Will doesn’t lift his head. “What are you thinking about?”

“You,” Mike replies honestly. There’s no need to lie about it anymore; there hasn’t been a reason to for several years.

“Oh?” His voice is prompting, but still gentle. Will has always been gentle, even before he was kidnapped when they were twelve. Sure, he hasn’t liked to yell very much since then, but not much else has changed.

Mike loves him for that, too.

“Stuff,” he says vaguely. It’s still hard to talk about.

Will sighs, finally raising his head. “Mike,” he says.

“What?”

His eyes are genuinely caring. “I can’t help you if you don’t talk to me.”

“Yeah,” Mike mumbles. “I just… our moms, you know.”

“Oh,” Will says again, his voice adopting a slightly cold edge. “Yeah.”

“I… I’m sorry.”

“For what, for your mom?” Will laughs without humor. “Mike, it’s not your fault. If anything, it’s mine.”

“Will—”

“No,” Will cuts him off. “I’m serious. I knew your mom wouldn’t like it. You could have stayed with El, with a girl, and your parents would be okay with that, and none of this would’ve happened!”

He doesn’t have to specify the “this”, because Mike already knows. He remembers the shouting, the tears, the arguing, as if it happened yesterday and not five years ago. He remembers Holly crying, Nancy, visiting from school, screaming at their parents, him just standing there in shock as his dad threw a fit and his mom simply vanished from the room. He remembers running from the house, grabbing his bike as Nancy tried to stop him. He remembers collapsing into Will’s arms the second he dropped his bike on the Byers’ front porch, his boyfriend understanding immediately, El and Joyce trying to comfort him.

“It’s not your fault,” Mike insists now. “I don’t want to be with El, and she doesn’t want to be with me. Maybe ages ago we might have, but we talked about this, we came to an understanding years ago. It’s you, Will. It’s only ever been you. Besides,” he says bitterly, “it’s just as much my fault. I should’ve known better than to tell them, I shouldn’t have told them it was you, I should’ve stopped my mom from calling yours and shouting… I could’ve done something.”

“Mike…” Will trails off for a moment, placing his hand on Mike’s knee. The touch scorches him through his jeans, and he reflexively looks around. But there’s no one around who would care. There’s no one around at all.

So Will doesn’t move his hand, instead ducking his head to catch Mike’s gaze. “Mike. Let’s stop talking about it.”

Mike doesn’t argue, doesn’t even consider it. “Okay.” He’s only quiet for a moment before saying something else. “Will, can we agree it was my parents’ fault, and fuck what they think?”

Will looks at him, grinning. “Yeah. We can do that.”

“We should only care about what the important people think,” Mike continues. “Like El, and Lucas and Dustin, and Jonathan, Nancy, your mother…” He leaves off ‘your father’, for obvious reasons, but the absence of the words still rings clear.

“Steve?” Will suggests, teasing, distracting them from who they’re both thinking of.

Mike laughs. “Well, sure, since he was fine with it. Us.”

“Us,” Will repeats.

Someone—sounds like Dustin—shouts, “You forgot the fucking Gushers!”

“But I got the Eggos!” Yeah, that’s definitely El.

“Can we just go now? Please?” Lucas yells, sounding exasperated. “Mike! Will! Let’s go!”

Mike and Will, they’ve talked about it. How hard it is. Because it is hard. It’s part of the reason they decided on schools so far from Indiana. Not just because the schools there are good, but because the people from their hometown, they wouldn’t understand. Because it’s hard for them to hide how much they mean to each other, and where they’ve ended up, they don’t have to.

Yet, despite everything, all the freedom they’ve tried so hard to procure, Mike only really feels safe admitting it in his head.

It’s a shame.

Sometimes he wishes that things were different, and he voices this to Will now.

“I know,” Will replies.

And Mike sometimes wishes he could hold Will’s hand in the street without the constant looming threat of being beaten, shunned, or even killed; wishes he could dance with him when they and their friends go out instead of casting glances at each other from across the room as Will dances with El instead to throw people off and Mike hangs back; wishes they could be official. They don’t have to be official to be real—they both know this, and they agree that, in most aspects, marriage is only a piece of paper—but sometimes Mike can’t help but wish. Wishes he could call him boyfriend, fiancé, husband. He wants to, with all his being.

So, with his heart in his throat, he tells Will.

“Are you proposing to me?” Will questions, voice light and teasing—there’s an undercurrent of something else, though, something that prompts Mike to grin sheepishly and nod. No special location, no big speech, no ring—just Mike, his thoughts, and Will—but it’s enough. Will’s eyebrows lift, and he asks, “Right here? In a gas station parking lot, in the middle of nowhere, rushed by our impatient friends?”

Mike shrugs and nods again. “I love you,” he offers as Will laughs.

“God, Mike Wheeler,” he says stumblingly, eyes bright. “Do you know how much—I…” He doesn’t need to finish his sentence, because Mike already knows.

There isn’t a single moment he can remember when he wasn’t in love with Will. Or, rather, he knows he hasn’t always loved Will like this—there have been others, of course—but now, every memory he has reminds him that yes, Will Byers is his, and he is Will’s. Mike has loved him through school, through the kidnapping, through finding out he was alive, through thinking he was dead, through finding Eleven, through the nightmares, through telling their friends, through telling their parents, through misery and pain and relief and joy.

He’s loved this boy since forever.

He does already know what Will wants to say. He already wants to say it again himself.

No, more. He wants to kiss this boy. He wants to marryhim.

(And yes, he knows they can’t. Not yet. He knows.

He doesn’t care.)

“Yes. God, Mike,” Will says again, hands coming up to frame Mike’s face. “Yes. You know.”

Mike agrees. “I know.”

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