walden "cole" montgomery / 21 / junior at indiana state / manager at the music center / the loverboy* penned by nikki
182 posts
rcbinbvckleysâ:
robin didnât necessarily directly associate cole with what she had accidentally witnessed all those years ago. yet being where they were right now, it was all she could possibly think about when confronted with him. the other jock, whoâs name currently slipped her mind, had died in the âmall fireâ. and the two of them clearly had something special back then. she couldnât imagine how cole felt just being in the location where it actually happened, it was almost haunting.
âoh! cole, i recognise you,â shit, was that too obvious? âfrom back in high school.â she added quickly, in case he somehow figured out where she actually knew him from. though unlikely. âwait, how do you know steve?â steve hadnât previously mentioned that cole was a friend, weird. sheâd have to ask the former about that much later, when she was much more sober. âitâs⊠going. itâs just super weird being here though, right? you know, because of what happene-â yeah, obviously he knows about that, idiot.
xx.
Cole caught a glimpse of Robin's expression and froze. Of course he knew her, but why did she know him? Did he stand out for some reason? He was probably just tipsy and paranoid, but still, it was enough to put him on edge. Still, he trusted that Robin meant nothing by it and choked out a laugh, "Oh yeah? I didn't realize I was so popular."
Steve. Maybe Steve had said something to her, and that's why she was being weird. "Just... you know, I was the water boy, he was a jock, impossible not to know him," he shrugged, burying the truth in his plastic cup. Cole nodded, a grim smile pushing his lips together. "Yeah. God, you were here, weren't you? That must have been fucked up," he said, though his gaze was vacant. What if she'd seen Adam that day?
Cole had just gotten off his shift at The Music Center and had nowhere to go; he had already gone by the skatepark looking for Max, but he figured she was still under her momâs lock and key ever since the whole mall incident. So, Cole had taken to skating around town, looking for someone to kill some time with. His mom had been particularly icy since he came home in a wrecked car, so he was trying to avoid home as much as possible. God, he felt like a teenager again.
Coleâs thoughts were interrupted by a girl he didnât recognize, but even still, he obliged. Pulling his headphones down around his neck, he planted a foot on the ground and stopped the roll of his skateboard. âOh,â it dawned on him who she was. Nancy had mentioned a friend from college coming to stay for a while. Who else would be contributing to the booming tourist economy of Hawkins? âYeah, no, not quite. But youâre close, itâs just around the other side of the strip.â He started to motion and then decided against it. âIâll take you, itâs a little confusing. Iâm Cole,â he smiled, deciding that any friend of Nancyâs was a friend of his.Â
WHO: cassie conrad & you!
WHERE: the strip mall, outside the video store
Cassie wasnât used to small-town. Even the suburb sheâd grown up in had more people in a square mile than Hawkins did in the entire town. Boston was even more of a monstrosity, but it was where Cassie felt most at home. Despite the less than logical layout of the city, she knew her way around every corner, every nook and cranny. It somehow became easy after being there for three years. What she couldnât understand, though, was how the hell to get around Hawkins, Indiana. It shouldnât have been so hard, with how little there was to memorize, but everything just looked the same.Â
So, here she was, standing with her map outside the strip mall where she thought the Radio Shack was, looking and feeling quite lost. Sheâd stupidly left her Walkman in Boston, and Cassie couldnât get around very far without ABBA in her ears. âExcuse me,â she asked the person walking toward her, looking like they were making their way into the video store. âThis might be a weird question, but Iâm kind of not from here, and Iâm looking for the Radio Shack. Iâm not ⊠in the right place, am I?â she asked, flashing a pained smile. âI promise Iâm not usually this directionally challenged, I just think this map is severely outdated.â
Cole didnât know Eleven particularly well. He knew of her, because, well, who didnât? But they hadnât spent too much time together. He knew she was a survivor of the mall fire, and he could imagine that she was feeling even more uncomfortable than he was. And, like him, it seemed she had been hitting the keg pretty hard.
âHey, El,â he put out a hand to stabilize her, plucking the cup out of her hand so she didnât spill more. âYou were looking for me, huh?â he chuckled. âAnything in particular I can do for you?â he asked, putting her cup to the side and glancing around the foyer. He knew Max and El were close, maybe he needed to have a backup plan in case El was really not okay to be here.Â
To say El was lost - happened to be an understatement. Her first time at StarCourt was itâs own experience but now⊠this was frustrating. â Have you⊠? â trying to speak over the constant beat from the â boombox â. Maybe that fifth red solo cup shouldâve been enough. Now fully aware the appeal of this â liquid fuel â being passed around. Stumbling mildly, eyes trying to focus on something other than bodies swarming around them.
Pushing through the crowd, the distinctly sweet scent of the beer spilling over herself and the other. â Sorry! â Elâs apology rushed with the sudden movements of trying to keep the liquid in the cup. Desperately failing. Finally peeking around for an escape, rushing towards a familiar face through blurry eyes. â Hey! â practically shoving as she approached. â Iâve been looking all over for you! â
eddiemcnsonâ:
+++
shit. shit, shit, shit, shit, shit. he shouldâve known, shouldâve known that this was a bad idea, shouldâve known better than to ask a current resident of hicksville, indiana if he was flagging. stupid, stupid, god, what had he been thinking? nothing, apparently, and now his mind was wiped empty once more as he stared at cole blinking at him in confusion - and, what was that, curiosity? - as eddie scrambled for something to say. he cleared his throat.Â
âneverâŠ.mind.â, he said slowly, cautiously, tongue pressed to the roof of his mouth. shit. eddie shook his head. ânothing, nothing. i just thought -â oh my god, munson, shut the fuck up. âi just - â no matter how hard he tried to stop himself the words now fell freely from his lips. âwell, i wondered if youâŠwell, do you know someone named - â if he didnât stop talking right then and there he was going to explode. well, spontaneous human combustion it was, as he simply carried on. âare youâŠperhaps a friend of, uh. of dorothyâs ? â a beat passed, eddie sucked on his bottem lip nerverously. he waved it off. âyou know whatâŠ.nevermind. nothing. it was stupid.â
he flashed him a pained grin, nodded, âright, thenâ, and turned on his heel. already squeezing his eyes shut because oh, the embarassment now creeped up on him, made his cheeks flush. at the last minute he decided to turn back, walk back to cole. âcan i bum a cig off you?â please, please, heaven, god, if there is one - eddie thought to himself as he stared at cole expectantly - please just donât let him bring it up again.
xx.
Coleâs eyes sparkled with amusement and curiosity as he searched his brain. Dorothy? Flagging? What was Eddie trying to ask him? And why was he speaking in this obscure code? At first, Cole wondered if it was a DnD thing, but then realization hit when Cole spotted a bandana in Eddieâs back pocket. He instinctively reached for the bandana heâd tucked in his own pocket and the amusement on his face morphed to something akin to wonder.Â
At Eddieâs question, Cole nodded and held out the pack, though his eyes were still glazed over. As Eddie plucked out a cigarette, Cole offered his lighter. He wanted to say something, at least to put Eddie at ease, but he wasnât sure if he was ready to say it out loud. No one knew yet... well, that wasnât true, because there was Steve and then there was Max. What the hell?
âI am, too,â Cole said, abruptly. He lowered the cigarette from his lips and looked at Eddie, motioning to the flag. For some reason, he felt the urge to prove it. God forbid Eddie thought he was playing a mean prank. âDo you remember Adam Richards? Tall, broad, blonde? He was my... well, you know,â Cole stumbled through his words, feeling his cheeks heat up. He was never this awkward.Â
backtowheelerâ:
Nancy let out a laugh. âIf Iâm going to be stuck here all summer instead of the Virgin Islands then Iâd like to keep her as pleased as can be,â she explained. Nancy had always had a complicated history with her own mother. Karen Wheeler could be a sweet woman, she cared about her children, she tried to be there for them as much as she could, but there were stark differences in Nancyâs raising compared to Mike or Hollyâs raising. Nancy was the first born meaning she set the precedent for the rest of her siblings. She was also the first girl which, with a father like Ted, meant that she had to adhere to simple rules (even as a 21 year old). It was a difficult life to lead, one that she didnât quite like at all, but sheâd play the part and just pray she didnât end up like her parents.
I bummed a ride off Harrington. That statement sent shivers down Nancyâs spine. She should have known Steve would show up. He was close to the Wheelerâs whether Nancy liked it or not and even though she was currently in a state of avoiding him, they were friends⊠at some point. âThe deal is that Steve and I are currently in Splitsville,â for whatever bullshit reason he gave Nancy instead of outright saying, âIâm having trouble with my sexualityâ. âAnd Iâve been seeing this guy. His nameâs Thad, business major at Emerson, his parents own a summer house in the Hamptons,â would you look at that! Nancy Wheeler was all about letting another guy dictate her life! âSo, things are going much better than anticipated.â
xx.
Cole chuckled, nodding in agreement. While his mom and Karen Wheeler were similar-- washed-up former "it" girls-- Maggie Montgomery was decidedly less... invested in her son's life. They both liked it that way, and Cole couldn't imagine being Nancy, having her entire life on display, under the watchful eye of her mother. It was no wonder she would up dating Harrington-- decidedly her polar opposite. "Cheers to keeping Karen happy," Cole clinked his bottle to her plastic cup and took a swig.
"Thad." He repeated, looking at her with a quirked eyebrow. "Just going off his name he sounds..." searching for the right word, "like he might have a giant stick up his ass." Cole pre-emptively ducked out of the way in case she tried to swing. "But, who can blame you, using the poor guy for his summer home," he teased.
zccmingâ:
âsomething like thatâŠâ max stared at her shoes for a moment. she couldnât recall precisely what the report had said, she merely knew that she was pulled out of the fire along with her friends and what her lines were for when she couldnât quite place herself in the fabricated story, ââit, it happened really fast.â then, she divulged, âi donât remember what they even said and i donât read those stupid articles about the fire.â max huffed, getting more agitated the more she spoke off book. she didnât take well to personal questions, even from cole. not because she was mad at him, but she was still so mad at everything, and that was an unnerving beast to let roam around outside her mind. yet, max had still managed to share something with him. some real frustration about the cover up, even if he didnât know.
the ghost of a smile on coleâs face told her that she had been successful in aiding his mood. âiâm always right.â she assured, a curve in her own lips appearing. max took the blunt and puffed on it, mirroring coleâs body position. âand you arenât?â she deadpanned, âsometimes iâd say youâre more thanââ if he didnât seem so urgent when cutting her off, she would have told him to shut the fuck up. and once cole fully asked his questions? max was wishing she had. her mouth dried and her jaw clenched. was billy like, different, right before? that didnât even begin to describe it. lost in the terror in her chest, max didnât speak until she felt a stinging on her knee. looking down she clocked the source; burning ash on her skin. she had forgotten about the joint. âshit.â she winced, brushing it off, then immediately passed it back to cole. he might have needed it for what she was about to say.
the cover up infuriated her at times, but simultaneously, max understood why it existed. it existed for people like cole, where the lie would hurt less than the truth. the lie would still hurt, greatly, but she wouldnât wish knowledge of that supernatural can of worms on anyone. ears burning, she prepped the fib on the tip of her tongue, âhe wasnât.â i totally didnât like, lock him in a sauna or watch him nearly kill my friends. max fought back the urge to pick at her nails, âbut then again, billy was always weird.â she rolled her eyes, wishing it was that simple and shook her head, âi donât know.âÂ
she left it at that.Â
in some kind of miracle though, maxâs mind was torn away from billy, and her attention was averted somewhere rapidly different. she looked at cole, brows knitted deeply in thought. so many puzzle pieces clicked together all at once. adam wasnât a best friend, he was a boyfriend. there was a stray inkling about it, once, a heart-to-heart ago when max was equating his feelings about adam being gone to hers about her best friend el âmoving awayâ. but she never followed up on that with cole. she should have. while there were so many things she wanted to say, and a dozen more questions she wanted to ask, max plucked a four leaf clover and went with the unexpected option. tenderness. âoh cole.â a hug, âiâm so sorry.â what a horrible realization of what heâd been going through.Â
suddenly, max felt very guilty about lying.Â
xx.
I don't remember what they even said. Something about that stood out in his mind, almost like "they" had been feeding Max lines. He felt, deep down, like she was lying. But he dismissed it with the next drag he took. Hadn't the shrink his mom forced him to see said that it wasn't unusual to make up stories to explain away tragedy? Maybe that's what he was trying to do. "Yeah. I guess no one really knows what happened. And we just have to... be okay with that. Move on, or try to," he said, his flat tone evidence of his unbelief.
Though he barreled through her sarcastic comment, her meaning wasn't lost on her. And she wasn't wrong. God, what he wouldn't do to make fun of the selfish prick one more time without feeling the sting of loss. He watched as Max inadvertently burned herself, and he raised an eyebrow at her sudden nervousness. Signs of lying again. But his heart sank all the same at her response. There he was again, trying to explain away the tragedy. "Oh," he nodded, taking the joint back again.
He felt himself leaning away, afraid of her response if she even had one. Maybe it would be best if she didn't, then they could get sober and pretend he hadn't said what he did. That would be better than losing a friend because of a stupid need to overshare. He was surprised at the feeling of her arms around him. The understanding in her voice. Even with the circumstances, Cole felt a lightness in his stomach. Finally, someone else knew. Finally, he wasn't alone with it. His blinks were rapid-fire and he silently willed the moisture to stay behind his eyelids. "Thanks," he spoke after a long pause, his voice barely above a whisper. He tilted his head slightly towards hers, relieved for the comfort, the acceptance. "And I'm sorry too. I know it's not the same thing, but... I get it, sort of."
Cole ventured a glance at Max and his eyes fell to the four-leaf clover. A sign of good luck, ironic. "And if you ever want to talk about it, any of it, or just... remember him. I'd like that," he met her eyes again. "Might make me feel less crazy."
zccmingâ:
âeveryone expresses their rebellion differently.â max rolled her eyes at the notion, then took a drag from the joint. this party was objectively stupid, but she was there anyhow. so who was she to judge? âItâs just⊠do you ever feel like it shouldâve been you? Like, why did all those people die and not me?â âheavy.â she replied. the effects of her indulgence throughout the night were hitting her all at once, so to hell with it. sheâd be honest with cole. âyeah. i mean, paramedics pretty much saved me and a bunch of other people. pulled us out.â at least, that was the official police story. not the truth, but it was the closest max could get to saying she watched billy die here.
 âiâŠstill donât understand why it worked out that way.â she rubbed her temples with one hand, then handed cole the joint with the other. time felt heavy on her shoulders, so she wasnât going to waste it. âi didnât like, really know adamâŠâ code for, i always thought he was just a dumb asshole jock. âbut since he was your friend, i doubt heâd want you thinking like that.â she was confident in that at least. âwhat do you think heâd think of this party?â max didnât know what had inspired her to ask such a loaded question, maybe it was something in the air, or maybe it was the hope that prompting cole to remember would help him feel better.Â
xx.
Cole studied Max's face when she told her story. They hadn't ever talked about that night before, not explicitly. He knew the substances helped make the conversation easier. "But it was too late? For your brother?" he asked, the high making him bolder. He could probably still recite all of the names of people who'd died in the fire, and when he met Max he put two and two together. "Maybe we'll never know. But none of it makes sense to me," Cole admitted.
He took the joint and sucked in a deep breath, exhaling with a cough. Leaning back against the wall, Cole cracked a smile thinking about what Adam would say if he was here. Why are you pouting? You know it doesn't look good on you. "Yeah, you're probably right," he paused, passing the blunt back. "Though he was a selfish prick sometimes." His expression darkened, remembering the last days they spent together. The fight. "Hey, listen... was Billy... like, different, right before? Was he acting weird?" He shuffled, crossing a leg underneath him.Â
âJust because Adam and I got into this huge fight right before. He kept saying that he couldn't be with me anymore. It's like it wasn't him, and... I don't know, I've felt guilty about it ever since." Cole trailed off. Did he just come out to Max? Maybe she was too high to catch it. Maybe he was too high to be talking about this.
zccmingâ:
cole might not have known about the truth about upside down, the mall fire, or the flayed, but he did know the truth of loss. he understood better than most the weight of grief and how it could change a person. at least, cole understood it in some of the ways max understood it. regardless, as soon as she started feeling jittery about everything she searched for cole. naturally, he met with an argument, which only made her scoff as she moved to refill her cup, âi wouldnât trust you to remember how to spell your own last name, let alone cups.â max assured him, then took a drink from her cup as a vow of donât worry, i will.Â
swallowing the last of her sip, she took a couple of step backwards, âcome on, i have something better.â max turned around and proceeded to lead cole halfway down a stopped escalator. they sat overlooking a fountain on the lower level, itâd be almost pretty if this entire place didnât feel so eerie. she fished around in her pockets, shoes, then bra to a produce a baggie, paper, and zippo lighter. âgotta get this off me.â max insisted, like it wasnât perfectly clear why she had pulled cole aside. it wasnât often max and cole got vulnerable with one another, but it happened enough that they managed to stay friends throughout all the bickering. a trauma bond ( and then some ) or whatever.
max got to rolling, throwing her trash off the side of the escalator as if to say fuck this mall as she went. all finished up, max sighed, âare you as miserable as me right now?â she asked bluntly, extending the joint to cole, then the lighter. max placed her hands on her knees and shook her head, âlike, this is super messed up, right?âÂ
xx.
"In my defense, my last name is long," Cole teased, trying to lighten the mood-- but the smirk on his face felt wrong, like he was spitting on Adam's grave. How dare he be happy in the place he had died? Cole finished his cup and set it on the ledge nearby, taking a long drag from his cigarette in the process.
When Max told him to follow her, he did so without hesitation. She was one of the few people in this town he trusted fully, oddly enough. Their friendship, however unorthodox, was a natural one: after running into her at the skate park a few times, he started bringing snacks for them and they just clicked. He could tell they were similar: both of them carrying around a pain they didn't know how to handle, and both of them unwilling to burden another with it.
Upon seeing her stash, Cole put out his cigarette on the side of the escalator, following suit and launching it over the side. Fuck this mall, indeed. Cole laughed, though it was more a breath than anything. "Oh yeah. Let's go throw a rager to memorialize the place our friends and family died. Nothing weird about that," he remarked, taking the blunt and lighting it behind his hand. He took a drag and handed it to her.
"It's just... do you ever feel like it should've been you? Like, why did all those people die and not me?"
where: blue quarry mall who: cole + robin @rcbinbvckleys
From the moment he stepped into the mall, Cole knew this night was going to be wild. Not because everyone was in the mood to party-- no, not at all-- but because everyone was uncomfortable. It made sense, everyone in the room had been affected by the fire in some way, and of course no one really wanted to be here. And if there's one thing Cole retained from high school, it's that when people are uncomfortable, they drink. A lot. Which is why Cole was offended when Harringon questioned his forethought.
After about six cups of lukewarm beer, Cole decided to venture into the crowd. The closest person to him was Robin, who he had never officially met but knew from afar. He noticed her cup was dangerously low and took it from her hand, using his head to motion towards the keg. "Here, let me top you off," he offered, his words slightly slurred.
Then, through his alcohol-infused haze, he realized how weird it was for a guy she doesn't know to take her cup and he turned towards her, splashing beer onto his shirt. "I'm Cole. A friend of Harrington's. Sorry, not trying to be weird, or like... predatory." He handed her the cup back and laughed at his stupidity. "So, how's your night going?"
Cole hadnât realized what heâd gotten himself into by volunteering to bring a keg-- scratch that, multiple kegs-- to this shindig. It might not bother everyone, but the sticky beer dripping on the linoleum made Coleâs spine shiver, so he dug into his backpack for something to clean it up with. Digging to the very bottom, he found a black handkerchief. Perfect. Cole wiped down the side of the keg and the floor beneath it, and decided to perch nearby in order to nag people not to let it drip on the floor. Really, how hard was it?
In his bag, Cole caught a glimpse of his cigarettes and felt a familiar pang in his gut. Surely it wouldnât be in bad taste to smoke inside, given the circumstances? Absentmindedly, he tucked the bandana in his back pocket and grabbed a cigarette. âHope no one minds,â he mumbled, mostly to himself, and lit up.
Shutting his eyes, Cole allowed the blaring music to distract him from the fact that he was inside the mall where the love of his life died. Light stuff. He wasnât mad at the music choice, surprisingly. Cole tried not to be pretentious about music, but he could only take so many days of people coming into the Music Center asking for the new Rick Astley or Whitney Houston. Thankfully, this music had some teeth. He wondered whoâd been recruited to play it.Â
When Cole opened his eyes to take another drag, he was shocked to see Eddie Munson running right at him. Cole leaned back instinctively, confusion written on his face, âUh, sorry. Whatâd you call me?â He followed Eddieâs eyes to his pocket and pulled out the handkerchief. âWait-- flagging? Iâm cleaning up the keg because these goddamned kids canât be bothered to catch their beer...â he paused, suddenly curious. âWhat did you think?â
where: blue quarry mall who: eddie + cole ! @colemontgomeryxââ
despite the inital apprehension, because he really didnât need the hawkins police department all up in his business again, not when heâd been a murder suspect barely two years ago, eddie slowly felt himself relax, some of the tension slipping from his body. not all, ever since that upside down debacle he hadnât been able to relax fully. but the beer helped - bless that kid whoâd brought the keg - and the general air ofâŠinsanity that lingered amongst the party-goers and protesters.
the sounds of black sabbath filled the mall, eddie felt himself nodding along to the tune, and, hey, he really didnât care that most of the people here had never heard of ozzy osbourne in their lives. they all seemed to have a great time, anyway. so he didnât even need to whip out that tape of 1988âČs top of the pops heâd recorded, just in case theyâd want to burn him at the stake for seducing them with his evil satanic dnd music.
he leaned against a pillar, let his eyes wander among the crowed, took a sip of beer and - hey, there he was, that kid with the keg. definitely not a kid now that he got a proper look at him. eddie tilted his head, his mouth dropped open slightly and he craned his neck, pushed himself off the wall, because⊠wait a minute.
wait a damn minute. he narrowed his eyes, looked down and. holy shit. well, if his eyes werenât deceiving him then that - yeah that - that was a bandana. dangling from his - coleâs - back pocket. on display. he nearly choked on his beer, coughed and, taking another sip to ease said cough, he booked it across the mall, tapped him on the shoulder.
âhey, man - cole.â, he said, held eye contact with him for perhaps a tad longer than was appropriate. cleared his throat, gestured down towards his own back pocket. a quick look left and right, they werenât in hearing distance of anyone else. still, he lowered his voice. âhey man, are you⊠are you flagging?â
where: blue quarry mallÂ
who: cole + max
@zccmingâ
Although Cole had thrown himself headfirst into this protest/party/whatever-the-fuck-it-was, he was unsure. Incredibly unsure. He hadnât been back to Starcourt since before the fire; it was hard enough to see reminders of Adam at the high school and the Music Center and his parents house and every goddamn place he looked. So now, being in the mall, everything felt... surreal. He knew it was illogical, but Cole couldnât help the guilt creeping into his chest, the feeling that maybe, if he had been here, he could have saved Adam.Â
Cole leaned over, his lips pressed into a grim line, and filled up his cup for the... fourth or fifth time. Lifting the plastic to his lips, Cole glanced up to see none other than Max Mayfield coming his way. He quickly pasted on a smile and handed her a fresh cup. âHow dare you think I forgot cups,â he scoffed, though his smile didnât reach his eyes. âHelp yourself.âÂ
spvrtyâ:
Ginny shrugged, âThe ones near the football field work. Go figure.â She swung her legs, her nerves starting to put themselves on display. Talking with new people wasnât her forte. Sheâd probably be a charming jokester if you got to know her. She assumed that was true, but had yet to prove it since know one had tried getting to know her yet.Â
âYeah, Ginny,â she confirmed, âWe had second period biology together sophomore year.â That came out too fast. Already she sounded like a stalker. Her good memory and lack of filter betrayed her once again. ââŠI think.âÂ
xx.
Cole snorted, leaning himself against the bleachers. "Ah. The good old high school hierarchy at its finest." Yes, technically, he was on the football team... but as the alternate for the alternate for the kicker, he was really just the waterboy. Whatever, it looked good on his college application and that was really the extent of it. But for Ginny, who seemed a serious athlete, he's sure that was incredibly frustrating.
He considered it for a moment and nodded. "Yeah, that sounds right. I was never very good at biology. Nothing to argue about," Cole digressed. "Anyways," he turned his attention to Ginny once more, "are you back in Hawkins for good? Or on break?" He was glad that he got to split his time between Indiana State and Hawkins; Cole was sure being here full-time would drive him at least a little crazy. Crazier.
stevehharringtcnsâ:
.
with his hands gripping the steering wheel, steve stared at cole and thought about how he had almost ran him over. what was with people skateboarding in this town, anyway? he asked to himself as he looked at the other approaching his car. the memory didnât take long to appear on steveâs mind as he was reminded of what the two had done in the backseat, but he shook it off his mind as he looked at cole as he leaned on the frame of his car. âyou really should be careful when youâre skating that thing, you never know whoâs behind the wheel⊠youâre lucky i saw you in time.â he warned, as he shook his head slowly and then motioned his head so the other could make his way inside the car.
âi wasnât exactly offering a ride, but itâs better if i just drive you there. like i said, maybe next person wonât stop and then youâll be left bleeding on the road.â he said, rolling his eyes slightly as he waited for cole to make his way inside of his car. steve didnât mind driving other people around, in fact, he was used to. he was almost always the designated driver when it came to these type of events and it didnât help that he was one of the few people in the group of people he knew that could actually drive. god forbid he would let max drive his car again, or anyone for that matter. âjust get in, we can show up together.â he said with a nod.
xx
Cole put his right hand up as if he were reciting a pledge. "Right hand to God, it won't happen again, Officer Harrington," he promised, with a mischievous gleam in his eye. He knew Steve spent a lot of time with Dustin and Will and all those younger guys, maybe it had transformed him into the dad friend, or something. Anyways, calling a skateboard that thing aged Steve to at least forty in Cole's mind.
Without hesitation, Cole opened the passenger door and slid in, stashing that thing in the backseat. "Well, I appreciate it, really. What can I do to make it up to you?" Just barely, he resisted the urge to add a wink to the tail end of his question. Steve was being nice by offering a ride, and there was no need to torture him about it. "Sounds like half the town will be there. Anyone you're excited to see?" Cole asked, nonchalantly, though he was certainly fishing for information.
zccmingâ:
âcole.â max said flatly as he rounded the corner. while her glare was cold as steel, the gradually growing grin on her face said that she was happy to see him. âitâs an emergency.â that was certainly a dramatization, but sheâd say whatever to make this look ⊠less bad. itâs not that she cared what cole thought of her, but she refused to submit to the idea she was perpetuating any negative stereotypes. as he drew closer and provided the suggestions she had asked for, she rolled her eyes and mocked him âdid you try to pick the lock? the fuck would i pick the lock with?â max held up her hand, âmy fingernails?âÂ
she approached the front door anyhow, then levelled with the lock. âi have a better idea.â max once again found a rock, picked it up, but this time smashed it into the lock. bingo. the lock fell off. while max wasnât expecting the door to only have an exterior lock and chain, she was happily surprised to find that the physical door itself hadnât been locked. she pulled it open, ushered cole inside, then closed the door behind them, âi just need some groceries.â max shrugged her lie then grabbed a basket as if she were actually shopping, âhappy memorial day.â she snickered, turning down an aisle, âhave any not-totally-lame plans for today?â
xx
Cole paused for a moment, but refused to give Max enough dead air to think she'd bested him. "I don't know, don't girls always have, like, bobby pins?" he threw his hands into the air with a faux exasperated sigh. He hid a grin behind an eyeroll. Though he'd never admit it out loud, Cole liked the bickering relationship he had with Max; it was like she was the little sister he never had. And, though she would never admit it, he knew she liked it too.
"Jesus, Max!" Cole glanced around to make sure no one had heard the crash. At Max's nonverbal invitation, Cole slipped inside, shaking his head in amused disapproval. He wasn't exactly pro-breaking and entering, but it was one lock and a few groceries? Who would it really hurt? "Well, get something fun at least. To celebrate," he chuckled, motioning towards the shitty grocery store beer. Meanwhile, he made a beeline to the soda aisle. There it was: a sparkling 2 liter of Wild Cherry Pepsi. He grabbed two, and craned his neck out into the aisle, "Are you calling me lame? Why would I share my plans with you when I'm at risk to be insulted again?"
backtowheelerâ:
Nancy was surprised to see Cole Montgomery show up at the little shindig put on by her mom. She knew this was mostly the time for Karen to shuffle her eldest and most successful child around (who knows? Maybe Holly will grow up to be a doctor!) for all her friends to see. It wasnât so much about Nancyâs friends, and she especially didnât expect to see Cole. Maybe Max, or Robin, but her and Coleâs family had such a convoluted past that sheâd thought heâd sit this one out.
For all intensive purposes, Nancy and Cole should have hated each other. They were pitted against each other from the moment they were born. Nancy could recall early years when Karen would mutter to her that Cole had gotten a better score than her on a Social Studies test, pushing Nancy to try harder and be better, a mantra she would often hear until the day she left Hawkins and moved to Boston. Yet, she never had disdain for Cole. She learned early on that it wasnât him doing anything, it was her mother perpetuating a different narrative, and while they werenât close in high school, Nancy was glad they could grow closer in recent years.
âProbably drop dead,â she chuckled, knocking her cup against his. Nancy was legally able to drink (the National Minimum Drinking Age Act had never affected Indiana), but her parents werenât heavy drinkers and assumed the same for their children. Or at least for Nancy. The booze was mostly there for guests and no one else. âI wish, but Iâd like to try to keep her panic to a minimum,â she took a sip from her cup. âWhat brought you here? Surely it canât be just because of me.â
Cole chuckled at the thought of Mrs. Wheeler spontaneously combusting; itâs not that he hated her, he didnât dislike her at all, really, itâs just that he hated what she represented: the overbearing presence of a small town, the way everyone everywhere was ready to whisper about you behind your back. Thereâs a certain type of person who does well in this town: someone like Nancy, who is generally impressive and straight-edge (or so she seems). But Cole knows what thatâs like, and he knows all-too-well the fear of bursting everyoneâs bubble.
Maybe thatâs what drew him to Nancy. He sensed there was more underneath the surface, that she could also understand the feeling of hiding from everyone. Maybe, together, they could escape from it all a while. Part of him was disappointed when she declined his offer to get out of there, but he knew it was for the best. âKeep her panic to a minimum,â he repeated, âprobably best for your sanity, anyway.âÂ
A wry smile teased the edges of Coleâs mouth. âFunny you should ask, actually, I bummed a ride off Harrington,â he said, raising his beer to his lips and keeping his eyes trained on her face. He hoped he could deduce exactly what was going on between the once-hottest couple in town from her expression, but he guessed Nancy was sneakier than that. She wouldnât reveal anything she didnât want to... but Cole was never above prying. âSo, you excited to see him? Whatâs the deal?âÂ
Will and Cole weren't exactly close, despite being half-brothers. Not that Will was aware of that... yet. Every time Will came into the Music Center and chatted with Cole, guilt crept its way into Cole's chest and settled there. He's sure nothing would change once Will knew, it's not like either of them talked to their dad anyway, but the longer Cole put it off, the weirder it became to bring up in casual conversation.
So, when Will came in today looking for a model, Cole volunteered. He always thought he had an artistic form anyway, and the Music Center was always dead this time of day. But now, his nervousness and guilt caused him to fidget-- which was less than ideal for the artist. "Right, right, sorry," he straightened his spine. "So... how's your family? Everyone home?" Cole had to force himself not to wince at the awkwardness of his phrasing.
WHO: will byers + open
WHERE: you decide
    His drawing skills have only improved since those childhood days scribbling with crayons and colored pencils, but it still requires practice, a constant honing of his abilities to stay sharp. And anatomy, realistic human portraiture, is one of the hardest things to get right, because when itâs just a little offâŠwell, it can get creepy fast. People have always been one of Willâs favorite subjects to draw, probably stemming from his interest in visualizing his and the partyâs childhood DnD characters. It would just be a lot easier ifâŠ
    âCould you try not to move so much? Sorry, it just helps if you stay still.â He didnât want to come across as impatient, but if his model was already fidgety, then sitting longer to finish the sketch wasnât going to help matters.
This was exactly what Cole had wanted to do all day: sit by the lake holding a book, giving him the perfect excuse to disassociate without being judged. But instead, he's been all over town: helping Max break into a grocery store, getting roped into the Wheeler barbecue, and generally exhausting his already-low social battery. So he trudged through the vegetation to his favorite spot: an isolated bench just far enough away from the shoreline to be remote.
Or so he thought. A sudden burst of movement much too big to be a squirrel caused Cole to slow his steps, until he peered around the trees to see none other than Eddie Munson. Cole didn't know Eddie very well, but everyone knew about Eddie. Personally, Cole didn't believe the stories: Eddie was so not the kind of guy who could kill a cheerleader. Plus, Eddie was friendly with Max and Harrington, so he couldn't be that weird. Geeky, maybe, but not creepy.
Setting his novel aside, Cole bent down to help Eddie pick up the figurines. Fuck, why were they so small? "Yeah, I'm good," Cole said, handing over the three he'd collected. "Eddie, right? Were you leaving?" he asked, not wanting to kick Eddie out of his spot. "Hey... what are these, anyway?" Cole asked, standing up and brushing leaves off of his knees.
who : eddie munson + open !
where : the shore of lovers lake
Sometimes when he comes home he just likes to do âŠ. this. Sit on a bench near a busy place- near, not, like, in the middle of it, âcause in Hawkins heâs still Eddie âthe freakâ Munson - and people watch. Thinking about how he has miraculously made it out of this shithole, alive. Not made it all too far but heâs managed to get out of Hawkins, Indiana at all, and that amounts to something. To him it does.
So he sits there, closes his eyes for a moment and inhales deeply and - oh, yep, thatâs definitely cow shit, isnât it - just listens to the sounds that surround him. Families having picnics, teenagers sneaking away, people bathing in the sun, birds singing, twigs cracking - hold on. Eddie jolts upright. Oh, fuck this, heâs getting outta here, heâs not in the mood to get roughed up by some high school freshmen who still think heâs put some satanic DnD spell on those students that died two years ago.Â
Eddie grabs his Van Halen lunchbox, jumps up, ready to make his escape as he bumps into someone - he grabs onto the backrest of the bench for balance, watches the contents of his metal box spill out onto the floor. Well, at least thereâs no drugs this time. âShitâ, he curses under his breath, crouches down to collect all the little figurines heâs fucking hand-crafted for the next Hellfire campaing, âShit, jesus, fuck.â Why did he have to make them this small? âShit ,ah, sorry. Sorry, my bad. You - you good?â
To be honest, Cole had forgotten it was a holiday. He usually didn't work Mondays anyways, so it was easy to forget the date and any federal holidays that happened to fall on Mondays. That is, until he woke up this morning with a primal craving for a Wild Cherry Pepsi. Two stores down and Melvald's was his only hope. As Cole rounded the corner on his skateboard, he couldn't keep his laugh in. There was Max, arm cocked like she was about to-- throw a rock through the window?
He couldn't blame her determination, but he knew she'd get found out. "Maxine!" he called out, making a tsk sound. "Are you positively determined to prove every negative stereotype about skaters right?" He propped his skateboard up against the curb and sauntered over to his unlikely friend. "Well, fuck, Max. Did you try to pick the lock?" he motioned for her to put the rock down. "At least, something that won't get you caught immediately. What's so important, anyway?"
WHO: max mayfield && open.
WHERE: outside of melvaldâs general store.
this wasnât maxâs mostâŠwell-thought-out plan, but she had ransacked the trailer for anything she could bring to the wheelerâs barbecue. and she was pretty sure cereal or swansonâs tv dinners wouldnât cut it.  as she skated her way downtown in hopes of a miracle, she brainstormed what she could bring that wouldnât be too complicated. she came up with the likes of doritos or boxed pasta salad. of course, when max pulled up to melvaldâs and tugged at the doors, they were locked. melvaldâs, like the hawk, and every other godforsaken business in this town just had to be closed. âshitâŠâ she breathed out, scanning her surroundings. not a car in sightâŠnot a person ⊠but there was a rock. maybe if she justâŠshe could get away with itâŠ
max scooped it up from the ground and raised her arm to chuck it through the window, but she felt these eyes on her. turning around, max initially jumped at the sight of another person. hadnât she checked for people? in a swift recovery, max rolled her eyes and frowned, âasshole. you canât just sneak up on people like that.â as if to explain herself, she stepped forward and gripped the handles once more, âitâs locked.â after chucking the rock out into the road, max placed her hands on her hips, then eyed the other, âi need in, like now.â then as a hint to help or get lost she asked, âgot any better ideas?âÂ
Every now and then, on a day he didn't have to work, Cole found himself wandering aimlessly around the main attractions of Hawkins; like he was taking a tour of his hometown. Today, somehow, he ended up at the high school. He couldn't decide if it was self-sabotage or nice to remember, but everywhere he looked he could see him. Lost in thought, it took the girl's deep sigh to shake him out of the fog. "Damn. Should've known the school was that broke," he joked, trying to plant himself firmly in the here-and-now.
Cole walked closer, peering at the girl. They definitely went to high school together, but weren't really friends. "Ginny, right?"
WHO: ginny sprat & open.
WHERE: the hawkins high tennis courts.Â
she sat on the picnic table, head bent as she re-wrapped her racketâs handle. sweat dripped down her forehead and stung her eyes, but she hardly stopped to wipe it away. glancing up at the person nearby, whoâs repeated pushes of the button indicated a familiar frustration.Â
âwater fountainâs broken,â she sighed, âso donât even bother.âÂ
The Wheeler family barbecue wasn't exactly Cole's first choice as far as Memorial Day festivities go. He would much rather be by the lake, pretending to read a book-- away from all the prying eyes of Hawkins' very own helicopter parents. But one chance run-in with Steve Harrington can derail even the strongest man's plans for the day. And Cole didn't mind, he sort of liked the twitch Karen Wheeler got when he was around.
See, Karen and Cole's mom used to be friends-- best friends, as Cole understood it. But best friends in the girl way, where they secretly hate each other and are always competing to be the prettiest, smartest, funniest, whatever. And then Maggie Montgomery got shipped off to New York and Karen won prom queen and that was supposed to be that. Until Maggie came back with a son, born around the same time as Karen's oldest, and suddenly the competition began again. Whose kid would be the smartest? The most athletic? The prettiest? It was amusing to Cole, especially in the last few years since he and Nancy have become friends.
So, he matched Karen's polite smile when he greeted her and raided her kitchen, making a plate of every feasible kind of chip and dip he could find. Karen watched him the whole time, peppering him with faux-questions used to assert Nancy's superiority. Are you still at Indiana State? Meaning: you aren't at a real college like Emory. How are you liking the Music Center? Meaning: Nancy has a real job running a newspaper, etc etc. After no less than twenty questions, Cole escaped to the front yard and to a cold beer. Glancing sideways, he noticed that Nancy had the same idea. "Prized pony, huh?" He grinned, clinking his beer to her plastic cup. "What would Mrs. Wheeler think if she knew Secretariat was defiling her body with alcohol?" he whispered, raising his eyebrows. "Hey, say the word and we can get outta here. You know I love to see Karen squirm."
đđđ: Nancy Wheeler & OPEN
đđđđ: Nancy escapes the confines of Karen Wheeler, spots your muse, and forces them to talk to her.
đđđđđ: Memorial Day aka Nancyâs Day!
Nancy had been home from Emerson for approximately five days and eight hours. In that time, she had barely seen the sunlight let alone escape from the grasp that was Karen Wheelerâs perfectly manicured hand. It was thing after thing with her mom. First, they went to the nail salon, then grocery shopping, then to The Gap, and then to her nanaâs house for a visit. There had barely been time for her to even sit down and breathe for the last week. Then Karen began talking about how they should throw a BBQ for Nancy! It made perfect sense, in Karenâs mind. The Wheelerâs knew so many people and a cook out on Memorial Day was the perfect kickstarter to reintroduce Nancy to people who she had actively been avoiding since leaving Hawkins. Nancy would protest, looking over at her dad whoâs glued to his Lay-Z Boy for some help, only for Ted to grumble and ask, âDo I have to cook?â
There was no use and come Memorial Day, the Wheelerâs backyard had been decorated. Her dad was on the grill and her mom was pushing Nancy along to talk to all of Karenâs friends. Nancy goes to Emerson! Sheâs a part of Alpha Epsilon Phi! And sheâs dating the president of Sigma Alpha Epsilon! Oh, and sheâs editor-in-chief at The Berkeley Beacon! Karen was bragging and bragging about all of Nancyâs accolades. It seemed to give Karen a leg up against all of her other friends whoâs kids were still stuck in Hawkins. âHey, Iâll be right back,â she said, excusing herself from the gaggle of moms.
Grabbing a red solo cup, she snuck off with one of the beers she spotted in the cooler, and poured it in the cup. There was no way she could tackle this sober. Taking a long drink, she spotted a familiar face, and booked it towards them. She needed some kind of distraction away from the clutches of Karen Wheeler. âHey, do you think you could distract me for like⊠five minutes before I have to go back to being trotted around like a prized pony?â
Cole had a bad habit of skating with his headphones in and forgetting about traffic laws. Today, he was lost in his Bowie tape-- Diamond Dogs, to be exact-- and completely missed the fact that he'd crossed from sidewalk to road. "You've got your mother in a whirl / she's not sure if you're a boy or girl" he sang along, unsure of how loud he was being until the obnoxious honk of a car interrupted his zen state. Planting a foot on the ground, Cole halted his skateboard and pulled the headphones down around his neck.
Turning around, Cole immediately recognized Steve Harrington's car. A smirk danced on Cole's lips upon the memory of what they did in steve's backseat. Making out in the back of a car was a bit juvenile, sure, but for Harrington? Cole couldn't object. Cole laughed at Steve's misplaced concern. The Wheeler barbecue. He had heard about it in town, of course, but didn't think it was his scene, exactly. But still, free food was free food. "I was going to stop by, yes," Cole lied, taking a few steps closer to the car and daring to lean on its frame. "You offering a ride?"
who: steve harrington & open
where: middle of the road
what was he doing? was he really about to go to a barbecue that was being thrown at the wheelerâs house? he had been invited, of course, but something didnât feel right on just showing up there. how was he going to react when he saw nancy? and worst of all, how was she going to react? all of these thoughts were going through his mind as he drove - he should have been paying the attention to the road, but luckily he snapped out of his own head just in time to spot someone crossing the road right in front of his car. without even thinking, steve hit the brakes as hard as he could, his body leaning forward with the abrupt stop and before he knew it, he was honking the horn in protest, before sticking his head out of the window to get a better look at the person who was standing in front of his car.
âwhat the hell are you doing, dingus? you canât just⊠walk in front of my car like that, you could have damaged it! i mean, you could have gotten hurt.â steve said, shaking his head as he ran a hand through his hair - both of them had been lucky, he thought to himself as he took a deep breath. âyou going to the wheeler barbecue or what?â he asked, once it got awkward enough - they couldnât just be there forever and the person didnât seem to move, and steve definitely couldnât run over them.
[TimothĂ©e Chalamet, cismale, he/him] whoâs that? oh itâs [walden cole montgomery]. i hear theyâre [21] and are known as [the loverboy] around [the skate park]. theyâre also a [junior] at [indiana state] and a [manager] at the [music center]. theyâre known to be [artistic + intellectual] and [self-involved + elusive]. some people say they remind them of [poetry whispered during a rainstorm, snide remarks from the back of the classroom, the outline of a flask in his jean pocket].
STATISTICS
FULL  NAME: walden cole montgomery GENDER/PRONOUNS: cis male; he/him AGE: twenty-one FACECLAIM: timothĂ©e chalamet BIRTHDAY: april 23 STAR  SIGN: taurus HOMETOWN: albany, new york HEIGHT:  5âČ10âł OCCUPATION: manager at the music center; junior at Indiana state ORIENTATION: homosexual (but not officially out)
HEADCANONS
* Cole is the half-brother of Jonathan and Will Byers (Lonnie sure got around in high school); he only found out a few years ago, right around when Will went missing and, frankly, Cole didnât say anything because he didnât particularly want to be tied to âZombie Boy.â Since then, he hasnât known how or even if he should say something. * Cole has been in love once: with Adam, the star quarterback two years his senior. For two years, they shared clandestine meetings and quiet declarations of love and whispered promises that theyâd move somewhere where things could be different, where everyone could know. But then Adam changed, seemingly overnight. He avoided Cole and acted cruel and empty; Cole still doesnât know what happened, and never will, because Adam died in the mall fire. *note: Adam was one of The Flayed, and while Cole knows something was very off, he has no idea how to find answers * Cole hasnât been the same since Adam died. He went away to college to study Literature, which should have made him happy, but he just felt like a ghost. Heâs not sure if itâs worse to be away at college pretending like nothing happened, or back in Hawkins constantly reminded of him.
PINTEREST | BIOGRAPHYÂ | CONNECTIONSÂ | PLAYLIST
âI have done nothing all summer but wait for myself to be myself again ââ
â Georgia OâKeeffe, in a letter to Russel Vernon Hunter, from Georgia OâKeeffe: Art and Letters (via luthienne)