two cans of vegetable soup with pasta shapes in a saucepan on the stove, cooking it through and letting it simmer while he waits for you.
The bathroom door opens. He gives it a minute before pouring the soup into bowls, knowing it'll take you a while to powder and lotion you and your baby, especially when getting her into jammies lately has been like clothing an eel. 
A few minutes later, Junie comes sprinting down the hall quick as a lightning bolt, barefoot to stop from crashing face first into a cabinet. You have no clue why, but lately she's extremely energetic. You've done some more baby-proofing around the house to avoid injury, moving tables completely out of her way and sticky taping your rug in the living room flat to the floor so she can't slip over it at speed, but nothing works as well as bare feet for good grip. Not even dragon themed grippy socks, Eddie laments. They looked so cool. 
He pours soup into three bowls and adds a splash of cold water from the faucet to Junie's, giving it a good stir and dipping the tip of a clean pinky finger in it to check it's not hot. 
"Hi, trouble," he greets, following her into the living room with her bowl. "You want some dinner?" 
He doesn't give her much chance to answer, grabbing her up in his free arm with a heaving groan and carrying her like a curled weight to the sofa. She's giggly to a fault, happy to be shuttled from one place to another if there's a kiss or some food promised at the end. 
He sets her down, puts the bowl on his thigh, and pulls out the bib he'd tucked into his pocket to secure it nice and loose around her neck. He's careful not to get any of her hair in the velcro. 
"Tada!" he says. "Let's get eating." 
Junie's amazing. Eddie lifts a spoon and her lips part expectantly. He could let her eat by herself, she's old enough and she's getting much better with a spoon, but he wants to avoid the mess and get her fed quickly. She's eaten every last morsel by the time you emerge. He's more pleased than he started, because you trust him to do this while you get dressed without rushing, and you'll allow yourself the luxury of ten minutes alone. 
Your footsteps sound across the kitchen. You turn into the living room, your face tacky with something, and even from the middle of the room Eddie can smell your deodorant and moisturisers, maybe even the lingering scent of conditioner on your hands. 
"My poor baby was so hungry," you say upon seeing Junie's empty bowl. You kiss the top of her head. "Sorry, Junie. Good thing Eddie's here to take such good care of you, hmm?" You kiss her cheek. You lean over her head and kiss Eddie's. He's about to start running a temperature, you're so affectionate tonight. "Thank you." 
"Don't," he says gently. 
You straighten up. Like you've been caught in a trap, you stop suddenly and peer down at him, hiding your smile with a pout. He's already seen it, but he lets you get away with it. 
"Your bangs are growing long again," you say, brushing them away from his forehead. 
You comb down the lengths of his curls with your fingers, partitioning the tangles with care. 
"Maybe you can trim 'em for me tomorrow," he says. 
Your eyes light up. "Yeah, for sure." 
"Good. Our soup is getting cold." 
"Oh, gotcha. I'll warm it up. You want more, junebug? More soup?" 
Junie doesn't answer, distracted by the TV. She's stopped bothering to support herself, her weight splayed over Eddie's thigh, her soup-stained cheek dangerously close to his pants. He has to admit that since knowing you a lot of his clothes have been stained irredeemably. He doesn't worry about the sweatpants, though. It's only soup. 
Eddie thumbs hair out of her face and smiles. 
"She could probably eat more." 
You know it already, but he says it because it feels nice to say. Plus, you like it. You'd told him so, a whispered admission sometime last week. 
I like that someone else worries about her, you'd said, your lips soft on his naked bicep, your face hidden by the lack of light and a few of his rogue curls. I like that you take some of the load. I'm sorry if that's not fair. 
Baby, he'd said, voice gritty with how much he meant it, it's not unfair. I'm happy to do it. And I know you're not expecting it from me.
No, you'd said quickly. 
I know. He'd kissed the top of your head, laughed against your skin, his breath fanning every which way. Don't think about it like that, like it's costing me something. 
I'm not saying it costs anything. I know it does, even if you don't feel it. And I'm not saying she isn't easy to love 'cos she is, but loving someone and taking care of them are different, and I know you want to do it–
Eddie had cut you off, sitting up enough that you'd been forced to take your weight off of his shoulder where you'd been laying down across the well-loved couch. He'd felt a familiar spring under his thigh as he shifted, the TV painting your face in a milky white that had your eyes shining like gemstone. 
I do want to do it, he'd affirmed. You guys– you're my girls. Eddie could've told you he loved you right then and there. He's sure you already knew. Why are you worrying about this stuff?
Have to worry about something. These days my options are slim pickings, thanks to you. 
He'd pulled you in for a hug, trying to squeeze the misplaced gratitude out of you uselessly. He's happy you're happy, happy you feel like he's draining your impossible levy, but he doesn't want you thinking you owe him anything. That's not why he's with you. 
You trek back into the kitchen with Junie's empty bowl and spoon, your pyjama pants slightly too long for you and dragging across the floor. You hadn't been with him when he bought them —he eyeballed. They fit around your waist and thighs just fine, but both of the pairs he got that day are too long. 
Eddie wipes Junie's face with the end of her bib and reluctantly hands her over when you return, reheated soup in hand. You swap him for his own bowl and feed Junie whatever she wants from yours, blowing on each spoonful as you go. 
"How was work today, sugarpea?" he asks between bites of pasta. 
"No," you say immediately. 
"Not a sugarpea fan?"
"Not when you say it like that," you tease.
"What about sweetcheeks?" He grins at your grim expression. "It's not that different to sweetheart, 'n' you like that one." 
You glance at him over Junie's head. "I think I'm used to sweetheart. You say it enough. Sweetcheeks is like a foreign object my brain is rejecting on the grounds that it is super duper weird." You smile as you talk and your voice takes shape through it, all smooth and silky and warm. 
"Honeybuns?" he tries, nearly choking on a pasta shape when you laugh. He can't help himself; whenever you laugh he instinctively wants to join in. 
"Work was fine," you say, stealing a big spoonful of soup. Junie huffs. "It was good, really, I got an amazing tip from Bernard, you know Bernard?"
"Bernard," he repeats menacingly. 
"Your competition. He gave me twenty dollars 'n' told me to put it in the Junie jar, so that was awesome. Now my little lady's gonna get some new shoes."
You don't like handouts you haven't worked for. It's why his gifts can be hard to accept, as much as you appreciate them. Eddie insisted months ago that being friends was 'doing things for other people', and letting people do things for you —as in, letting him buy you small presents is actually a service to him and a credit to you. 
You don't necessarily like it. You like presents, most people do, but you don't like his spending money on you because of some ill-conceived notion that you can't deserve them. It's why Eddie doesn't go out and spend his wages on the things that you want willy-nilly. It would embarrass you, put you out, and that's the last thing he wants. So while he's in a place where he's fortunate enough to have disposable income, and he doesn't think twice about spending it on the people he loves, he does think about how it makes you feel. 
But boyfriend privileges are very real. The step up he took from a friend who's suspiciously affectionate to an actual proper boyfriend is large and luxurious —he gets away with doing a lot more than he could beforehand. Eddie can put gas in your car, pay for breakfast, bring by a gallon of laundry detergent when you're running low without a word of protest. It's little things, and they mean a lot to him. 
He thinks they might mean a lot to you, too. 
So he would buy Junie new shoes if she needed them, but she doesn't. If she did, you would've got them already. You want her to have new shoes, and you're saving up for a nice fancy pair that she'll grow out of within the year. You should take pride in that. There's nothing so sweet as treating your daughter. 
"How come I can't contribute to the Junie jar?" he asks in a playful whine.
"Don't start with me, Munson. You tipped me ten dollars for a coffee yesterday, don't think I didn't notice. And the coffee was for me," you say, smiling still. 
He grins down at his soup and kicks his socked foot against yours. 
"That wasn't me," he lies. With no effort involved, the end result is lackluster. 
"Yeah, well, it wasn't Davey," you say. 
Davey's a grumpy regular. He never tips. 
"It could've been. Maybe he had a change of heart. And, biassed as I may be, you are a very pretty waitress. I'd tip you if I was allowed," he flirts. 
You turn the spoon in your hand so the well is toward your chest and pretend to load it at him like a trebuchet. 
He wimps out, "June, mom's attacking me! Mommy's trying to get soup on me!"  
"Am not!" you protest. 
The damage is already done. Junie, her face a mirror of your own but smaller and with eyes a little bigger in their framing, glares at you and tries to take your spoon, babbling an outraged, "No no no!" 
You make a funny squeaking sound and drop the spoon back in the bowl, your lips parted in mock shock. 
"You don't really believe him, do you?" you ask, your bubbly talk saccharine. "Baby, I'm just playing." 
She's your number one fan. The sound of your voice would win back her affections by itself, but your lovely smile, your hand behind her back, it's instantaneous. Junie forgets all about the imminent danger he's in and puts her hand on your chin. You close your eyes. 
"Mommy, can we have kisses?" she asks. 
"How many?" you ask, delighted. It's rhetorical. Eddie finishes his soup and you kiss her cheeks so many times he reckons you'll have dry lips, humming, "Mwah, mwah, mwah," as you go. 
He'll make you something else tonight to make up for how little soup you've had. It's not a substantial meal either way, and he knows Benny feeds you well at work, but it's been a long time since lunch rush. 
Junie wiggles out of your grip and drops to the floor, clearly having had enough kisses. 
Eddie doesn't see what she's doing from the kitchenette where he's carried all the dirty dishes, but he listens intently to her babble talk, new words popping up in her chatter every day. She says, "Mr. Bear," and "pretty," and "let's go!" between gibberish. 
"Oh, hey!" Eddie calls to be heard over the running water of the sink and the TV. 
He can see your head through a gap between the counter and the cabinets attached to the ceiling. You turn at his voice, arms across the back of the sofa, chin resting on your hands. "Yeah?" 
"She said, 'fast'!" he tells you. "When I grabbed her from the bathroom, she said the water was cold and fast. That's a new one." 
"The bathroom. I need a lock. Do you have anything?"
"Do I have a lock? Maybe."  
You nod hurriedly, eyebrows pinched in stress . "It's an accident waiting to happen. I had no idea she could reach that handle, I don't want her in there when I can't see her." 
"Don't worry, we'll nab one of those child locks from the store tomorrow if it bothers you." 
You're quiet for a moment. "I shouldn't have fallen asleep." 
"You couldn't help it," He puts a dish down on the rack. "It's not a crime to nod off, I do it all the time. It was an accident." 
"It doesn't matter. She can't be alone with water, it's dangerous." 
"You said it yourself, you had no idea she could even get in there. Now you know, you'll make sure it doesn't happen again." He turns off the faucet, trying to snub your self-annoyance before it twists into something cruel. "Yeah?" 
You hum. 
He wipes his hands dry on a rag and slides around the kitchen counters, back into your living room. Your eyes flash wide as he approaches. You know what he's gonna do, tucking your arms away as he drops into your lap. "Woah," you groan. 
"You're a good mom," he says seriously, shuffling back so his weight is on a couch cushion rather than your tired thighs. "I mean it, you're a good mom. You fell asleep. It happens, okay? Don't punish yourself for something that didn't happen. We can jam the door closed with a sock or something tonight, and I promise you she won't get in there again." 
You bunch one of his legs in your lap to rest your mouth against his knee. He holds himself up with one arm, watching you relax with relief. 
"She said 'fast'?" you ask, turning your face so your cheek is on his knee instead. Her building vocabulary excites you endlessly. You've been practicing descriptors. 
"She said that the water was cold and fast," he says. She would know, she made your floor into a slip and slide. 
"She's a genius." You rub your cheek against his pants. "I knew it." 
He flops back into the couch cushions, arms behind his head. "Yeh. You can't help yourself, can you? Making that girl cooler every day." 
You pinch his thigh. "Lay off." 
He's serious and joking at the same time. It's a very cheesy thing to say and it isn't untrue. It's the juxtaposition of every parent, he supposes, the insurmountable task they perform on such a grand scale. It looks impossible, and yet people have been managing it for thousands of years anyways. At varying levels of success, sure. 
He hasn't lied to you once. You're a good mom and you're raising a sweetheart, and while neither one of you could care less about Junie being an actual 'genius', singing her praises is a pass time you love. 
He isn't tired enough to fall asleep sitting up, yet slouched down as he is with your hands on his legs stroking slow lines feels like a blanket has been thrown over him, fresh from the dryer. Speaking of… 
"Can I give you the gifts now? I promise they're not too much," he says. 
"Can I tell you something first?" He nods. You hug his knee to your chest and look him straight in the face, unabashed. "You have a really nice voice, Eddie. Listening to you talk, I don't know. You could read me the yellow pages and I think I'd like it." 
"Wait, are you flirting with me?" he asks, making a show of sitting up slowly. 
"It's nice and deep. Not too much, but it is. And you say things in such a particular way sometimes, it makes me want to smile even when I've had a garbage day." You stroke down his thigh with a fingertip. "Everything about you is nice, but I wanted to tell you." 
"Thank you," he says warmly. "I'm glad you think so. 'Cos when I'm around you, all I want to do is talk. And I mean that in the best way." Eddie sits up, bending at the waist so he can kiss your cheek. He doesn't move away immediately, pressing the bridge of his nose flat to your skin as he continues, "I want to hug you really badly right now, like, a make-your-spine-click kind of hug. Think I can do that?" 
"Yes, please, it's not even hurting. You can hug me as much as you want." 
Eddie shuffles forward on the couch to be near you, his cheek smushed against your ear as he wraps his arms around you in a hug. He goes over your shoulders. Even if it isn't hurting today he doesn't want to inspire any backache, and you return his hugging eagerly. 
You smell like your favourite lotion. He breathes it in. 
"You're sniffing me," you murmur. 
"You smell nice," he murmurs back. 
"You smell nice, too." 
"I smell like sweat." 
"A little." 
He encourages your face into the crook of his neck, beaming. "You're so weird," he dotes. 
"Sorry," you say, rather shyly. 
You're not shy because he said you're weird —he says that stuff all the time and when he means it, it's adoring— you're sorry because you're genuinely embarrassed that you like how he smells, sweat included. He wants to kiss you forever. 
"Don't you dare be sorry. It's my irresistible musk." 
"Ew," you say, "ew, ew, ew. Musk is a gross word." 
"Yeah?" he asks, giving your cheek a quick stroke with the side of his knuckle. 
"Yes. Definitely banned around my daughter." 
He snorts. "Like it's a curse word." 
You run your hands in sync up and down his side, his t-shirt hiking up with each swipe. Your eyes have softened and renewed you, your earlier fatigue a memory without evidence. The fine wrinkles at the corners of your eyes smooth away. 
"I'm so happy," you whisper. 
He takes your elbows into his hands, thumbs rubbing at the crooks fondly. "Me too." 
Your hands fall to his waist. Eddie's never been more content; he's so grateful to feel as he does, whole at your side, affectionate and aflame and in love with your every attribute. Your timid admission, your knowing smile. 
"Can I give you your present now?" he asks. 
You lean back into the couch, mumbling, "Oh, if you must," with a pleased smile. 
"I must, my lady. It's imperative that you and your charge receive the most splendiferous of gifts in haste."   
"Then so be it, my liege." 
He's morphing you into a nerd one corny joke at a time. 
Eddie stands up. His movement grabs Junie's attention from her toys and make-believe, the small girl climbing to her feet. She hops toward him, hands out in expectancy to be picked up. 
"Two seconds, June, let me get your present first." 
His bags are exactly where he left them on the kitchen table. He rummages through them to make sure he's presenting the right gift to the right girl, before yanking the present from the bag it came in and putting it out of Junie's reach.
"Here," he says, sliding his hand under the gift's cardboard fastening and ripping it open. 
The blanket he's bought for her, big, gorgeously soft and made up of pastel pinks and oranges, puffs out and reaches the floor. Junie strokes it. 
"It's so soft!" he encourages. "Isn't it soft, sweetheart? This is going to keep you nice and cozy tonight for our movie. Do you want me to wrap you up?" 
He drapes it around her shoulders. Little kids are temperamental even if they aren't bad-spirited, and chances are that she doesn't even want it on her, but she smiles as he wraps it around her and lets out a happy line of sounds. 
"Do you like that?" he asks, beaming. 
She drops her cheek to her shoulder and rubs it, her eyes slipping closed in happiness. 
"Eddie," she says sweetly, "it's soft." She says 'soft' clumsily, with lots of weight on the 'oft'. 
Her adorableness often sucker punches him. He kind of assumed he'd felt everything there was to feel, but there's a particular kind of awe that comes with watching her grow, and experiencing nice things. She's endearingly enticed by the material, putting her hand under the blanket so she can pull it to her face and feel it against her nose. He can't see more than the corner of her mouth, but he can tell from the way her cheek apples that she's smiling at hum. 
"I'm glad you like it, junebug." 
"Will you tell him thank you?" you ask, hand on the wall, looking down at her with a similar fondness as he is. "Say, 'thank you, Eddie'." 
Junie has a different plan. She pulls as much of the blanket as she can to her chest and waddles toward him, where she leans her face into his legs. Eddie covers the short breadth of her shoulders with one hand. 
"Thank you," Junie says. 
"Of course, sweetheart. You're very welcome. I'm so happy, you look really comfy. Now we can watch movies in style." 
He turns to his second bag and yanks out another blanket, this one a solid dark grey. He doesn't know if he should, but he does the same as he'd done for Junie, tearing the cardboard fastening off of the blanket and shaking it out, before beckoning you forward and wrapping it around your shoulders. You smile, and you look like you could cry, not that you will but you could, your lips pressed together and your eyebrows gently furrowed. 
He takes your face into both hands. 
"That's an acceptable present?" he asks. 
You turn your head, your lips pressed to the base of his thumb. He strokes the top of your cheek, the skin there smooth and dewy, fresh from the shower. 
"Do you want a kiss?" he asks knowingly. 
You fluster at being read that easily, "No, I… yeah, I do, I do, don't be smug, please…" 
"I'm not smug, I wanna kiss you just as bad as you want me to, I'd crawl into your skin if I could–" 
Your laugh is a shock, your chest shaking where it touches his, and he can't take it anymore. He kisses your smile, his lips clumsy and too eager, a total mismatch as you giggle into his touch. 
He gives your cheek a good rub with his thumb. 
"Thank you," you say. 
He shakes his head. "Don't mention it." 
"This is nice. Did you get one for yourself?" 
He did. "I'd love to say I got one for myself 'cos I thought you'd accept it easier, but I wanted one. They're so soft." 
"So soft," Junie says, slipping on the ends of her blanket as she wobbles toward your embrace. "Up?" 
While the blankets that Eddie's brought for you are, in fact, so soft, they're much too warm when the three of you are laying on top of one another. Eddie's like a superheater to your left, Junie's a hot water bottle on your chest, and your hair is damp with sweat. 
You wipe your face with your sleeve and sit up on the couch, hand behind Junie's dozing back. 
"You okay?" Eddie asks, pulling his attention from the movie. 
"Too hot." 
"Pass me the baby." He says 'baby' dramatically, like she's one of the rings from his books, or the prodigal child. 
You hand her over. She mumbles something but settles, her nose jabbed into Eddie's clavicle. He pats her back. 
You shrug off the blanket and pull the collar of your shirt away from your neck, fanning yourself lightly. When you're feeling less like you're cooking you stand up, squinting in the dark. Now you've moved the table to the side of the room you don't have to worry about catching your calf on a corner, but it's still a death trap in here when you haven't put away the toys. 
"Do you want another drink?" you ask. 
"Please. Coke if there's any left," Eddie says. 
You walk to the kitchen on tired legs to make two drinks. You hadn't wanted to think about it but you're really hungry, your stomach hurting with it. You open the fridge for the bottle of coke and cast your eyes over the contents. There's more fresh food than you're used to having, but tired as you are, you can't think of anything to make. Something quiet and easy for the late hour would be nice. 
You hear as Eddie follows you in. You look over your shoulder to see if he's brought Junie with him. He's alone. 
"You didn't eat much," he says. 
"I know, that's what I'm looking for." 
"I," he says, melodic, his elbow up as he scratches behind his neck, "will make you whatever you want." 
"Really?" you ask. 
"Sure. Or I could go get you something?" 
"I don't want you driving alone at night," you say. 
"It's not dangerous." 
"No, I know, but I don't want you to leave." 
"Good. Me neither." He joins you in front of the fridge. "I could make you a huge sandwich," he says. "I got some of the fancy cheese at my place." 
"I'm not eating Wayne's cheese." 
"I paid for it," he insists. "No, look, you have cheddar, pepperjack, we don't need fancy cheese. Let me make you a sandwich." 
You slip your hand behind his back and squeeze. 
Eddie kind of grabs you, all jokes, and pushes you down into a chair like he thinks you're trying to run away. "Stay there, fiend," he demands. 
He makes you a sandwich. It's a simple pleasure to watch. He washes his hands, grabs all the fillings, and makes it carefully. It's too much care to be put into a sandwich. It makes your chest ache. 
He browns it in the frying pan and presents it to you with little fanfare. Odd, for him.
"What, no, ta-da? No kiss?" you ask. 
"I was trying to keep it classy," he says, bending down to kiss the skin shy of the corner of your eye. "Now eat, please. I worry about you." 
He doesn't need to ask. He likely couldn't stop you. You're glad he's already your boyfriend, otherwise the speed with which you take your first bite might have put him off. 
"Do you want half?" you ask. 
"No, you eat that whole thing." 
He puts your glass right next to you on the table. There's something unsaid in his gaze, not judgement but close. 
"I've been busy," you defend. 
"How much did you even eat today? You had breakfast, right?" 
You nod, taking a sip of your drink, and size him up. "Munson." 
"Did you, sweetheart? Honestly?" 
"I did! Eddie, please don't worry," you say, pushing him toward the open chair rather than let him crowd you. "You know I'm eating properly, you feed me ten times a week." 
Eddie sits, propping his foot up on the chair by your thigh, and stretches his arms across the table toward you. He flicks your elbow. 
"I don't like thinking about you going hungry," he says. 
"Then it's a good thing I'm not." You take a showy bite of sandwich. 
"Promise?" he asks.
"Yes!" You pat his shin. "Promise promise. It was a busy day, but I had oatmeal and Benny made me a fancy salad, and now this. I'm all fed, thanks to other people. I'm lucky like that." 
"You're not lucky. People want to take care of you because you take such good care of them," he says. You like how he says it, like it's no big deal. 
"I just wish you'd take good care of yourself," he finishes, digging his heel into your thigh. 
You squirm away from his attack, ditching the last couple of bites of your sandwich in favour of the paper towel he'd brought with your plate to wipe your fingers and mouth. 
Clean, you get up from your chair before you can stop yourself and sit on one of his thighs, careful not to rest your full weight there. 
"You're being dramatic," you say as you wrap your arms around his shoulders, nose close to his and getting closer. "I love that you worry about me, but you don't need to. Think of all the energy you're wasting on me that could be spent on your music, or your games." 
Eddie pulls you into his lap properly.
"It's one game," he says, hooking you against him so you can't slide off of his legs. "Fine. I won't worry about you so much if you finish your sandwich. Cool?" 
"Don't let me fall," you mumble, stretching back in his arms to grab your plate. 
You slide it across the table, pick up the last quarter of your sandwich, and eat it there in his arms. He looks ridiculously happy to watch. 
The night passes like that. No matter where you go it's in his arms. He calls you his barnacle and you like him so much you let it slide. You only part to carry Junie to bed, sliding her into her toddler bed with all the precision of a professional. 
Eddie gets his hands on you soon after, pressing your back to his front as you brush your teeth half-asleep in the mirror opposite, his minty kisses pressed generously to the side of your head. 
You don't remember getting into bed. When you wake up, it's to the sounds and smells of French toast, or Eddie's approximate version, a spatula scraping against the sides of your frying pan and Eddie singing a children's song. You scrunch your eyes together and groan as you turn into the sheets, hiding your head under the pillow from the noise. You love them, you're tired —maybe in half an hour you'll want to join in. 
You're not sure how much time passes when you wake a second time. Rings slide across the curtain pole, quiet footsteps smushed into the carpet. You turn onto your side and pry your eyes open, lashes barely parted. A bleary slice of Eddie's back takes centre stage. 
He shakes out Junie's blankets and tucks them in. He plumps up her pillow. Gentle, he rights her fallen teddies and sits them up one by one like proper gentlemen. His expression is handsome but blank.
Squared, Eddie moves away from Junie's bed to your forgotten pile of laundry. You'd fallen asleep folding it, and the unfolded stuff will no doubt be full of creases. He gathers everything into your laundry basket and heads for the door, not having looked your way once. You smile to yourself and close your eyes again, totally at ease. 
The door creaks. You haven't managed to open your eyes when a hand is on your shoulder and pressing you into the mattress gently. Eddie kisses your forehead, before dipping down to rest his own against it, sealing in the kiss. He laughs under his breath. 
"This is nice," you say, lips like glue, voice an incoherent mumbling.
"I thought you were awake," he says. 
"I'm not." 
He rubs your shoulder, a long and loving sweep. "Stay in bed as long as you want to. Me and June are gonna go outside and try soccer." 
You groan and throw your arms around him tiredly, "No," you say, "you better help me up so I can change her diaper." 
Eddie helps you sit up. You blink blink blink, and rub your eyes, and when you can see again you stand up. He follows you into the hall. You don't question it when he starts to clean you up from behind, stroking your hair and pulling your pyjama pants back up the hip they'd been falling down. 
"I feel like I've been run over," you tell him. 
You feel heaps better when you see the main section of the trailer. 
The kitchen is clean. Sparkling. The living room is the same when you peer around to find Junie. She's standing on the couch, Eddie clearly having brushed her hair, the mess of the night before nowhere to be seen. He's taken care of everything while you slept. 
You about to turn around and collapse on him in a hug, but Junie sees you and starts talking, taking big bounding steps across the couch cushions until she's at the end of the one closest to you. You step forward to greet her. 
"Hellooo, lovely girl," you say, dragging her up the length of your chest to meet her eyes. "Eddie says you're gonna play soccer outside. Do you think that sounds fun?" 
"I want mommy," she murmurs.
"I'm right here," you say. She pouts. "What, you want me to come and play soccer?" you ask. "I'll play soccer, baby, just let me get you changed first." 
She isn't happy, but she perks up when she's clean again, double when you squeeze her into a dress and tell her how nice she looks. 
"Eddie did your hair already, so there's nothing left for me to do," you say sweetly, brushing your hands down the length of her skirt. "You're all ready!" 
Junie is less ready for soccer than you thought. Eddie runs down to his home to get a ball and you, having changed and eaten, sit down outside in the growing grass surrounding your trailer on a towel. The sun shines, the sky is a beautiful ocean blue, and Junie does not want to get up from your lap. 
You're content to let her sunbathe, applying sun cream to her face, neck, arms and legs just in case and which she abhors, wriggling and whining as you coo at her. She calms as you rub it in. 
"You'll thank me one day," you say with a small laugh. 
Junie goes quiet. It's not like her, she's a babbler, but you sit in it with her rather than talk for a moment. 
She looks like you.
She's happy, and loved. So much has changed since you moved here. She was always loved unconditionally, and nearly always happy, but she's growing. You both are. 
You thought moving here would be good for her, but you never stopped to think it might be good for you too. Eddie terrifies you, or rather the idea of losing him does. You have these moments where you think about him and plot the possibilities, that one day you'll be waiting for him to come calling and he won't, or one day Junie will ask you where he is and you'll have nothing good to say. It's a catastrophisation if you've ever had one —you trust Eddie, you've let him into almost every aspect of your life. It goes without saying that you trust him not to hurt you. 
But trusting him doesn't mean you can stop yourself from worrying about the future. You told him already, maybe it's being a mom or something, that your brain chooses a new thing to needle at every day, and you roll with it the best that you can. 
Junie smiles at you. 
"Mom… so pretty," she says. You stop short. 
She does this sometimes. You've taught her a lump sum of conversational tidbits from everyday life. Like, "Don't touch, baby," often referring to something hot, or, "Wow! Look at you!" when she's in new clothes. Every time she says one back to you it makes you laugh, but this one hits you like a freight train, right in the heart. 
"You think I'm pretty?" you ask. 
You don't know if Junie even knows what pretty is. You say it to her so often, it might feel like a strand of "I love you," or even, "Good morning." Maybe she doesn't get it. 
She sits up in your lap and reaches up for your face with both hands. You bend to let her. 
"Pretty," she says again. She squeezes your cheek. 
Maybe she doesn't understand. Or maybe she does. Yeah, she does. Your baby thinks you're pretty. You pour love into her unfailingly and she's giving you some of her own. 
"You really think that?" you ask, smiling in her little palms. "Gorgeous girl, I love you. I love you love you." 
"I love you," she says back. 
"You do?" you ask, delighted and selfish because of course she loves you. You wanna hear it again.
"Yes." She drags the 's' sound, her eyes crinkled up. "Mommy," she says. 
"Yeah?" 
Her hands fall back onto her chest, and she sags against your thigh. "Mom?" 
"What, baby? You want something? You want some juice?" She doesn't respond. "You want something yummy to eat?" 
She says a string of words you don't understand. Not a lick of sense start to end. You sigh, duck your lips to her neck, and blow the biggest raspberry that you can. At the same time, you press your fingers into her underarms, tickling down her sides. You laugh at her sudden shrieking and blow another raspberry, and another one, struggling to draw breath as her giggles infect you completely. 
"I got you," you tease. 
"No, mommy!" she squeals, sounding more pleased than her pleas might suggest. 
"I do, I have you!" 
"It tickles a lot!" 
"I have to tickle you, it's part of my job." 
"Mommy," she says, almost breathless. You ease up. You don't want to wear her out. 
"Mwah," you say, giving her a sorry kiss. 
She laughs again. You think she might attempt another sentence —you can practically see the cogs of her brain turning behind her eyes— but she's cut off by a familiar voice. 
"Girls! Y/N!" Eddie hollers. "They're having way too much fun without me." 
You look up at his call, frowning at his odd phrasing, and are immediately startled to see he isn't by himself. 
At one side of him stands a pale girl with brown hair cropped to her chin, in a mock biker jacket despite the heat carrying the promised soccer ball Eddie left to retrieve. A half step behind her is a taller guy with dark blonde hair, a smile on his face. You meet his eyes accidentally, forcing yourself to smile despite your confusion so he doesn't get the wrong idea. 
They must be Eddie's friends. You've met Gareth, from his old band, and Melanie, one of the cooks from The Hideout, but you haven't met these guys. 
"Y/N, sweetheart," he says, rather proudly, if you do say so yourself, "these losers caught me at home. Robin," —he points at the girl, who smiles with all her teeth— "my very good friend, and Steve, her leech." 
"Hi," Steve says first, surprising you again. "And that's Junie?" 
"That's Junie," Eddie says, again so proudly. 
"Hi Junie," Steve says. He's smiling at you, sure, but he's beaming at your baby. "Holy– she's bigger than I thought, I kind of pictured a baby baby, you know?" 
"I showed you a picture, man," Eddie says.
"She didn't look this old in the picture," Steve says. He looks heistant for a second. "Can we sit down?" 
"Yeah– yes, yeah, please. Can I get you guys something to drink?" you say, sitting up too quick and almost tipping Junie out of your lap. She says, "Woah!" in her little voice and Steve, Robin and Eddie all laugh. 
"I'll get drinks, don't worry," Eddie says. 
He walks around your towel to head up the trailer steps. Steve sits on the grass by your towel, and Robin kneels with the ball in her hands opposite. Neither is dressed for the sunny weather but they don't seem to mind. 
"It's nice to meet you," Steve says, giving Robin a weighted look. 
"We've been asking," Robin says. 
"I didn't know," you say apologetically. 
"No, we know, you're like Munson's best kept secret half the time. One minute he's showing us your picture all smug but when we ask about you he just rolls his eyes." 
"'Wouldn't you like to know,'" Robin quotes with a smarmy smile. 
"So he doesn't talk about me?" you ask. 
"He doesn't shut up," Steve says. "Sorry, we're kind of kidding." 
"Oh–" Junie wriggles in your arms. Her face is in your neck, but she keeps turning to sneak peeks at these friendly newcomers. For once, being a mom is gonna save you from awkwardness rather than subject you to it further. "June," you say softly, "you wanna say hello? These are Eddie's friends. You can say hi, baby." 
Junie isn't shy around new people. After your reassurance and a couple more seconds looking at them with mild suspicion, Junie turns her face to Robin and says, "Hi." 
"Hi," she says back. "She's a really pretty kid. Me and Steve have worked at the video store for like, almost three years, and we see some uggos." 
"Rob," Steve says.
"What?" Robin asks. 
"You can't say that." 
"Mom," Junie says. 
You look down as she looks up. "What?" 
"Where's Eddie?" she asks. 
You lean back and turn her encouragingly toward the open trailer door. "He's inside. He's coming back." 
"He…" She looks between you and the doorway. Her voice is quiet. "Play soccer and me?" 
"Yeah, he's gonna play soccer with you." 
"With me," she says. 
You grin. "Exactly." 
You've only ever had Junie, so you don't know what counts as slow or advanced or normal, but you know kids all go at their own pace, and that most get there eventually without help. 
Your girl's never been quiet. She speaks even when she doesn't have the words. Daycare and your dedicated encouragement have brought it on suddenly, leaps and bounds of words, but she's still slightly behind, you think, although you trust that she'll get there when she can. Her vocabulary grows every single day. 
"How old is she?" Robin asks, pulling her knees to her chest, soccer ball held in front of her shoes. 
"Uh, she'll be three really soon," you say. 
"Oh, she's kind of small," Steve says. 
"You just said she was big," Robin says belligerently. 
"I already said, she looks different in the picture," Steve says, frowning at Robin forcefully. "Does she look three to you?" 
"Yeah, doofus," Robin says. 
"Her birthday's in June, so it's really coming," Eddie says, a tray in hand you barely remember owning and bedecked in drinks. 
He has four big lemonades and June's sippy cup, the pink one that was supposed to help her transition from bottles to cups and has yet to be progressed from further. Like always, these things take time. 
"Can you believe that?" you ask. "It's already summer." 
"Ew, no. I need time to slow down. Summer at the video store is hell, and it's about to get worse because Steve's ditching me." 
"How come?" you ask.
Eddie sits beside you with the tray. It impresses you that he doesn't tip a drop, until you remember that he's a bus boy, and at times when the Hideout gets super busy he acts as a regular waiter, just like you. 
"Steve's gonna start working at Cork Kids," Eddie says. 
"The daycare? No way, that's where Junie goes," you say excitedly.  
"Really?" Steve asks, smiling again. "I just signed my contract with them. Looks like we might be seeing each other all the time, Junie." 
"You'll have a friend before you start," you say. 
"Oh, thanks," Steve says, looking down at his lap momentarily. 
You side eye Eddie, who gives you a look that says he knows what you're thinking. At first glance, Steve looked like a normal, perhaps preppy guy, but it makes sense that there's some uncertainty there. Eddie seems to attract earnest people with self-esteem issues.
"Have you been around kids before?" you ask. 
"I– yeah, I had to take a course, but this is my first go at it as a job. I can handle it though, I'm good with kids. I'm new to looking after the younger ones."
"It's hard work," Eddie says. 
You shake your head. "No, it's easy, they're lovely. My June is a sweetheart, I promise." 
"She makes it look easy," Eddie says, shaking his head vehemently. 
Robin snickers at Eddie's fear mongering and drops the soccer ball in favour of one of the glasses of lemonade. Ice cubes clink against the side of the glass as she takes a sip.
Junie's interest is piqued by the ball. She sits up in your lap, looking tentatively between the adults surrounding her and the prize ahead. Robin nudges the ball toward her subtly with her foot. Junie's delighted as it rolls toward her, standing so she can grab it. It makes her look small to be holding something so big near her head. 
"Do you wanna play?" Eddie asks her. 
Junie shrugs. "With you?" 
"Yeah, with me." 
She looks at Robin. "Play?" 
"Sure," Robin says. 
"What about me?" Steve asks. "Can I play, too?" 
Junie looks oddly hesitant. You rub one of her arms briefly. "Steve can play too, right, baby?" 
She squints at him. "Okay. Steve too." 
Eddie chokes on a laugh. "Exactly how I feel about him. Oh, come on, Harrington! You know I'm joking. Just get up already, Junie wants to play." 
Eddie's lying down in the grass a couple of hours later when you sit at his hip. He's tuckered out from running, kicking, and throwing June around, and he's in desperate need of a shower. You clearly don't care, bending over his prone form, your arms around his stomach in a skewiff hug.
"Hi, handsome." 
"Hi. She's sleeping?" 
You'd dragged Junie inside and out of the sun to change and feed her, and Eddie had stayed outside to say a proper goodbye to his friends. Now they're gone, and the lack of her points to one obvious explanation. 
"Missed her nap. She was asleep by her third mouthful." 
"That's my bad." 
"No, she had the most fun she's ever had today." 
What's better than one person willing to dote on you? Four. Steve had been eager and honestly more than happy to meet Junie and get to know her, and Robin had been awkward at first but just as kind. Good thing: Junie declared Robin her new best friend. Eddie couldn't help feeling a little sorry for Steve, but she warmed up to him eventually. 
"I'm glad, actually, 'cos I've totally fucked my jeans. Cancels out."
You'd absolutely decimated your jeans with grass stains. Reluctant, you'd agreed to play soccer, or a mismatch game with way less players. You, Junie, and Robin against the boys. You were starting to enjoy yourself when you slid, and Eddie thought, Oh, fuck, she's gonna be embarrassed, ready to jump in and help you up, but you burst out laughing and Junie ran to your side, ecstatic at the sound.  
"I'll get you new jeans." 
"I'll get myself new jeans," you say, rubbing your nose against his chest. It tickles, butterflies erupting beneath your touch. "It'll wash out. Probably." 
"I'll get you new jeans," he says firmly, searching for your hand. 
He wraps his fingers around it and feels your skin without motive, the sky a calmed, darkening blue above him, orange and pink hints whispering at the horizon. 
"Do you think they liked me?" 
"They did. I know they did. Steve gave me that look guys give each other." 
"That look," you croon, laying down in the grass beside him. 
Eddie misses your hugging but lavishes in the feeling of you under his arm, your face turning into his chest. He lifts his head to see you've closed your eyes and pressed your mouth against his shirt. 
"He's jealous." 
"He's not jealous," you say fondly. 
"He should be," Eddie says, curling his arm around you. 
"Don't flirt with me." 
"I can't stop." 
You laugh. He doesn't hear it so much as feel it, the gentle shaking of your shoulders. Dropping his nose into your hair, Eddie closes his eyes as you have and breathes you in. 
"Holy shit," he says, pretending to be alarmed. 
"What?" 
"Nothing." 
"Tell me," you say. 
"No, it's nothing." 
You huff showfully and lift your head to look at him in question. The longer you look the weaker your resolve becomes, until you're cupping his face, total adoration in your eyes as you ask, "What?" 
"Just can't believe we're together," he says. He lifts his chin. Your hand falls to his neck. "That's all." 
You soften further. There's a hint of sadness to your tone, "Me neither." 
"It shouldn't be feasible for someone to have as much luck as I do. Hey, d'you think you could kiss my dice before I leave tonight?" 
You tuck a piece of hair behind his ear, your gaze on his lips and chin.
"Y/N?" 
"Yeah, I'll kiss your dice… m'just thinking." 
The wind blows mildly, lapping the smell of grass and dry dirt your way. Eddie finds he kind of likes it, but that could be the smell of you overtop, domineering as it is. Jasmine, the lingering scent of talcum powder, honey and milk hand soap. The last remnants of your shampoo, if he really thinks about it. You smell like everything he's ever wanted. 
"What are you thinking about?" he asks quietly. 
"You and me." 
"I'm always thinking about you and me," he says. 
You hug him, hiding your face in his chest for a second time. "I'm the lucky one," you say. 
Eddie stretches back in the soft grass and looks up into the sky. Sunset approaches without any concern for what Eddie wants; to stay here with you for a long, long while. It's too bad that he has to find a lock for your bathroom, and go see Gareth and the remaining Hellfire Club (or rather, the remaining members of his Hellfire generation) for another session of D&D.
"Maybe I'll call. Cancel." 
"No, you have to go. You spend too much time with me as it is. You need your friends, and you'll have fun when you're there, you always do." 
"I don't spend enough time with you," he says. 
If he had it his way, he'd happily spend forever locked in time with you here, the warmth of your body sinking into his side and his hair trapped under your weight. It tugs every time you move. He likes you so much that he doesn't consider asking you to stay still. 
It's quiet. Eddie can hear the wind over the grass, the ticking wheel spokes of bikes somewhere not far, and your breathing. Slow, deep breaths. 
"I'm glad I could fall in love with you before I noticed it was happening," he says, his voice low and a tad rough.
Your breath catches. 
It's a half truth. He was well aware of how much he liked you, but hadn't realised it was going to be such an intense sort of reverential affection until he was already knee deep in it. 
"I barely felt it," he says. "No, that's wrong," —he smiles, his words warmed by affection— "I did feel it. I felt it and it was intense, but it was ridiculously easy. Like I'd already done it before. One day I'm stealing looks at you over Friday dessert and the next I wanted you so badly I couldn't make myself ask for it.
"And… even though I wanted you, I think I fell in love with being your friend first. I'm fucking grateful for that, for you. You're everything to me." A best friend and a great love. 
"Oh," you mumble, your hand sliding up his chest to the space opposite his heart. "You might actually have to cancel seeing your friends, I don't think I can let you leave after that." 
You lift your chin, steer his face to yours, and kiss him. It's soft, but Eddie can feel an exuberance underneath it. Like a vibration. A thrumming fondness for him in the way you pull away and dive right back in. 
One kiss turns to two, and a third lends itself to something deeper, his lips parting under the light pressure of your weight above him. 
He drapes his arm behind your neck, hooking you into the crook of it. The kisses after that are endless and too short, heavy and not heavy enough. He can't tell his own touch from yours, your hands or his hands, the tip of your nose as it slides into his; as you search downward for something more. 
"Public indecency," he says when he can't breathe, nudging you away. 
You draw in a big breath and sit up so you're kneeling beside him. He sits up too in an attempt to minimise the space between you, feeling flushed as though he's done a forbidden thing, rather than having just kissed his partner. 
He grabs your hands. He isn't ready to part with them. 
"I think I fell in love with you when I cut your hair," you say. The setting sun is like gold, your skin aglow in its wash. 
"Yeah?" 
"Or maybe the first time that you came to see me at work." Your eyes light up at the memory. "You didn't even try to pretend it was for food. You didn't care." 
He shakes your hands around mindlessly. "The haircut was a big event for me, too," he says through another smile. 
They're constant when he's with you. 
"Do you still want me to cut your hair?" you ask, tilting your head to one side in appraisal. 
"Maybe tomorrow. I think I'd lose my mind tonight." 
"I think so, too," you say.
You lean down as you lift one of his hands to the underside of your chin, rubbing your skin with his knuckles. You draw a line with his hand, your chin to your jaw to your cheek. 
His heart skips a beat at the sight. Your serene expression, your soft cheek, and the little smile that blooms as he opens his hand and strokes quarter circles into the desired space with his thumb. 
"Are you gonna shower before you go?" you ask mildly, eyes half-lidded. 
"Do I smell?" 
"Kind of," you say. 
"You never smell gross," he says, a tiny lie. Everybody smells bad sometimes, but the majority of the time you smell like heaven on earth. 
You roll your eyes. "You're all talk." 
"Maybe. Maybe not." 
He leans in for a quick kiss, like a dotting of the lips. He does it another two times, to be sure you feel as loved as he feels. "Okay, I better go. I'll shower, and I'll see if there's a lock I can borrow for the bathroom 'til I have time to go to the store." 
"You don't have to do that, I can take Junie and get one tonight."
He kisses you again. "It's okay," he says with a smile, his lips a hair's width from yours. He pulls away. "I don't mind. Saves you having to get her ready, I know she's a demon in the store lately." 
"She used to be our little lady," you lament faux-tearfully. 
"That she did, sweetheart. That she did." 
Eddie pulls himself out of your arms reluctantly. 
Wayne's eating a grilled cheese sandwich over the sink when Eddie gets home, and a second when he gets out of the shower, so he picks Wayne's brain and towel dries his hair. 
"How do we stop June from getting into the bathroom?" he asks, hanging his head upside down and scrubbing at his stringy curls. 
"Lock it." 
"If we don't have a lock?" he asks, looking through his curtain of hair. 
"Buy one." Wayne shrugs. 
Eddie drops the towel onto the floor by his feet. "I'm going to. But for tonight?" 
"Put a chair under the door of your room so she can't leave when you're asleep." 
"Not my room," Eddie says. A flush colours his cheeks. 
"Are you going to move in with her? You could get a new place, rent one of those houses by the elementary school. They're nice enough." 
"Woah, woah, who says I'm moving out?" Eddie asks, laughing nervously. 
Wayne takes a big bite of sandwich and Eddie suffers without an answer until he's done. "'We,'" Wayne says, "you keep saying 'we'. Sounds serious."  
"I think it's a little soon to move in," Eddie says. 
"Me too. But if you're thinking about it, it doesn't hurt to start saving. I'll help." 
Eddie wants to say no, you definitely won't. "Yeah," he says instead, coughing to cover the tickle in his throat. "Alright. Thanks, Wayne." 
"Moving is expensive, but she can't stay in that place forever. Junie'll outgrow it in a year." 
"We live in almost the exact same trailer," Eddie says with a laugh. 
"Exactly. And we're comfortable." Wayne swigs his coke. "But if I could've, we would've moved." 
"You still could." 
"Are you kidding me? This is my home. When you move out I think I'll stay in the front room, I like it in there. TV in bed, big windows." 
"I bet you'll like it more when I'm not around keeping you up at night." 
Wayne shrugs. "Most people live with their kids until they're eighteen, right? We had a late start. You're entitled to a couple more if you want them… but something tells me you'll be flying the coop soon enough." 
"Not that soon." 
Wayne sniffs like this is upsetting for him, "Well, whenever you're ready, kid." 
Eddie comes back a little later to tell you to trap the baby in your room tonight and he'll get you a lock first thing in the morning, promise. You love him because he calls her 'the baby', and because he could've called rather than park up his van and tell you in person. He gives you another kiss, you can't count how many that makes it, saying he'll see you tomorrow, and that's that. 
Junie wakes up from her nap not long after. She's startlingly grumpy considering, and she demonstrates the horror of motherhood concisely —she screams, she cries, she pushes your glass of juice off of the table. It smashes it into a hundred different pieces. 
She screams louder when you pick her up to stop her from cutting her feet. 
You love her, but it's been a long day. You're exhausted, your head hurts, and it's difficult to clean up smashed glass with a kid. You don't wanna leave her unattended when she's wound up in case she has a tantrum. She's given herself bruises before, and you don't want or need that to happen again. 
If you put her down she might try to touch the glass. You clutch her to your chest and sweep the glass up one-handed. It takes a long time, and she only grows more irate as it passes, wiggling in your arms to be put down. 
She squirms and pulls her arms from under yours, hitting you square in the face by mistake. You're lucky it hadn't happened earlier. They don't mean to, but babies in tantrums tend to flail around, and June's great at chinning you. 
It's an accident, you know it is, but you flinch and almost drop her. 
"Juniper," you say firmly, desperate for an intermission. 
She quietens a touch. You take a very deep breath, abandon the almost full dustpan, and walk as quickly as you can to your room. You put Junie down on her toddler bed, put Mr. Bear in her lap, and crawl into bed with a pillow over your head. 
You don't scream or anything, but you could. One sharp moment. You could really scream. You would if you thought it wouldn't scare her. 
It's not Junie's fault. You have a shorter fuse than usual and it's incredibly frustrating when she gets in one of these moods, but she's your baby, you made her, and she's growing up. It must be frustrating for her, too. 
She cries quietly in bed, the sound turning your heart. You try to stop your own tears and give yourself a minute in hiding. You nibble your lip. Why are you so stressed? You can't work it out. 
You know she's hardwork sometimes, but it's not her fault. It's not your fault, either. You're both doing the best you can. 
You take a breath, another, and peel the pillow from your head.
She has snot on her face, wide-eyed and hugging Mr. Bear to her cheek.
Your nose stings. 
"You wanna come and lie in bed with me?" you ask, begging whoever it is that's watching over you to have her give in. 
With Mr. Bear's ear in her fist, Junie slides off of the bed and crosses the small space of the room to yours. You pull her up onto your mattress and smile at her. Guilt is a leaden weight in your stomach. It aches, seeing her all covered in tears, worse because she looks properly scolded. You don't often tell her off. 
"Your nose?" she says. 
"It's okay." You clear your throat. "It's okay, lovely girl." 
She blinks at you and raises her hand to your nose. You let her feel it, even though it hurts. 
"Does it look like it's hurting?" you ask. 
She doesn't usually connect her actions like this. A month ago she bit your index finger and couldn't figure out why you pulled your hand away. You're surprised that this is different. 
"No…" She sniffles. 
"I'm okay. Don't be worried, baby, mom's alright. It doesn't hurt. But you can give it a little kiss, if you want. That'll be good." 
You bend down for her. 
"Kiss?" you ask. 
She leans up and kisses the tip of your nose. It's not a clean kiss. You don't mind. 
"Thank you." 
"You'w welcome," she mumbles. 
You sigh, pulling your shirt sleeve over your hand so you can wipe her messy face. "Let me clean you up, you're all snotty. Make you feel better. There we go, there's my girl. I couldn't see you under all the tears." You stroke her cheek with your knuckle. "I'm sorry, baby. Everything was very overwhelming. Should we try again?" 
She looks like she might grizzle. 
"Let's have dinner, yeah? You can pick something from the freezer. Any dinner you want." 
Dinner works for a time, but afterward she has more sulking to do. You keep her on her toes, playing games and watching TV. She's clean but you're pulling out all the stops, filling the baby bath for her and letting her play until the water's cold and you're soaked from her rubber ducks. 
She still doesn't sleep. In a last ditch effort, you give her a bottle of warm milk, though she's aged out of formula now, and it works. 
She falls asleep hours later than she should. It's nearly 11PM. 
You look down at her asleep on your chest. Her eyes are swollen from crying buckets. Your own prickle, until tears swim and your vision blurs.
You press the back of your hand to your mouth, eyes scrunched closed, and try to make as little noise as possible. It's awful timing, you'll wake her before she's properly sleeping, but you've felt so tired today, and even when Eddie's friends came for a couple of hours you were already rubbed raw. You're tired all the time.  
In compliance with the nature of being upset, the things that are upsetting you grow in size. They double, quadruple, until they're heavy enough to knock you down for the count, have you crying like a kid out of pure defeat. You cry so hard it pulls every bit of energy you have and kills it, so hard you couldn't make noise if you wanted to, about everything and nothing. You're at the end of your rope. 
You rub Junie's back and wish someone was rubbing your own. It's an odd distress. 
It's lucky you hear his footsteps on the steps outside. 
If Eddie walked in on you like this, you'd never forgive yourself. You can't imagine it. He's seen you hungry, greasy. He's watched you put things back at the store, he knows you lived off of leftovers and saltiness for months. And you'd do it all again for your girl, but it still hurts thinking he's seen you that low. 
You shudder, sucking in two big breaths that won't work. 
You drag a rumpled sleeve over your cheeks and try not to move. 
The knock is very gentle. You can picture him on the other side, stooped and waiting for you to let him in. If he thinks you're asleep he won't knock again, and it's late. If you can stay quiet for long enough, he'll go home. 
He tries the handle. 
"Oh, my god," he says when it opens, "I'm gonna fight her." 
The her in question sniffs and wipes her eyes again. Eddie flinches at the sound, his head whipping to the side to find you where you're balled up on the couch. 
"Holy shit, what's wrong?" he asks. 
You shake your head. "N-nothing," you stammer quietly. 
"What?" he asks, like this is preposterous, and you guess it is. Something seems very wrong. 
He kicks his shoes off by the door as he closes it and doesn't waste any time, though he's quiet and careful as he crosses the room and sits down next to you. 
His hand cups your cheek, feeling the tacky damp there for himself. 
"What's wrong? Tell me… tell me,” he says. 
"It's nothing," you say. 
You'd wanted a hand to rub your back, but it's sudden. He's here, and he's seen you crying, and you have no control over it. You never really do. 
"It looks like something," he whispers. 
You cover Junie's head with your hand. Your smile is somehow more concerning than your frown, if Eddie's reaction is anything to go off of. 
"I'm fine." 
"How long has she been sleeping?" he asks. 
"I don't know.” You sniffle.
For some reason, Eddie's question starts you off again, tears welling in your eyes like fat drops of dew and falling just as fast. One squeezes under his hand. 
"Is something hurting?" he asks, his brow pinched now, nothing but patience in his tone. 
"No." 
"How about I put her to bed for you?" he asks. 
"Yes, please." 
His frown deepens as the tears build. You're horrified to notice his wince at your shuddering, but breath won't come right. His hands needle under Junie's front, tense as a taut string, and Eddie lifts her into his arms, not quite practised. He shushes her when she mumbles. 
"I'll be right back," he mouths.
You nod at his promise. As soon as he's cleared the living room you curl forward, face in your hands, shoulders shaking hard as you wipe your cheeks, catching tears before they race the hill of your cheek. 
Things must go well. Eddie's back thirty seconds later, and he's worried. 
"Hey, hey. Tell me what happened," he murmurs, perching on the couch next to you.
You try. You're not sure what's upset you, and when you open your mouth nothing wants to come out. Eddie's never, ever seen you cry like this, and it's clear that it's freaking him out. 
He curves his arm behind your shoulders and pulls you to his side, voice a pleading murmur as he says, "What's wrong? Please, sweetheart, tell me." 
"I'm tired," you force out. The main issue. 
"I know." 
"Sorry, I don't– know why I'm crying so much," you say, words staggered.
Eddie encourages your head under his chin. There's nothing specific beyond that, no more talking from either of you. He hugs your shoulders tightly, likely tighter than he means to, as though he's worried you'll come apart if he doesn't. The strange feeling of helplessness abates slowly, like an ebbing tide guided away from the shore. 
Your sobs turn to smaller, spluttering tears, until the panic fades completely, and the waterworks eventually stop. 
"I'm sorry," you mumble, fighting the sore lump in your throat.  
"It's okay." You can feel him swallow. "You scared me. You– Do you need something? Some water?"
"No…" You feel like a little kid and like you're too old at the same time. You haven't cried that hard in a long time, and you hadn't had Eddie there to sit with you through it. You're grateful for that, if nothing else. "Can you just–" You turn toward him. "Can I have a hug?" 
He steel arms you into his chest, dropping a kiss against your hot forehead.  
"Yes," he says, punctuating with more kisses. "No question about it. You can have anything you want from me. Would it make you feel better if I cried, too? I can do that, sweetheart, I could really go for it. In sixth grade, I made myself cry so hard I threw up 'cos I wanted to get out of gym." 
You choke on a laugh. 
He doubles down. 
"I was dry heaving on the bleachers for an hour," he says, his hand behind your head and vying for your clammy neck, stroking a line when he finds it. "They wouldn't send me to the nurse." 
"I don't need you to cry. It's… Junie's been wound up like a top all day, and she woke up and just screamed for hours, Eds, screamed. She couldn't have been asleep ten minutes when you got here." 
"I'm sorry. That must have been overwhelming." 
You peer up into his face to gauge his expression. Not that you think he's ingenuine, but you're worried he's humouring you. 
"I got mad at her." 
He hums. "Yeah?" 
"I didn't mean to, but she hit me." 
"What?" 
"By accident." 
"No, I figured. Where'd she get you?" 
"My nose," you admit. 
Eddie leans out of the circle of your arms to see your face, bringing a hand to your cheek. He assesses your nose. You want to tell him there's nothing to find, but it's nice to be checked over. His palm is warm. 
"If you're crying because you got angry, I promise it's alright. Everybody has a breaking point." 
"I know." You hadn't been cruel. You took what you could, and when it got too much you set her down and had a breather. 
"Wayne got so mad at me one time he asked me to go get him rosemary toothpaste just so he could have an hour away from me." 
"Rosemary toothpaste?" 
He turns your head slightly to the side. "Doesn't exist." 
"What did you do to make him mad?" 
"Cut all the sleeves off of my t-shirts." 
"All of them?" 
"Every single shirt I owned. It was a cold winter." 
He smiles, his pale cheeks appled, his big brown eyes reflecting your own. 
"Did you get really mad?" he asks softly. 
"No,” you say, cutting yourself some slack. “I didn’t.”
“You know you're allowed though?”
“I don't want to get mad at her. She can't help it.”
“Neither can you. I'm not saying you should yell at her, but don't beat yourself up for not enjoying a sucker punch.”
“It wasn’t that. I’m not upset about it, I mean, I’m not very happy but it’s not the first time I felt overwhelmed by her. I don’t care if she drives me up the wall sometimes, I don’t even care about the impromptu nose job,” —Eddie whoops, before covering his mouth apologetically— “or that she took awhile to go down. I really don't know why…”
“I'm going to say something.”
“Oh no.”
“Not trying to be a freak here, but maybe you're visiting with the devil.”
You sit back. His hands fall to your hips. 
“Sorry?” you ask. 
Eddie smiles ruefully. “You know. Riding the crimson wave.” He grimaces at your continued confusion. “Time of month?”
You’re embarrassed thinking he’s embarrassed by it, but luckily he furthers, “Sorry if that’s weird to say, I don’t know if that’s weird. I’d, like, crawl across hot coals for you, I really don’t care if that’s what it is, just girls get kind of intense. Emotionally. At that time.”
“Oh really?” you ask. 
His skin turns ashen. “Um–”
“I'm kidding,” you say.
Your hand drifts to your stomach. It would make sense as to why you’re feeling very tired and confused about your emotions, and it might be nearing that time. You’re so busy you haven't been keeping track. “Maybe it is,” you say, mumbling still.
“I’m not saying you can't have a breakdown if you need one,” he says. 
“No, I know. Maybe you’re right. I kind of hope you're right.”
“Is this awkward?” 
“You sleep in my bed nearly every night, Eds. I dont think it's awkward unless you do.”
“Again, I’d crawl across hot coals for you, so… this is the most minor thing ever. Not for you, for me. For you, it sucks. For me?” He pinches your cheek gently. “I worship the ground you walk on, you loser, I don't care if it’s shark week. We’re not in middle school.
“But if it isn’t hormones making you unhappy, if you really feel this awful, you can tell me.”
“I don't know what it is," you say, embarrassed, a headache pounding in your temple. 
“That’s okay though, right? Or is it too much?”
“I feel better,” you say. It's true and not true. 
Fuck, he’s sweet. His lips pout ever so slightly in concern for you, his brows pinching down. His hands remain steadfast on your hips. 
“Well, if it gets too much you gotta let me know. Legally. That’s the whole point of having a boyfriend, I think. You gotta let me take care of you… You're sure you feel better?”
“Yeah. I really am sorry.”
“For what?”
“Being a loser.” You laugh wetly. 
“Ah, but you're my loser,” he says, arms curling behind your back again. “I don't want you to cry, but if you are going to then I’m glad it’s when you’re with me, yeah? I don’t like that you were crying alone. Think of all the amazing support you missed out on. I could’ve been rubbing your back that whole time.” He rubs your back in emphasis. 
“That feels nice.”
“Do you have any aches?”
“I always have aches, I’m a waitress.”
“Me too.” He presses his lips to your skin. “Let me make you something to drink, and I’ll stay the night, if that’s cool? I can rub your back for hours without getting tired.” 
“‘Cos you have such big muscles,” you agree indulgently. He has amazingly shaped biceps, but that’s besides the point. 
“That is exactly why.”
He blows a breath out against your cheek and sits back into the couch. “Do me a favour? Next time I ask you what’s wrong, don't say nothing. Don’t hide when you’re feeling like shit, I need to know.”
"Okay. Yeah, I will. Just… you always see me at my worst." 
Eddie chucks under your chin and begins to stand. "I get to see you at your best, too. It's a good deal." 
It’s a good deal, you mouth to yourself.
“Get up,” he says from the front door, mock-cross when you don't immediately follow, “I can't go to bed by myself.” He locks the front door, sliding the deadbolt home. “You didn’t kiss my dice, you know? That’s why I came tonight, to harp at you.”
“And that couldn't wait until tomorrow?”
Eddie glares at you, “No?”
You hold your hands up, your voice still thick from tears but inarguably in love. “Alright. Harp at me. But carry me to bed first.”
It’s not long before he’s pushing his head against your side, arms at your waist in an attempt to lift you over his shoulder like a fireman, whisper-yelling, “What are you saying? You asked me to carry you! I can’t hear you, babe, just brace yourself.”
Junie has the sense that you're being weird. She’s three, or one day away from it, and she won’t remember anything you’re saying right now but she’ll remember how she felt, the warmth of your loving hand in her hair, stroking it from her face as you and Eddie titter at one another. Eddie’s like you, in a way, a mom but not around as much. Almost as much recently, though, which is great news. 
“I saw one in the department store by the bus station,” Eddie says, strumming his guitar. It plinks. 
Junie sniffs, her nose a little runny, and dips her head back against your chest. You smell like home, the sweet and soft swirl of lavender and jasmine laundry powder, a burning smell she doesn’t really care for that comes after you sit on the floor and press the clothes —hot hot hot, junebug— every other night, and the treats you’re sharing. 
“Sounds expensive,” you say gently. 
“So?”
“So,” you say, and Junie bristles at the mild annoyance in your tone, because you are incredibly soft-handed and have been since she was born, “I won’t be able to afford it, Eds.” Your annoyance fades as soon as it comes, and you say ‘Eds’ so nicely that Junie turns her face and rubs her cheek into your t-shirt. 
“You okay, baby?” you ask her. 
Junie huffs, pleased. She is very okay. Even better when you offer her another chocolatey cookie. 
“It’s her birthday, she only gets one a year. And I’d be happy to pay for it, anyways.”
“Yeah, you’re always happy to pay for things, you have a screw loose.”
Eddie laughs. Junie laughs at his laughing; whenever he’s laughing there’s happiness afoot. He loves to swing her around in his arms, tickle her, play with her small army of teddies and make them speak. He beams at her from his seat on the floor in front of the TV, the guitar that she’s grown to revere twanging as he puts it down on the floor. 
“Hearing that, bug? Your mommy can’t leave me alone today.” 
Junie, for all her brilliant smarts, her growing mind, doesn’t really get what he means. She knows that she’s the bug he’s talking to, and that he’s doing something fun from the lilting cadence of his teasing, but beyond that it’s nonsense. 
She loses interest quickly and returns to her melting cookie, unperturbed by the mess that it makes of her small hands and once-pristine sleeves. You never shout about stains, so Junie doesn’t see a problem, not until you laugh, the breath of it warm against her ear, and push the sleeves of her shirt up the lengths of her arms. She’s wearing her very favourite strawberry pyjamas today, though they make her agitated every now and then because they don’t feel quite right. She doesn’t see why. They’ve always been the best.
“Don’t listen to stinky,” you say. 
Junie nods. Mom always knows best, she knows, in an abstract way. Except for when you say that the one-eyed stray that slinks around doesn’t like pets. He loves them when you’re not looking. 
“We have a chance to make it a really special day, so why don’t we? It’ll pay for itself. The sun’ll be out morning, noon, and night soon, and she can use it every day.”
“Morning, noon, and night,” you repeat. “Very Tolkien of you.”
Eddie makes a pleased sound as he stands up. Junie thinks he is the tallest person in the world. “Thank you,” he says sincerely.
He squeezes Junie’s toes as he passes, and despite how weird it feels she kind of likes it. She loves Eddie, astronomically, gargantuanly, though these are big words to her. 
Love can't be described in the words that she knows, but it can be acted out. She drops her cookie like it’s aflame and slips out of your comfortable lap: you are the very best seat, even better than being in bed. Still, she abandons you and your cookies and follows Eddie in a run to the kitchen where he’s opening the fridge. 
“Drink, pretty girl?” he asks her, voice saccharine sweet. 
She makes a sound of delight. “Up!”
“Say please,” he directs, already squatting down to grab her. 
“Please up!” she demands, walking into his waiting arms. 
Again, Eddie’s like you. As mom, you feel not too different from Junie herself. She doesn’t know that she misses you, but she does miss you heartily when you leave her at the daycare for the day, or sometimes when she wakes up first in the mornings and can’t climb into bed with you. She doesn’t understand missing you, only wanting you, and she wants Eddie in the same capacity. When he picks her up she feels better, and happy, and loved when his hand stretches palm-flat over her back and pats a turbulent rhythm. 
He sings too fast to understand, one of his loud songs. Your music is quieter, because you’re a quiet mom. You whisper when she falls asleep on your chest, singing love songs under your breath as the night creeps in, and your footfall is carefully measured. But you laugh loudly, one of Junie’s favourite sounds in the whole world —up there with the Muppet Babies’ theme song and the squeak your tennis shoes make when you half-run to the baby gate at pick up. 
Eddie laughs much, much louder, usually in tandem with you, or if not then only a few seconds before. He also growls, raspberries, and chortles. He does the best Animal impression ever, like the muppet himself is hiding around the corner. 
“Here, June, you have your sippy cup, there's a good girl. You’re not drinking much today, what’s the matter? Is your juice not yummy enough?” 
Junie takes the offered sippy cup and tries to formulate a response. It’s hard, because Eddie said lot’s of things all at once, and there were two different questions in the mix. She catches onto the very last, giving her sippy cup a good shake as she answers, “It’s yummy.”
You and Eddie love when Junie speaks. Your faces glow. It’s the best. 
“Yeah?” Eddie asks. 
“Yes,” she tries. “Juice.” She changes her mind. “Cookies?”
“One track mind,” Eddie says. 
Junie takes it for an I love you, of sorts. The way he says it suggests affection, she can’t pinpoint exactly what, but it’s how you sound when you tell her every day. She pushes her hands into his hair and then around his neck to give him a deliberate hug. He does the humming thing he tends to do when he’s picked her up, pat-pat-patting her back even as she pulls away. 
“Is the cuddle over?” he asks, pouting at her, his eyes widening. “Mom wasn’t even jealous yet.”
“Shut up,” you say happily. 
“Have a drink,” Eddie insists to Junie, encouraging the mouth of her sippy cup to her chin. “It’s a warm day today, me and you and mommy have to drink lots and lots to stay healthy. Did you want another drink?”
Junie has a drink, but she doesn't bother correcting him. 
“Please, handsome, if you don’t mind," you say.
Handsome is kind of like junebug, only you never call Junie handsome, so it must be Eddie’s alone. Junie doesn’t mind: she gets called baby and babe and bub and sweetheart and even little lady when she’s being really good. 
It goes without saying that she feels very, very loved. Even her name feels like a pet name when you say it most the time. 
"Junie doesn't need a super big one, she's just one girl. She'd be happy with a kiddie–" You cough. "Whatever size."
"I know she'd be happy," Eddie says, Junie still in his arms and confused. 
He's multi-tasking, filling up your prettiest cup until the enamel flowers are starkly backgrounded by juice and ice. Eddie pulls Junie up higher on his side and kisses her forehead. "You've been a happy gal lately. Which is good, good for mom, and good for you." He smiles until she smiles back.  
"What I'm saying," Eddie starts over Junie's head, carrying her and your cup back to the living room, "is that I want to get it for her, please. I'll go now while it's still open, and I'll have to get a hose and an air pump or something from somewhere so that'll take time, and filling it up might take an hour or two. 'Cos, listen, I'll pay for it and if the water bill is ridiculous I'll pay for that, too–" 
"I don't want you to pay for it, Eds, you don't work ten hour shifts six days a week to spend it all on us." 
"No," he says agreeably, sitting down beside you, Junie in his lap. She spots the cookies she'd been missing and reaches across to your lap. You take her on instinct, and boom, cookies achieved. "I barely ever work six days a week anymore, and you're right that I don't work to spend it all on you guys. I spend too much of on nerd crap, another too much on groceries, and some of it goes into savings–"
"What savings?" you say, laughing like this is a funny joke. 
"–but really, I don't think of it as spending money on you, babe, and I bet you don't think of it like that either. We're not keeping a tally chart." 
"Of course not," you say softly, putting your hand on Eddie's shoulder, "I didn't mean to imply that." 
"You didn't," Eddie says, just as soft. "I'm just saying, it's not about money. You know it yourself, the less you have the more you want to give, and I have enough to blow her mind, so I think we should do it. But I don't want to make you uncomfortable or uneasy," —he says uneasy like it's a slimy word, making Junie giggle— "so if you don't want me to, I won't. We'll find something else, it really doesn't matter. Don't get stressed." 
"I think I'm always stressed," you murmur, sinking down into your seat. Junie twists to look at you, startled at your sudden change in attitude. You've moved from happy to sad. It's odd. "Sorry, I'm not trying to be a nag." 
Eddie laughs, the sound as startled as Junie's feeling. "You're not a nag! Do I make you feel like a nag?" 
"No, I just know I am…" 
"You are not a nag. You have a lot on your plate all the time, and you worry about money because you need to. I'm not blaming you for something that's not your fault," Eddie says. 
Junie likes this part. Eddie slides an arm behind your shoulders, kisses your cheek, and speaks in murmurs as you relax under his touch, "You're allowed to be stressed, don't feel guilty. Just let me have some of the stress too, alright? Don't be greedy." 
"This sucks." 
"It doesn't suck." Eddie lowers his voice to a whisper, Junie can't hear what he says next. "Let me buy the pool, babe. She'll love it. It has a built-in slide." 
"I know what one you're talking about, and it was one hundred and fifty dollars." 
"I have it. If she uses it every day for the summer, that's like two dollars a day." 
"She won't, though." 
"Well, we waste money all the time. We bought that box of apples from that guy on the side of the road the other day for ten dollars and we didn't eat a single one." 
"That's different, we forgot they were in the trunk. We probably would've died if we ate one, they got all squishy." 
"If we all use the pool it's worth it. Me, you and June use it every day, it works out cheaper than a movie ticket." 
"I'm gonna make you go in the pool every single day," you threaten without malice. 
You obviously won't be doing that, you aren't that bitter, and Eddie says, "Yes," under his breath because it's practically permission. 
"I will happily go in the pool every single day," he says.
"Pool?" Junie asks. 
Junie already has a pool, and she loves it, and now she's heard the word, she wants it bad. 
"Oh…" You kiss Eddie's jaw chastely. "Your fault." 
"Shit," he says. 
Junie takes a breath and repeats it, puzzled at your horror. You usually love it when she says new words. 
The trailer is something out of a movie today. It's a warm and sunny day with enough cloud cover to defeat the brutal summer glare that sometimes smothers Hawkins. The breeze cools the sweat on the back of Eddie's neck, a blessed reprieve. 
He couldn't ditch you yesterday after his 'pool' related slip up —you are, in fact, 'visiting with the devil', and it's making you miserable and stressed despite all your best intentions, so leaving you alone to get out and fill the pool, a sometimes stressful situation, was not on his agenda— resulting in a very early morning for him. He woke up at 6AM to drive to the department store by the Indianapolis bus station, had to hang around for half an hour before it even opened because he didn't time it right, and then had to drive back with the new pool hoping he could get it done before Junie was awake. 
Juniper was, in fact, already awake and bounding around the trailer like a girl on fire, the decorations, banners and balloons and tablecloths, working her into a frenzy. Apparently she took a while to understand that the day was about her, but once she did she couldn't stop smiling. 
"You should've seen it," you'd said, stretching the elastic string of a cardboard party hat over the head of Mr. Bear. "She went ballistic, Munson, absolutely crazy when she saw the cake, I don't think I've ever felt that happy in my life." 
"Sorry I missed it," he'd said, in agony. 
Eddie’s hoping the pool will get her to a similar level of excitement. He looks out over the grass behind your home and feels very, very smug. The pool has been successfully blown up with air and filled, and it looks like it was worth every penny with the hose running down the slide, the attached palm trees standing tall. Your favourite The Beat record is playing from the open window, and he can hear you and June singing along to Save It For Later, aceing the long na-na-na-na-na-na-na-na-na-na-na's. It makes him ridiculously happy. 
"Looking good," Wayne says. 
Eddie turns to his uncle where he's approaching from the left, a Teddy bear wrapped in purple-pink cellophane in hand. 
"You think so?" 
"Tyke's gonna love it. When's the grand reveal?" 
"I'm all done, so right now," Eddie says. "Holy shit, this is sick, right?" 
Wayne, in his most deluxe outfit, a light brown button down and a pair of unripped, unsullied jeans, gives Eddie what can only be described as his fond dad look. "It looks good, Eddie." 
It should. There's the pool, the picnic blanket covered in cupcakes and finger sandwiches shielded by a big beach umbrella, and a sheet of green grass behind it. 
"How are you gonna stop the strays getting at it?" Wayne asks. 
"Who knows. I got a tarp in the van, that'll have to do it." 
"You could, you know, pack it away."
"That is not how we do things," Eddie jokes. 
"Didn't we just have a conversation about saving money?" Wayne asks. 
"We did, yeah…" Eddie crosses his arms across his chest. "This honest living thing is tough." 
"You love it," Wayne says. "You're a good kid." 
Eddie sits on the foldout picnic bench he'd borrowed from Gareth and Wayne sits next to him, the two of them looking out at the pool, the sound of the hose and the crickets in the tall grass bordering the park a steadying company. 
"Y/N invited the daycare kids. She didn't want me to get the pool, even though she kind of did, 'cos it wasn't cheap, but as soon as I brought it home she just–" Sparkled, Eddie wants to say, but he certainly won't be saying that to Wayne's face. Wayne would never let him live it down. "She called every mom she had the number for and invited the rest of the kids from daycare to come over. I don't even think she wants to brag, and shit, I want to. She just wants the kids to have a good time." 
"Well, you picked a good one," Wayne says easily. 
"I know you weren't sure. At first." 
"That didn't have anything to do with her." Wayne rubs a hand over his chin. "It's hard, having kids. I feel for her doing it all by herself like that. I'm glad she has you now, but dating a woman with a kid isn't easy, and it isn't something you can do and move on from like nothing happened. I'm not saying you're that little girl's dad now, but you're doing the things a dad does, understand? You're not just a boyfriend." 
Boyfriend is funny from Wayne's mouth. Juvenile. He doesn't think Eddie should call you his 'old lady' but he always laughs at 'girlfriend'. Wayne's a complicated dude. A little rough around the edges, and absolutely brimming to the neck with love. 
"I get it," Eddie says, and he does. 
He isn't Junie's dad, but he loves her like his own, he's sure of it. He's never had his own so he doesn't have a comparison, but still. And he gets that this is a layer to the relationship he shares with you. How it might complicate things. How it could go wrong. 
"But you'd do anything for those girls, and I know that," Wayne says. 
Eddie wishes Wayne would say a little more, explain it to him, because Eddie feels out of his element sometimes and needs a hand. He doesn't question if what he's doing is the right thing because it hasn't ever felt wrong. He doesn't worry about the future because the only thing he can see ahead are good times. But there's still an underlying anxiety, and he wishes his uncle would give him some relief. He also understands why Wayne doesn't. 
"I would do anything for them," he agrees. "Which, I've been meaning to ask you something, a favour." 
Wayne raises his eyebrows, looking tired. Eddie knows it's half charade. 
"How do you feel about babysitting?" 
"Now that's why I didn't want you hanging around her," Wayne says, deadpan. 
Eddie laughs sharply, so suddenly he can't breathe and ends up hacking coughing into his hands. 
Wayne laughs and pats Eddie on the back. "I can babysit. For an hour." 
"Two? I'm trying to take her to dinner, you know. A real date, like a gentleman." 
"We'll see. What's she think about it?"
"She's extremely protective, and you know she doesn't think you're a bad guy, or anything, but she's apprehensive." 
"She'd be silly not to be. Some people are evil." 
Eddie grimaces. "Exactly. But she trusts me and I trust you, so." 
"I'd think you do. Only broke my back–" 
"For the last ten years," Eddie finishes. 
Wayne throws his arm around Eddie's shoulders. "Looking after you, son. God knows I'd do it again… As long as it's alright with Y/N, I'll babysit. But you know there's a ton of kids trying to make a buck around here who'd just love to help out," Wayne says. Eddie must have rubbed off on him or maybe Wayne's the source of all his theatrics; he puts on a hopeful, almost wistful sort of voice as he says it that has Eddie laughing all over again. 
"We'll see. There's no hurry. Just wanna take her out sometimes, she deserves it." 
"She sounds like she's having plenty of fun to me," Wayne says reassuringly. 
You're singing and laughing through the words from the kitchen. You'd told Eddie you're going to give Junie a very intricate hairstyle so she can swim without worrying about washing it, and it's taken you the better part of the hour, yet neither your good mood nor June's has faded. He can see it, you feeding Junie cold cut-up fruit dipped in condensed milk, kissing her cheeks and massaging her scalp as you go. Junie on the counter, as happy as she's ever been. 
"You almost done?" Eddie calls. 
You turn down the music. 
"What?" you ask, pushing the kitchen window open a little further, careful to push aside the shutters just enough to see him, but not let Junie see the backyard. "Oh, hi Mr. Munson, how are you? Can I get you something to drink?" 
"Just here to give some birthday wishes," Wayne says, lifting the bear up. "How are you doing?" 
"I'm awesome," you say brightly.
"You look good." 
Wayne had pulled Eddie aside once, when you'd been dating for two weeks and bumped into him outside of Bradley's, as the fates should have it. He'd looked stern, hand on Eddie's shoulder, and said, "I'm not blaming you, son, but you gotta help her get some rest. Poor girl looks ready to fall over."
Eddie thinks you're pretty even when you're exhausted. In the fullest sense of the word, you meet every definition in his dictionary. You have these eyes that might not pull everyone in but more than hook him, and when you look at him sometimes it's with so much love you're basically an angel. Your smile is beautiful because it's yours. Your voice is lovely because of the words you choose to say, that endless sweetness and softness. He knows you well enough now to realise that there is an end to it in reality. When you're tired or fed up, you can be snappy and blunt and occasionally argumentative, but he likes that. He doesn't want you any other way, 'cos perfect doesn't exist and if it did he'd still end up on your doorstep with a plastic bag in the crook of his elbow, begging for one of those shitty mini pizzas you make and a place at your table. 
You do look well, admittedly and despite your recent bout of restless upset. You had a good night's sleep, and Junie being happy makes you happier. You beam down at them from the window, your eyes sliding to the blown up pool and the mini picnic Eddie's set up.
"Thanks, Mr. Munson. Can I bring her down?" you ask. 
"Absolutely," Eddie says, hand in the air and pulling toward his face, ushering you down, "right now." 
The back door opens and you guide Junie out first. Eddie popped in to give a birthday cuddle and the card he'd picked out, but he hasn't seen Junie since you did her hair, and it looks so nice it melts his heart. She stands in the doorway in her swimming costume, pink and purple and green ombre with frills everywhere, her face slack. 
"Happy birthday!" Eddie says, standing so he can hold out his hand and help her down the stairs. She takes it but doesn't move. "Me and mom know you like your pool so much we wanted to get you another one, do you like it?" 
She starts wiggling, jumping without her feet leaving the floor. She looks at Eddie, at Wayne, at you, at the pool, and a noise starts to brew like the whistle of a saucepan boiling water, the lid skewiff. Eddie grins and waves her hand. 
"It's for you, babe, do you want to get in?" he encourages. 
"With you?" she asks, still wiggling. 
"Maybe later. Do you need help?" 
Junie runs to the edge of the pool, looking over the side that's almost as tall as her and into the water. You already gave him a strict talk about water safety as though for a moment you might not be supervising, loving but resolute that she can't for one single second be unattended or without eyes on her. 
He hadn't been offended, though he did kiss the top of your head and say sarcastically, "Thanks, major, I didn't know that." 
"Jerk," you'd said, earning another kiss. 
Eddie puts his hands under her arms and lifts her up carefully. Her legs curl in toward her stomach like a pill bug. "It might be cold, June, but it's in the sun, so it won't stay cold. Ready?" 
"Yes!" she says. 
Eddie eases her down into the water. She shrieks happily as water covers her toes, her legs, up past her belly button. 
Eddie lets her go and she sits in the water rather than stands. The water reaches her shoulders. She lifts her hands and does a little splash. "It's so big!" she cheers. 
You ease down into a kneel poolside and reach your hand into the water. "And so cold!" you say, looking up at the sky for a moment. "It'll be warmer in no time. Oh, wow, June, there's so much water, you're up to your chin!" 
Junie stands up and runs to the palm tree, giggling. Her attention snags on the slide, and Eddie knows everyone present smiles when she gasps and spins on her heel to you, almost slipping onto her butt. She scrambles up again. "Mommy, it's a slide!" 
"I know! Are you gonna go down? Come here, you have to let me help you up over the side and you can climb up the slide." 
Just when Eddie's starting to think he couldn't like you more, you pull her up against your chest and out of the pool. You don't care that she's soaked. 
"Let's go down the slide!" you say, sounding genuinely excited. 
"Starting to think you should've got a bigger one, kid," Wayne says. 
Eddie snorts and peels off his shirt. "Maybe," he says, shooting Wayne a secret, pleased smile, before rounding the pool. "Babe, you're getting wet, let me have her," he says to you. The daycare kids and their parents should be coming soon. He knows you'll want to look your best. 
"Woah, put your shirt on, Munson, what do you think this is? A GQ shoot?" 
"Like I'm some piece of meat," he murmurs with a smile, failing to help Junie navigate the inflatable steps of the slide. 
You whistle playfully. Wayne howls with laughter. Eddie turns three shades of pink. He blames the sun.
Your teasing ends as soon as it's started. When Junie gets the hang of the slide he dries off and puts his shirt back on, and soon the daycare parents arrive with their tiny charges. They're quick to climb into the pool. Junie is ecstatic beyond words, laughing and giving out dripping hugs to her very favourite friends Adrien and Lucy. Adrien is a sweet, smart toddler. He manages to say, "Happy birthday, Junie!" with a small reminder. 
Junie smiles until her eyes close. "Thanks," she says gleefully. 
You shuffle over to Eddie. "Can you please watch all the babies so I can go get the drinks, please? And say thanks for the gifts?" 
"Please please," he says, squeezing your wrist. "I think there's about seven pairs of eyes on them, but yeah, absolutely. They don't call me Eddie Water Safety Munson for nothing."
You elbow him mildly. 
The only danger Eddie can see is that the kids look like they might have a fight over who gets to use the slide first. There's an impatient four year old called John who feels desperately that he should get to go first, and Lucy, Junie's favourite, does not agree. The birthday girl doesn't seem super interested in the conflict and instead plays with Adrien and a little girl named Matildhe with her rubber duckies, away from the slide. 
"You don't have to stay," Eddie says to Wayne, eyes on Junie's excited chattering. 
"And leave you to entertain the parents? I'm not that cruel." 
Eddie doesn't know most of the parents, having only met Adrien's mom when Junie was having her hugging phase and Eddie went in for emotional support, and John's dad outside of the mechanic where Wayne works, you in the car, Junie on his hip as he dipped in to bring Wayne his forgotten lunch for a late night doing overtime. Junie had recognised John, and so Eddie had been forced to introduce himself. It had been fine, but Eddie would prefer you with him for any future clumsy introductions. 
You come back down with drinks and make parental rounds, thanking each one for the small gifts they've brought. You ask about allergies and nod seriously when one parent says their boy is sensitive to aspartame, before sneaking back to Eddie's side. 
"What's aspartame, handsome? Do you know? I might poison that poor baby from stupidity." 
"It's a sweetener,” he says, "they put it in Jolt Cola. I think they're saying he's hyperactive." 
"Oh, right… is there aspartame in the strawberry juice?" 
"I'd have to check. Want me to take a look?" 
"No, it's okay… I'll just… hold off on it for a minute," you say. You let your weight rest against his side. "This looks amazing. It's amazing. Thank you, Eddie." 
He turns to you and pouts for a kiss. You lean up and give it to him immediately. Eddie doesn't care that there's a crowd of people to watch, he can't not give you a hug. His head locks over your shoulder, and he squeezes you tightly. 
"Don't worry, I'm still watching her," he says before you can wriggle out of his arms. 
"Okay," you say, your face flopped into the juncture of his neck. "Thank you double. I don't deserve you." 
"Yes you do. You deserve a whole lot more," Eddie says, thinking about the houses by the elementary school, and how lonely you can get, and the feeling of your hands as you wash soap suds out of his hair. He hugs you hard and pulls you toward him, your heels lifting off of the ground just slightly. "But this is a start, right?" 
"I wouldn't call this a start," you say, pulling away from him. Your face is lined with affection. “This is better.”
You turn around, sliding firmly under his arm, and scan the pool for your girl. Junie's standing now, offering handfuls of water to Lucy, who takes them and tips them over her head. Every time water runs down her face she laughs, and Junie hurries to get her another handful. 
"I think Steve said he was gonna come by," Eddie says. "That cool?" 
"Sure, the more the merrier. What about Robin?" 
"She can't, she's training the new video store recruit. She said Steve has her gift, though." 
You shake your head and click your tongue, "Tsk, they didn't have to get her anything." 
"They wanted to. Steve actually enjoyed it, I think. He's kind of desperate to be a dad, you know? He's dating this girl from Anderson but she's in college and they're not settling down yet. You know, I never thought that I'd– that I would end up settling down before him." 
"Are you?" you ask softly. 
He's quiet for longer than he means to be, watching as Junie gets her go on the slide. She barrels down into the water and screeches, overjoyed. 
"I'm not asking you to," you say, "I wouldn't ever ask you to, I mean, you don't–" 
"Hey, hey, wait. Wait a second." He tears his gaze from the pool to meet your eyes. "I'm settling down. I am. I want to. I want to be with you, and I want to look after you. I love doing it. This," —he gestures around your backyard— "is what I want. I want a ton of other things and I'm not giving up on them, I wanna make music, and get a job that pays better, but I want to do those things with you. You and Juniper." 
"I'll look after you, too," you say. 
He kisses the skin before your ear. "You already do," he says quietly. 
There's a small gap in your conversation. Eddie takes a sweep of the yard. Wayne looks content if a little bored in the sun, arms crossed across his chest and Teddy bear sat beside him. Junie's talking animatedly from inside of the pool to one of the parents as they rub sun cream into their own child's arms. The stray cat who sometimes sleeps under the porch noses at a half sandwich on the picnic blanket. Eddie's sweating in the heat, and it is so, so loud, but he reckons it's a damn good party. 
You stroke a big wad of curls behind his shoulder, a smaller strand behind his ear. 
"I love you," you say tentatively.
Eddie laughs but closes his mouth, the sound more of a hum, and leans back so you can cup his cheek. "I love you, too," he says, "you know that." He confessed it plainly enough only a week ago, lying in the grass with you, your cheek over his heart.
"Good," you say, looking like you might keel over. "I was really scared to tell you." 
"I was scared to tell you too. That's the fun part, for sure. This is terrifying." 
"Terrifying," you second. 
"And awesome." 
"So awesome," you murmur. 
Eddie peels your hand from his cheek and spins you around. You move slowly but let him do as he pleases. Your lashes kiss in the corners as you smile, as you pause in your spin to squeeze his fingers tenderly. 
"Munson!" Steve calls, though he blinks when he sees the crowd of people he technically works for amassed poolside. He's only been with Cork Kids for a few days. "Oh, hello." 
"Steve!" Junie cries, throwing herself at the wall of the pool. "Hello! Good morning!" 
"Hiya, Junie," he says.
"Good to see you, son," Wayne says, extremely amused. 
"Come swim, Mr. Steve!" one of the kids calls. 
"Gonna save him?" you ask Eddie. 
"Not a chance." 
"Steve!" Junie yells again, "Hello!" 
Steve understands that he's not going to get out of it, clearly, because he crosses the yard and kneels down in the wet grass by the pool. "Hi guys. Are you having fun?" 
The kids all cheer. Steve gets splashed in the process.
— 
Children's birthday parties are much shorter than you thought they'd be. The children, in different states of tiredness, are wrangled into towel ponchos and shepherded into cars, each with a slice of cake wrapped in a paper towel and a heartfelt, "Thank you so much for coming." 
Steve, exhausted, is slumped on the couch in your trailer with a cold can of coke pressed to his forehead and a borrowed pair of Eddie's sweatpants as well as a black and red Metallica shirt that wildy changes the young man's appearance. Junie giggles, sitting with Mr. Munson —call me Wayne, kid, I'm begging you— at the kitchen table. 
"Not like that, Way!" Junie says, trying to coach him through eating a powdered sugar donut. 
"I don't know how else I'm supposed to be eating it." He sounds as adoring of her as you often feel, forgiving her mispronunciation. 
"Babe, where do you want these?" 
You finish the cup you'd been washing and sidle to the back door. Eddie's holding the towels you'd brought out for the parents to sit on. Most are wet from the kids climbing in and out of the pool, and all of them are plastered in grass. 
"Leave them there, I'll put them straight in the washing machine." 
Eddie climbs up the steps, arms full to bursting. "Open the door for me." 
You open the washing machine and Eddie tucks them all inside. Every clean towel you had has been muddied and you wouldn't care, but Eddie looks like he needs a shower, and you probably look similar. You stop him before he can go back outside. 
"What?" he asks.
You twist your hand into his shirt and pull him in. "Two seconds, you have–" You tilt his head to the side and rub at a funny splotch on his cheek. It spreads but doesn't budge. 
"If you lick your thumb, we're breaking up." 
You go on tiptoes. "We can't break up, 'cos you love me," you whisper, not even smug. "And I love you." 
"That's pretty good logic," he says, smirking, "but it won't stop me." 
"Ew," Steve sing-songs, pulling out a chair next to Junie as he cracks open his coke. "That's super gross. And in front of your family. Yuck." 
"We didn't so much as kiss," Eddie says. 
"No, you're just in love. Much worse." 
Eddie rolls his eyes and pulls out the last chair. You assume he'll sit, but he backtracks, grabbing you by the shoulders and sitting you down. "Sit," he commands. 
"I don't think I have much choice." 
Junie smiles at you from across the table, changed into dry fleece pyjamas to fight any possible chill. You smile back, propping your chin on your hand. 
Powdered sugar coats her cheeks. "Donut, mommy?" 
"Oh, yes please," you say, holding out your hand.  
She gives you a donut like she's worried you're about to collapse from hunger, nearly catapulting it across the table. You pick it up and take an indulgent bite. 
"Did you want one?" you ask Steve, hand in front of your mouth. 
"I think I've had enough," he says, queasy.
Junie must have force fed him half the cupcake platter. Her viewing him as a nemesis was short-lived. 
"Eddie?" Junie asks. "Donuts." She babbles something indistinguishable. 
"No thanks, junebug." 
Junie hugs the bag of donuts close to her chest, then, seemingly glad that everyone is done sharing. 
"Did you cover the pool?" Wayne asks. 
"Yes sir, no cat claws will be getting at that one." 
"You'd be surprised what you can fix with duct tape," Steve says. 
"Does that really work?" Eddie asks. 
It's sweet seeing Eddie around his friend. You resolve to ask if it can happen more often —even if you're not there to see it, knowing he's having a good time would make you happy. You've been selfish with him since you met him, and you can't say you're too sorry because of how it ended up, but you can try to make up for it now. 
He and Steve get along in a very specific way, wherein Eddie says suggestive things and Steve pretends to hate his guts, and then one or both of them forgets the facade and they talk like normal friends. 
"I got from St. Louis to Evansville with duct tape over a puncture." 
"That sounds amazingly dangerous." 
"I survived, didn't I?" Steve asks. 
"By the skin of your teeth." 
"You weren't even there!" 
You finish your sugary donut and try to earn Junie's attention. She's pulling apart a donut of her own in her hands and licking the jelly off of her fingers, looking confused and delighted at once. She's going to be thrilled when she realises there are chocolate filled ones after that. 
"Is that nice, my love?" you ask. 
"Mom, it's strawby jelly," she says. "Strawby strawby strawby." 
She's been chatty today. "Strawberry, huh? Do you like that? It looks yummy." 
Junie offers you a squashed square. Some people would be disgusted at the mauled goods. You take it and eat it, 'cos her hands should be clean, you washed them yourself a half hour ago before she started on the treats. The strawberry jam is as fake as they can make it, which is probably great for Junie but sucks for you. 
You're starting to stand when a big cup of water gets placed in front of you, held by a familiar hand. You love his stupid hands, his knuckles and his short nails and the tiny white hairs, everything about them. More now as they deliver your saving grace. 
"How'd you know?" you ask Eddie, turning in your seat as you pick up the glass.
"I tried one earlier, I knew you wouldn't like it." 
"How could you possibly know that?" 
He taps the tip of his nose. 
"I should be heading home," Wayne says. 
"You don't want to stay for dinner?" you ask, sitting up properly. 
"No, kid, I'm alright." 
"He's meeting his friends at the bar," Eddie says, "don't let him fool you." 
"We haven't kept you, have we? I'm sorry," you say. 
"No, you didn't keep me. I had a great time, best kids party ever," Wayne says, standing up. He leans down to meet Junie's eyes. "Happy birthday, little miss. Make sure you plant one on your mom, huh? It's been a long day." 
You don't think she gets his drift but she nods at his solid eye contact, and that's good enough for him. Wayne claps Eddie on the shoulder and they walk off to the front door. Eddie follows him down the steps as they trade goodbyes. 
"I should get going too," Steve says. 
"Are you sure?" you ask, frowning. "If you want to stay for dinner, that's no problem. I don't know what Eddie's told you but I'm a good cook, I promise. We're gonna have Junie's favourite, it's fresh chicken noodle with stelline, the little stars." 
Steve wavers, "I-" 
"If you don't have anywhere to be tonight, it's really no trouble. I'd love to have you, I'm sure Eddie would too." 
"Yeah, okay. If you're sure," he says, scratching a hand through his hair. 
Junie jumps down off of her chair with impressive gusto and crawls under the table to your thighs. She leaves sugary fingerprints behind as she emerges, patting your legs until you're forced to help her up. She's mumbling something. Junie talks all the time, but what counts for actual words is another story. 
"What are you saying?" you ask, pulling her legs out from under her so she doesn't hurt her knees. 
She babbles. Her face has all the intent of someone speaking understandable language, to the point where you feel bad for not getting it. 
"Baby talk doesn't get easier?" Steve asks. 
"I mean… she's mine. I understand her a lot more than Eddie does, but half the time she might as well be speaking Sindarin." 
You pause, mouth open. Steve licks his lips. 
"Is that–" 
"From Lord of the Rings, yeah. We've been reading it together." 
"It's worse than I thought. You should really come out with us sometime, have conversations with people who aren't trying to brainwash you," Steve jokes. 
Junie hums, pleased at something invisible, and starts pulling your sleeve down over your hand. You nod toward her. "I can't, really. I always have her." 
"You could bring her with you. I wouldn't care, and Robin wouldn't either. We have a couple other friends who'd love you; Jonathan, he's a photograph developer for the post, and he's kind of quiet but he's one of those undercover nerds, like you." 
"Stop flirting with my girl," Eddie says, closing the door behind him. 
"She's actually talking like you and the idiots." Steve looks at you from the corner of his eyes. "No offence." 
"Full offence," you say sweetly, leaning down to give Junie a kiss. "We're offended, aren't we? Mister Steve's name-calling." 
Junie looks up, smiles at Steve like a traitor, and then spots Eddie's return. "Up," she says, "up, please." 
Eddie takes her. She gives him a gross sticky kiss on the cheek and he eats it up. "What do you want, then, birthday girl?" 
She pops her lips but doesn't say. Eddie carries her to the fridge and opens the freezer, sorting through the amassed collection of frozen treats. There's a range of popsicles and ice cream sandwiches hiding between mini pizzas and a bunch of ready-made pasta you got on sale. 
She accepts a popsicle and then insists on a second. Eddie glances at you.
"It's her birthday," you say. 
"What happens tomorrow? When she expects another round of treats?" Steve asks. 
"I pop a double dose of Tylenol–" 
"She won't be doing that," Eddie says. 
"I take two Tylenol," you amend, "and we try to explain. It's worth it even if she is a demon tomorrow. You've had a good day, right?" You smile at June and her two popsicles, one fist cherry pink and the other lime green. 
"She's had the best day ever," Eddie says, and then, a reflection of yourself if you've ever seen it, he kisses her forehead five times in a row. 
"Oh, god save her," Steve says. 
You stand up to make dinner. Steve helps, and Eddie promises to join you in a moment but never gets around to it, preoccupied by Junie's turbulent popsicle eating and the subsequent rainbow stains on your couch cushions. He scrubs at them with a washcloth and Steve, helpful but unnecessary, stands at your side having chopped all there was to be chopped. 
"You can come around whenever," you say, wondering if that's too far. 
"That's generous. You don't really want me here that often," he says, chuckling. 
You dip your pinky finger in the saucepan to gauge the heat. It's not hot enough to add the pasta stars yet  
"Steve, this might shock you, but I actually like having company. It was just me and Junie for so, so long, and I love her, but–" You stir the soup with a wooden spoon rather than continue whatever embarrassing thing your heart had compelled you to verbalise. "I missed having real conversations." You laugh. "I've never been as lucky as when Eddie decided he didn't mind being around me." 
"It's worse than that. He minds not being around you. We had him over for dinner, yeah? Two weeks ago? He started rubbing it in my face that he met you first." Steve crosses his arms. "You're pretty, but I have a girlfriend, and he knows that." 
"What's she like?" you ask. 
"She's amazing. I keep worrying she'll realise that I'm a total loser." He clears his throat. "I mean, I'm a catch, obviously. But no, you'd like her. She'd like you." 
"Think so?" 
"One hundred percent." 
"Maybe we should go on a double date like in the movies." 
"Stevie'd like that," Eddie calls. "He's been trying to get me on a date with him for years." 
"You wish, Munson."  
"Yes I do," he sing-songs. 
Junie throws a teddy at him and he drops to the floor like he's passed out. She giggles and climbs on top of him. He oofs but doesn't throw her off, maintaining his act until she sits on top of his chest and starts poking his cheeks. His tongue lolls out of his mouth. 
"Well, you can't have my boyfriend, but you can have the best chicken soup ever if you pass me the stelline from the cabinet." 
You think Steve might be a great friend. He's funny, he's quick-witted, and he's bitchy but not mean. He and Eddie get physically aggressive with each other when he asks for a second serving, because She's not your servant, Harrington and I was asking permission, you idiot, but it's definitely more friendly than nasty.
When Steve does get going it's later than any of you realised. He says goodbye with varying levels of niceness. You get a heartfelt thank you for the meal and compliments on the party, Eddie gets a hug with a shoulder pat and then an insult that actually worries you until you hear him laughing, and Junie gets a hesitant hug. Junie wants the hug desperately, and Steve isn't used to her yet, but when she gets her arms around his neck he rubs her little shoulders like a pro. 
"How did you ever land him?" you ask after his car has pulled away. 
Eddie giggles like a kid, "That's so offensive." 
"He's a sweetheart…" You turn to him. "You're a sweetheart, what am I saying?" 
"What are you saying?" 
You lean against his chest. Eddie looks at you warmly enough that it makes you feel you're gorgeous —something in his smile, maybe, that says he's thinking a nice thought. When you lean on him it grows more obvious. His lips part, his eyes on yours.
"You're so fucking pretty.” Your smile is too much like a smirk and yet it doesn't put him off. "I'm serious," he says, hands clasped at the small of your back. 
"Thank you." 
"You're welcome." He steals a soft kiss. "Very welcome." He steals another. 
You're putty, melting, and you'd care but his hands are loving. He slides one hand under the hem of your shirt and presses his rough palm to your back. You rub your cheek against his chest and feel it like a siren in your head: I'm lucky. How'd I get so lucky? 
"Yeah!" Junie shouts, jumping on the couch and almost falling flat on her face. "Kiss kiss," she says, "Mommy!" 
"Demanding, insatiable pest," Eddie says. 
"Don't you dare talk about my love like that," you scold. 
"I meant you," he says, grinning at a well-landed joke. "C'mere, let's have a good birthday cuddle before mommy's shower."
"You're showering first," you say. 
"I thought you liked it when I smell gross?" 
"You smell like wet grass, but that's not why. You should go first 'cos the water won't be hot by the second one." 
Eddie gets gooey. "I'm weird about you. Keep being like this and I'll get weirder. You couldn't cope with that and neither could I." 
"Not even," you say. 
"Kiss please," Junie insists, still jumping. 
You and Eddie turn to her at the same time. Her eyes widen as though she knows what's about to happen, but she doesn't care. She's had the best day ever. Woke up with tickles, praised and petted and cuddled, she's bounced from a birthday breakfast of waffles and more syrup than her baby teeth should be able to withstand to TV with stovetop popcorn and her favourite movie. She sang, she preened under your fingers in her hair, and played in the pool until her legs turned to jelly. She blew out all her candles in one breath (aided, secretly, by Eddie behind her as you held the cake). She ate enough donuts to down a horse. And now, to end it all, she's gonna get the world's best hug. 
"Ready?" Eddie asks dramatically. "Three, two…" 
You reach for her at the same time, laughing before you've so much as set a hand on her fleece-covered shoulders. 
𓆩❤︎𓆪
Thank you soooo much for reading! I hope that you enjoyed. Writing is a labour of love but sharing it is terrifying so if you enjoyed this, please let me know, or consider reblogging. It makes a big difference! ♡ I really missed writing for them! Please forgive sometimes the formatting of my paragraphs being odd, I had to cut this down to fit it all into one post!
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cutie-hemmings-penguins · 6 years ago
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I just thought of something involving Juni that’s making me cry. The first thing Juni feels when she’s brought to her home is the feeling of unconditional love.
Her siblings are all circling around infant Juni. Her eldest sister is awestruck as she looks at her new baby sister with a fondness growing in her heart. Her eldest brothers are starting to cry as they hear her coo. Everyone in her family is just so happy to see her.
They each take turns to hold her in their arms. She’s slowly falling asleep as her small hands hold onto her new parents fingers.
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sleepyjuniper · 2 years ago
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Aight it’s anon again from the last invisible moment and I am back to give you as much love as I can in a hopefully helpful way.
JUNI. MY BELOVED AND ONE OF MY MOST FAVOURITE AUTHORS IN THE DCA COMMUNITY. STOP LOOKING AROUND IM TALKING TO YOU AND IM BACK WITH A LIST.
The way you bend canon is amazing. You look at the game and go “hmm this is a mess is anyone gonna fix this” and then don’t wait for an answer, and for that you have my complete and utter respect. The game is a puzzle missing valuable pieces and you seem to keep finding all of them
You wrote the characters so beautifully!! And you take into account how they would realistically respond to something happening!!!! And it’s just!!! So!!! Well!!! Written!!!! You have created personalities and relationships from practically thin air, and they all feel so authentic and realistic. Yes, Moon is going to put a child’s well-being above his own, even when he’s confused and scared. Yes, Gregory is going to act his age when faced with obstacles, because he’s still a child!!!!
The plot is incredible. Information is slowly being revealed but not too quick or slow. It feels, once again, realistic. There’s proper, real progress in each chapter, even if it just involves Moon and Greg moving to another section of the Plex
Feeling invisible isn’t unusual for an author, especially a fic author. I hope you know that we don’t just appear when a chapter releases and then go back into our little caves ignoring you until another comes out. There are people who check your blog because they enjoy YOU, not just your fic. I know I said something similar last time, but I mean it.
well, that’s all from me for now. Have a nice night Juni and take care!!
Gosh this is.. I don't even know what to say. You really didn't have to go out of your way to say this, but you did, and I'm very grateful for it. It's hard for me to believe some of these statements, but with the way you've presented them, it makes it sound true. I will keep trying to remind myself of that fact.
Thank you so much for your kind words, it means a lot, truly.
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