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12 mos ago
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#c7b29b ....|..... outfit .....|..... #54998e ....|..... outfit .....|..... #a4ded2 ....|..... outfit .....|..... arena


Kacper didn’t bother with the starting line. Didn’t so much as look at the tires. He had passed. The rules didn’t matter to him the way they mattered to others, and he wasn’t about to play soldier for a god that had never bled for him. Instead, he angled off the path, bypassing the course entirely to slip through the ropes and barricades until he reached the far edge of the obstacles. A place he could intercept. A place he could wait. His usual smirk was gone, stripped away like armor in the dark. In its place was something sterner, quieter—sharp eyes tracing each hurdle ahead like he could map the dangers in advance and blunt them before she hit them again.

Katryna channeled every jagged edge of her frustration into movement, each step a strike against the idea that she was weak, that she was static, that she was meant to be molded rather than allowed to grow. The tires no longer felt like a gauntlet designed to humiliate her. Her feet found the pattern with a fluency she didn’t have earlier, muscle memory settling into place without the migraine clawing at her skull like broken glass. Vision clear, breath steadier, she skimmed through the rubber with a rhythm that felt almost natural. Not effortless, not even close, but smoother, faster, like the course wasn’t a punishment but a problem she could, perhaps, solve.

The logs were less kind. She hopped from one to the next, arms flaring once for balance, breath catching as her foot slipped a fraction. But she didn’t fall. Didn’t feed the arena that satisfaction. Her jaw clenched as she finished the sequence, teeth grinding down on a sound that wanted to rip its way out. By the time she dropped to her stomach for the crawl, the grit of sand clung to her elbows, her ribs, her throat— coarse reminders scraping along her skin. She gritted her teeth and drove forward, chin tucked, breath harsh against the ground, every inch forward fueled by a singular, unspoken demand; This time counts. Even if no one but me ever knows it.

So when she stumbled to her feet at the rope climb, lungs straining, nausea lapping at her ribs like a tide threatening to rise again, she paused. Hands on her knees, she swallowed hard, focusing on the rope in front of her like it had answers embedded in the fibers. The world buzzed in her ears, vision tunneling just slightly. She was composing herself, readying for the climb, when Sloane’s voice cut through the haze like a hand breaking the surface.

Sloane was already out of breath and panting as she approached with her hands on her hips. Once she was in view she motioned to the rope with a heavy breath. "Go on. I’ll spot you." She laced her fingers together, bracing the back of her knuckles against her thigh as she crouched slightly. It wasn’t likely a boost would help much, but if it shaved a couple feet from the climb, it’d be better than nothing.

Kat looked up. Relief flared, brief and warm and startling. Sloane was winded, flushed, but here. Not a shadow in the course behind her. Not leaving her to her muted anger at the stupidity of this. Here. The relief twisted with guilt she couldn’t name, but she still let out a ragged breath she hadn’t realized she’d been holding. "You caught up," she breathed, voice threaded with surprise and something resembling gratitude. The offer, I’ll spot you, hit harder than Kat expected. People didn’t… usually offer. Not like that. Not without strings. Not unless it was Kacper. Her throat went tight around words she didn’t know how to form.

"Yeah, well—" Sloane’s chest heaved, struggling for breath and unlikely to catch it before they finished. "—Couldn’t let you run it alone."

Kat stepped forward, ready to move, when movement sliced into her peripheral. Kacper. Not through the tires. Not through the mess of obstacles. He carved a line straight through the course like it wasn’t even there—like barriers didn’t apply to him, because, she supposed, they didn’t. He reached them with an expression that hovered somewhere between annoyance and intent.

She stared at him—silent. He met the look with a shrug, half cavalier, half armor. "What?" he muttered, tone prickling with defensiveness even before accusation could form. "I passed. I can do what I want." His gaze flicked between them—their heaving breath, the rope, the course. His jaw worked. "So. Do you want help or not?"

Kat huffed, a sound that was not quite a laugh but not sharp enough to be a scoff. Her hands flexed once at her sides, grounding herself. The rope loomed above, daunting as prophecy. But with Sloane there and Kacper waiting, she felt that seed of resentment in her chest shift, unrooted, if only by a fraction. She placed her foot in Sloane’s laced fingers, fingers curling around the rope like she intended to climb all the way to the sky and tear the sun down with her teeth if she had to. "Thank you," she whispered to them both.

Sloane’s smile grew, warm and a fraction mischievous as Kat’s foot rested against her palms. "Who do you think guilted him into helping?" she whispered conspiratorially like it was a secret shared just between the two of them even though Kacper, without a doubt, could hear every word. She flashed him a quick, guilty smile that didn’t reach the genuine appreciation that glistened warm and thankful behind her eyes. To be fair, Sloane could have suffered through the course a second time on her own, but the way Kat stormed off, it seemed his sister was the real one in need of support. She just gave him… a gentle nudge.

After sucking in a deep breath, Sloane hoisted Kat up with all the strength she could muster… Which, arguably, was not very much. She was barely able to pick up Rocco on a good day, so trying to give a boost might not have been her best decision ever, but she tried… with a huff, grunt, and slightly trembling arms.

Kacper snorted—an unguarded, incredulous huff of laughter that slipped past the edges of his composure. Sloane’s arms were trembling before Katryna was even fully off the ground, and the sight of her, jaw clenched and shoulders straining like she was trying to hoist a small car instead of his sister, was… absurdly endearing. Before he could think better of it, he stepped in close. His hoodie brushed her shoulder, then his arms slid around her frame, hands fitting beneath her own as if guided by instinct rather than decision. "Looks like you need some help there, sweetheart." His voice was soft, little more than a gentle rumble against her back, but there was an unmistakable teasing lilt to his tone.

Together, their palms formed a cradle sturdy enough to lift with purpose. The push was fluid, his strength filling the gaps where hers faltered, her determination fueling the motion like a spark, and in that brief, suspended moment the heat of her back radiating through cotton and proximity almost broke through his facade. He felt the shape of her, slight but burning like a flint, something struck and striking. Then she was lifting, rising, and he released her as though the moment had teeth.

Sloane mockingly rocked her head at his snort, but then she felt the brush of his clothing against her back and she froze. Her measured breaths that had been slipping between gritted teeth escaped in a single startled exhale. Her gaze fell as she watched Kacper’s arm envelop her. The tips of his fingers brushed her thigh as he slipped his hands beneath hers, sending an unbidden flutter through her body. His words were a warm breeze across the back of her neck, tempting a subconscious shiver that she had to repress. While a part of her was racking her brain for a sarcastic response, remaining calm and unfazed took command of her willpower.

She followed his guidance, focused on lifting Kat up and nothing else… Not the way Kacper’s muscles felt rigid and strong around her or the way every breath he took made his chest press into her back or how there was a burning heat in her cheeks that she couldn’t fight no matter how hard she tried. The second Kat’s foot left her palms, he pulled away abruptly like Sloane was made of ice, so frigid that it burned. There was a temptation to look back at him, but she kept her gaze on the coarseness of the rope in front of her as she seized it in her hands to help keep it steady.

By the time Katryna scrambled her way up, inelegant as a startled cat but twice as stubborn, Kacper had already stepped back, posture loose and deceptively unaffected, as though he hadn’t just had his heartbeat spike against the confines of his ribs. He caught Sloane’s eye for a fleeting beat, smirk crooked and light as air. "Good job," he offered, voice smooth, casual, a half-laugh threaded through the syllables like he could pretend none of it meant anything at all. Above them, Katryna began her descent, shoes skidding once in a near-slip that sent his hands twitching upward on instinct before he smothered it. She landed breathless, shaky, and smiling, almost beaming at both of them as though nothing electric had passed in the space between. Oblivious to any tension, she grinned in the wake of her small victory, and Kacper only huffed a breath, pretending his pulse hadn’t changed tempo at all.

Sloane only turned to look back at Kacper when she could feel his gaze burrowing into the back of her head. Thankfully for her the only redness that remained across her pale skin could be chalked up to heat from running the course and nothing else… Because it was nothing. His words came out casual like they had been shared back in the stands and not after whatever that was. She clung to that, following his lead to try and find the baseline beneath her elevated pulse. Her eyes squinted, playful, mocking, desperate to find their normal—if it could be called normal after knowing each other for a single morning—repartee. "Be so for real, I didn’t do anything beyond moral support," she teased her own lack of strength as she dusted her hands off along her thighs.

Once Kat dropped down on the ground beside them, Sloane met her smile like nothing had happened, only sparing Kacper a brief sidelong glance before looking back at his sister. "You did good," she offered, soft but genuine, with a gentle pat to her shoulder.

Sloane sighed softly, staring down at her unblemished palms and then the rope before her. The last thing she wanted was to tear open the skin a second time, especially not when she was being watched so… intently. She climbed it once before, she could do it again. Just slower, more steady. Right. She sucked in a deep breath and took the rope in her hands, preparing to jump and make her ascent.

Kacper rolled his shoulders back like he could shrug off the last few minutes, drop them beside the rope with the spent sand and the echoes of their breathing. He cleared his throat, tone even and composed because nothing rattled him—at least, that’s what he’d always claimed and would continue claiming until the grave. His gaze flicked to Katryna, and something warm—not quite soft, but close—threaded through the words he offered her. "You did good,
młodsza siostra — little sister."
The nickname slipped out, instinctive, the consonants gentle in his mother tongue. She beamed, exhausted and glowing like she could swallow the sun if she believed in herself hard enough. It made something in him unclench.

Then Katryna moved like she might step forward, arms rising awkwardly to help. Kacper’s hand shot out, palm braced against the air like a stop sign. "Nope. I’ve got it." The dismissal wasn’t unkind, just firm, making her eyebrows shoot up. He ignored her expression of amusement. Instead, he dropped into a crouch in front of Sloane, and the change in elevation felt sharper than the drop, knees pressing into sand, hoodie brushing his ribs as he leaned forward, arms lifting. His hands cupped where hers had been before. The muscles in his forearms flexed, not from strain but from intent, like he was preparing for something bigger than just a boost.

He looked up at her, one brow arched in a challenge that tasted like smoke and something saccharine left too long in the sun. "Come on," he smirked, nearly lazy, but his voice dropped low. "Don’t make me kneel here all day." He didn’t give her time to question it. His hands shifted, ready and steady, "On your count," he added, as though he wasn’t the problem.

Sloane had expected Kat’s help, preferred it, but it seemed Kacper had other plans. What those were exactly? She didn’t know. It was likely some show of how easy it was to lift them, or maybe he just didn’t want to wait through his sister struggling similarly to her. It had to be one of those and nothing else, at least that’s what she elected to believe. Regardless of his intentions, her hands tightened on the rope, wringing it like a washcloth until her knuckles whitened. Looking down at him there was a second where a thought nearly slipped out, sarcastic, jabbing banter, but it would have been laced with… something else. Something she couldn’t quite describe that would have colored her words in a way she never spoke. It was impulsive and out of character, and thank the Gods she was able to bite her tongue before they slipped out.

She sighed, sifting through whatever nonsense was going on in her head to get back to normal. It wasn’t that she slipped on a mask, but shut the curtain on her tumultuous thoughts, pretending like everything was completely normal, like Kacper was… Because it was normal. Her small smirk had an almost imperceivable crack of uncertainty as she looked down at him. "I don’t know… It’s nice feeling tall for once," she teased, but it fell on deaf ears as he shifted his hold preparing for her weight. "It’s fine. I did it once already—" Sloane started, but Kacper didn’t budge. She threw her head back and groaned. "You’re difficult," she grumbled under her breath with a frustrating, scrunched face as she lifted her right foot and placed it in his hands.

Kacper’s grin tilted, crooked as a blade turned in sunlight, sharp and teasing but softened at the edges by something unspoken. Her foot settled into his palms and he adjusted instinctively, hands sure and steady, like he’d been built for bearing weight that didn’t belong to him. He wiggled his eyebrows up at her, a pantomime of mischief that cracked the rising tension like a pebble skipping across the surface of a lake. Behind them, Kat snorted, voice dry as tinder, "You have no idea," and the comment landed like a stone tossed carelessly at his back.

He didn’t even flinch. Didn’t look away. Like his sister’s voice was background noise and Sloane was the only thing in frame. His fingers flexed once beneath her, a subtle test of balance, of trust. "Tall suits you, Thimble," he teased, voice low with humor, though the nickname landed gentler this time, less like a jab and more like a hand offered in the dark.

"Hmm," Sloane hummed, her smirk shifting from something cracked and sharp around the edges to a smile, soft, involuntary with a warmth that matched the heat that bloomed across her cheeks. She cleared her throat, gaze falling to her small sneaker half engulfed in his hands as she adjusted her placement for better stability.

"But trust yourself a little, yeah? You can handle a rope climb." He said it like a fact, not a question, like he had seen the rooftop she didn’t know she stood on and already knew she wouldn’t fall. The smirk lingered, but his eyes, bright, intent, startlingly clear, held something steadier. Realer. It felt like the first breeze after a storm. And then, as if the moment demanded it, his voice dropped, humor peeling back like a curtain tugged aside by invisible hands. "If you slip again…" The words unfurled slowly, deliberately, like each syllable needed room to become what it meant. "I’ll catch you."

No grin. No raised brow. Just a promise, simple, lethal in its sincerity. He might as well have carved it into stone with the edge of his breath. The world narrowed to the heat of his hands against the arch of her foot, the rope creaking above, sand shifting beneath his knees. He didn’t look away, not even when the weight of it settled like gravity between them. Kat lingered somewhere just beyond the moment, quiet for once, and Kacper held steady, her anchor or her cushion, depending on how she moved next.

His words hit hard in a way Sloane hadn’t expected, stopping her just before she pushed off. She looked back down at him, finding his gaze, intentional and unwavering, staring back up at her. For whatever reason she couldn’t explain, she trusted his words in a way that reminded her of the past, in a way that was startling in its sincerity. There was a pull to soften the silence that fell between them like it was weighted by lead, to make a comment or joke at her own expense, like his offering of support was misplaced. But something else silenced her, unable to taint the gentle olive branch he was offering her.

Sloane simply nodded her head while holding his gaze, tentative and uncertain, but trusting him nonetheless. She drew in a deep breath, preparing herself before turning her attention back toward the rope. Her hands shifted higher, grip tightening, and then finally, she leaned into the foot that rested in Kacper’s hands. She pushed off of him, trying her best not to hurt him when he held the brunt of her weight as her other foot slipped off the ground.

Kacper braced as she committed, the weight of her trust settling into his palms before the weight of her body did. When she pushed off, he rose with her, strength coiling through his arms, back, and shoulders like a rope pulled taut. He didn’t strain, not outwardly, but there was a grit to his jaw, a focus sharpened to a point. He lifted her higher than he had lifted Kat, higher than he probably should have been able to, the motion smooth and careful as though he feared any suddenness might break whatever fragile thing had sparked to life between them. His hands steadied her foot until she found purchase, until gravity shifted and she no longer needed him, though the absence of her weight felt strangely, suddenly cold.

She had expected a foot or two of advantage, nothing more, but Kacper continued to lift her, drawing a sharp startled breath from her. Sloane was given such height that her hands had to climb the rope to adjust to the unexpected elevation. Her gaze flicked down to him, wide eyed with a mix of emotions painted across her face: confusion, shock, awe, and something warmer, softer… like admiration. She cleared her throat, forcing her attention back to the task at hand. She quickly wrapped her left ankle around the rope, trying not to leave him suffering beneath her weight longer than necessary. The second her grip settled and the rope was secure between her thighs, she pushed off his hand, severing the connection of his support and started her climb.

He didn’t step back far. Didn’t move like a man finished. Kacper stood beneath the rope, body angled just so, knees loose and ready, the subtle brace of someone preparing to catch something precious before it hit the ground. His eyes tracked every inch of her ascent. Not with hunger, not with awe, but with a quiet vigilance. Dust clung to his hoodie. Sunlight skimmed the angles of his face. And still, he watched, like he could hold her steady with his gaze alone.

Katryna lingered beside him, breathing still uneven from her climb. She shot him a look, eyebrows climbing, expression somewhere between surprise and suspicion, as though she were finally seeing the shape of something she’d missed forming between them. She crossed her arms, hip cocked, watching her brother watch someone else with an intensity she hadn’t seen since, well… ever.

But Kacper didn’t look away to acknowledge her. Didn’t toss a joke over his shoulder, or puncture the moment with sarcasm like he so often did. His smirk, his easy arrogance, his arsenal of barbs, they all fell away, as though this silence deserved to stand untouched. There’d be something to say later, something teasing, something sharp and crooked to reset the ground beneath their feet. But not now. Not while she climbed. Not while she trusted him. For now, his voice was quiet, more breath than sound, barely rising above the sand and wind: “Keep going, Thimble.”

Sloane’s upper body strength might have been abysmal, but she had made the climb once, she could do it again. While she had the luxury of taking her time, the rope climb was the one obstacle where hesitation and a slow pace worked against her. Then there was her audience… Sure, it was less people watching her than before, but they were dozens of feet away observing her like a spectacle… Not beneath her with bated breath and ready hands to help her should she fail. There was a comfort in knowing that Kacper would catch her, but a determination to not falter. She didn’t want to fail, not again, not in front of them, not in front of…

Focus.

She drew in a deep breath through her nose as she continued to pull herself higher. Her form was still sloppy, like a newborn monkey clingy to its mother, not a seasoned athlete… or an amateur one at that. Her arms burned and trembled, and every other time she pulled her legs higher up the rope she lost her footing, but she didn’t rush or push forward without stability. Her head fell back, letting out an audible sigh when she reached the top and tapped the crossbeam with her hand. But her relief was quickly replaced with a new wave of dread as she looked down at the twins and truly noticed just how high up she was. "Fuck."

Sloane paused, just for a second, to catch her breath and try to settle her nerves. The descent was deceptively more complicated. It took a level of coordination she didn’t possess to lower herself smoothly without risk of slipping or losing her grip. It was only by sheer determination and will power that she managed to not slice open her palms a second time. Halfway down her hands were on fire and struggling to keep a secure enough grasp. She spared a glance over her shoulder… Fifteen feet. Fuck that’s too high to jump. Five more feet.

She gritted her teeth, lowering herself further with heavy breaths, sweat trailing down her scarred back, and fatigued muscles seconds away from giving out. Sloane looked down again, still high but not too high… hopefully. She quickly unwrapped her legs, double checked where Kacper and Kat were, then released her hold. She hit the dirt with a thud that stirred up a cloud of sand and sent a stinging pain that radiated up her feet. Her landing was surefooted, albeit a bit wobbly. Subconsciously she grabbed the closest thing for support and stability, which happened to be Kacper’s outstretched hand. Her skin, hot and coarse from the rope, contrasted his. She gave herself one beat, a single pause for one heavy breath, before she severed the connection with a sidelong glance and tentative smile.

"Thanks." The word was lost to the wind the moment it left her lips, but the weight still remained. She rubbed her hands together, while taking a small step backwards to look between the pair of them. Sloane overturned her hands, revealing her palms, flushed and angry, but still intact.

Katryna bent forward with her hands braced on her knees, breath coming in shallow pulls as she tried to steady the rolling in her stomach. The arena buzzed around them, movement tugging at the edges of her awareness whether she wanted it to or not. She caught sight of Tapeesa a few lanes over, running with a red-haired man at her shoulder—Tapeesa’s expression pinched, irritated, like the course itself had personally offended her… or maybe it was the man. She paused, head tilting… yes, definitely the man.

Beyond them, a dark-haired girl moved in tandem with the muscled blond Kat had noticed earlier, no longer shirtless, but still very much a spectacle whether he meant to be or not. Farther down, a blonde girl was speaking with someone else, and beyond them a redhead and curly haired girl were speaking quietly amongst themselves. Kat exhaled softly and tore her attention away. People watching could wait. Finishing could not, she refused to be here until mid-afternoon.

She turned back just in time to see Sloane drop the last stretch, the impact kicking up sand as Kacper leaned in on instinct, hands already there, already steadying her before the wobble could become a fall. Kat watched the way his body angled toward Sloane without thought, the way concern lived in the line of his shoulders even as Sloane pulled back a moment later. A small smile tugged at Kat’s mouth despite herself. “You did it,” she said gently, pride threading her voice as she nodded toward Sloane’s unbroken palms. “And without tearing yourself up this time, we’re thriving.” She snorted at the end of her sentence, amused despite herself.

"Low bar for thriving." A laugh, tired but lighter than the dust that stirred around them slipped out as Sloane looked back down at her unblemished palms. "But given the alternative, I’ll take it." The right side of her mouth curled into a crooked but unguarded smile.

Kacper huffed, straightening like nothing had happened, though there was something undeniably pleased flickering behind his eyes. He rolled one shoulder, gaze dropping briefly to Sloane’s hands before lifting again. “See? Didn’t even need me,” he said, tone sassy as ever, though it softened at the edges despite his best efforts. “Climbed it, dropped it, walked it off. Whole thing.” There was a beat, and then a crooked smirk. “Guess you’re tougher than you look, Thimble. Let’s get going, ladies, I’m looking forward to the pool.” He wiggled his eyebrows at them both, before turning away before Kat could smack him.

Sloane squinted as she gave Kacper a sidelong glance with knitted brows upturned in lighthearted confusion. "We’ll see how much I didn’t need you by the time I reach the end." She took a step forward, froze, held up a finger and half spun back around to face him. "We—" She motioned back and forth between herself and Kat to emphasize her correction, marginally frantic but it got the point across. "How much we didn’t need your help." Her nose scrunched as she turned back around and continued toward the next obstacle.

The rope bridge was one of the few obstacles that didn’t bother her too much, beyond the fact she had to do it a second time. Sloane didn’t bother waiting or hesitating when she reached it, carefully placing her right foot on top of one of the knots and stepping out onto the net. Her hands held the ropes on either side to keep her balance as she patiently made her way across, not sacrificing balance or form for speed. When she reached the end, she climbed up onto the platform then turned back to face Kat with an expectant smile. "Don’t think we’ll need to bug your brother for help on this one," she teased, sparing him a quick glance before crossing her arms lightly over her chest and leaning a shoulder against the wooden railing.

Kacper had to bite the inside of his cheek to keep the laugh from spilling out at the sharp little choreography of Sloane’s hands, the frantic emphasis of her correction like she was warding off a curse rather than fixing her wording. His shoulders hitched anyway, breath escaping in a low huff that only barely passed for restraint. Then she scrunched her nose and turned away, already moving, already done with him, and that was it. The sound broke free, not sharp or mocking but warm, openly delighted, following after her and Kat like an echo that refused to be embarrassed into silence.

He shook his head, grin tugging wide and unrepentant, and peeled off from the course with an easy confidence, cutting around the rope bridge entirely. They wouldn’t need him here. He knew that much. So he went to lean against the next obstacle instead, arms folded loosely as he waited, eyes tracking their progress with an ease that didn’t dull his attention.

Katryna stepped onto the rope bridge behind Sloane with careful intention, every movement measured, deliberate. She remembered too well how her foot had slipped the first time, how the gaps between knots had reached up like teeth eager to bite. This time she took it slow, hands tight on the side ropes, breath steady despite the tremor in her legs. The net swayed under her weight, like a living thing that demanded respect.

She glanced up at Sloane and offered a shaky smile, something wry and tired but real. “I really didn’t realize I signed up for hard-labor fantasy camp,” she muttered, voice light but edged with disbelief, before rolling her shoulders and bracing herself to keep going.

"Don’t forget the petty High School drama. We have that on surplus here. Love triangles, hook ups, people just leaving in the middle of the night…" There was a slight shift at the end of what was supposed to be a lighthearted joke. A seriousness crept in and hung on the end of Sloane’s words like a chill she couldn’t shake. She drew in a sharp breath as she pushed off the railing and shifted to stand at the edge of the rope bridge. "Stand on the cross sections," she suggested, pointing to the next one Kat was about to step over. "It feels a little weird, but you won’t roll your ankle and slip into the holes."

Katryna’s nose scrunched immediately, an instinctive wrinkle of distaste that creased her expression at the mention of petty drama, like she’d bitten into something sour she hadn’t been expecting. She let out a short, incredulous huff through her nose, half laugh and half scoff. “I really thought this place would be… I don’t know,” she said, eyes flicking toward the distant sprawl of camp before returning to Sloane, “More mature? Or at least people pretending to be.” The snort that followed was quiet but genuine, the kind that loosened something tight in her chest.

Then she did as she was told, planting her foot squarely on the cross section Sloane indicated. It did feel strange, the rope taut and unyielding beneath her sole, but it held. Confidence followed quickly after, and with it more speed, each step more certain than the last, her balance settling into something steady and reliable. The bridge swayed, but it no longer threatened her.

She reached Sloane’s side in moments, breathing a little fast but triumphant, and flashed her a small, grateful smile that said thank you without needing the words. Ahead of them, Kacper waited by the end rope swing, posture loose, hands resting on his hips as he peered down at the dark water below with narrowed eyes and unmistakable suspicion, maybe even a little disgust. The surface rippled faintly, reflecting light in a way that promised nothing pleasant. He looked unimpressed with it, borderline offended, even, but made no comment about how long they’d taken, only lifting his gaze when they drew closer, expression settling into patient, watchful ease.

Sloane returned the smile, just as small and soft, but speaking the same unspoken language in response. She slowly turned around on the platform walking up to one of the openings in the railing where the rope waited, resting in a small hook. After taking the rope in her hand she pivoted slightly to look over at Kat. "It’s a camp full of young adults without supervision. I might be the most mature person here," she commented, continuing their conversation. It wasn’t until she actually said it that she realized there probably was some truth in her words. There weren't many people at camp that she would consider as mature. Duke might have lived in the mature bubble too… If he was there.

As her thoughts drifted toward him, Sloane couldn’t help but turn around slightly, scanning the crowd that remained in the stands or was scattered about the course… But he wasn’t there. She had hoped Sylas’s words were only to get under her skin, but the more time passed, the longer Duke, Ace, Elysium and Anatoliy were gone, she couldn’t help but wonder if he was right. And worse still… Her gaze drifted across the pool of dark water to where Kacper waited, and then towards Kat who stood beside her. Would they disappear too?

Before she could let the thought take root and fester into something she couldn’t handle, not right now, she held out the rope toward Kat. "Did you want to go first?"

Katryna hesitated, fingers hovering just shy of the rope as if it might bite her again for daring to exist. For a heartbeat she considered shaking her head, letting Sloane take this one first, but resignation settled in her shoulders instead. They slumped, a quiet surrender. It would be better just to get it over with. “Yeah… I can,” she said, the words edged with reluctant resolve rather than confidence. She took the rope from Sloane, its coarse fibers warm from waiting hands, and stepped back a few paces to give herself room. Her jaw tightened as she tested the weight once, twice. Under her breath, almost like a curse meant to ward off fate, she muttered, “I never want to touch another rope as long as I live.”

Then she ran. Not fast, not graceful, just determined. The edge of the platform vanished beneath her feet and the world tilted as she swung out over the water, knuckles whitening as she clung to the rope like it was the only solid thing left in existence. The arc carried her through, breath stolen by the rush, and when her feet finally scraped the far side she stumbled forward, momentum threatening to pitch her flat on her face. A strong hand caught her instead, Kacper’s grip firm and sure, one hand steadying her shoulder while the other snagged the rope mid-swing. He grinned down at her, all easy triumph and brotherly pride, before giving the rope a sharp, practiced shove that sent it sailing back toward the platform for Sloane. Kat exhaled, shaky but smiling, grounded again, if only because he’d been there to make sure she didn’t fall.

A soft applause echoed across the pool of water from where Sloane stood on the platform. When the rope came swinging back toward her, her hands fumbled, and there was a moment where she nearly lost balance over the edge but she caught herself on the railing. She laughed nervously at her own clumsiness and promptly took a couple steps back. Her hands gripped the rope tight, wringing it twice before running toward the edge and jumping. Like the first time, she made it across the pool fairly easily, but dropped too soon. She landed on the edge, her toes on the earth while her heels dipped over the side. There was a fraction of a second where she was steady before her weight shifted and her body began tipping backwards toward the water. Her eyes went wide and arms started to flail as she attempted to regain her balance, but gravity was faster, consistent, and far more coordinated than she was.

Kacper was already smiling when her feet touched down, that crooked, reflexive grin that surfaced before he could stop it, before the world reminded him it had teeth. For a breath she was upright, victorious in that small, scrappy way that suited her, and then he saw it; the subtle betrayal of balance, heels dipping, center of gravity slipping past the point of forgiveness. Time did that strange stretching thing it liked to do when it wanted to be cruel. Her arms flailed, eyes wide, the water behind her dark and waiting, and something in his chest snapped tight as wire.

He moved without thinking. No commentary, no sarcasm, no time for cleverness. Just instinct. He surged forward, boots skidding on damp earth, one hand closing around her wrist with certainty while the other wrapped around her middle, pulling her hard and fast into him, away from the edge, away from the cold shock of the pool. The motion knocked the air from both of them, her chest bumping into his chest as he anchored his weight and let gravity settle where it belonged.

A low chuckle slipped from him then, unforced and grounding, the sound vibrating against her like a reassurance he hadn’t planned on giving. He loosened his grip just enough to be polite, but not enough to risk it happening again. “Careful,” he murmured, voice close, quieter than his usual bravado. “I’m running out of dramatic saves for the day.” The smirk was there if she looked for it, but beneath it was something steadier, something that lingered a second longer than necessary before he finally let go.

Once again Sloane’s clumsiness all came down to swift action from Kacper. She was equal parts thankful and embarrassed, although it was more of the latter as she was pulled firmly against him. Their chests pressed together, every breath out of sync with a chaotic cadence. While he was focusing on steadying them and turning her from the edge of the pool, her mind twisted with a frantic efficiency, clocking and noting… everything: his hand on her wrist, his other arm curved around her, the lack of space between them, the warmth of his breath against her forehead, the growing heat that bloomed across her cheeks, and the overwhelming awareness that Kat was only a handful of feet away and likely watching it all.

Then he chuckled and made a joke which snapped her out of her panicked overthinking, and grounded her, in its own weird way. A laugh burst forth, unguarded and nearly like a scoff, curving the corners of her lips into a weak and faintly self deprecating smile. Her breath fanned across his neck, warm and uneven, before she took a small step backwards to look up at him and create some semblance of normalcy through space. "I hate to break it to you, Heathcliff, but I’m clumsy." Sloane found comfort in their laughter and the smirk he wore like armor, able to slip back into their banter rather than focusing on… anything else that promptly needed to be locked away. "You’d be better off accepting that I’ll eventually fall." Her hand raised of its own volition and gently patted his chest, reassuring yet playful in its ease.

Sloane cleared her throat, quickly pulling her hand away once she realized what she’d done and started making her way toward the next obstacle. She flashed Kat a faintly guilt laced smile as she walked past and approached the balance beams. Rather than overthinking it or putting herself in another situation where she’d need help from her reluctant hero, she immediately started up the incline without any hesitation. Her arms extended and rose by her sides like delicate wings, flapping and moving to keep her balanced as she stepped one foot in front of the other. When she reached the decline she jumped down, stumbled a couple feet but managed to steady herself easily… enough.

Kacper snorted at her declaration, the sound short and rough with amusement as he straightened fully, rolling his shoulders like he hadn’t just considered jumping into that small pool of water after her if she’d fallen in. “Great,” he said dryly, watching her with that familiar crooked look, half challenge, half fond disbelief. “Then I’ll start keeping count. Dramatic saves, I think they’ll have a fee.” He let that hang there, suspended between them like a thread pulled tight, mouth twitching as though he might leave it unfinished on purpose. Then, casually, too casually, he added, “Coffee. Lots of it.”

But when she turned away, when her warmth moved with her and the space she left behind cooled too quickly, something unsettling shifted in his chest. Kacper lifted a hand without thinking, rubbing at the side of his neck where her breath had brushed him only seconds ago, fingers lingering there like they might find an explanation written into his skin. His brows knit together faintly, confusion threading through the usual sharp edges of his thoughts. It was stupid. Chemical. Adrenaline. Proximity. Anything but what it felt like—his heart doing small, traitorous flips against his ribs, as if it had forgotten its job was to stay armored. He scowled at the ground, annoyed at himself more than anything, then looked up again just in time to see her step onto the balance beams.

Katryna, meanwhile, had already caught on to something neither of them were brave enough to name. She flashed Sloane a slow, knowing grin as the girl passed her, all quiet mischief and soft confidence, the kind that suggested she’d just been handed a secret and planned to keep it warm. Then she followed, careful and light-footed, arms lifting as she mounted the incline. The beam wavered beneath her once, just a small betrayal, but she recovered with a sharp inhale and stubborn focus, feet finding their rhythm again. When she reached the decline, she jumped cleanly, landing steady, a little breathless but upright, eyes already flicking ahead toward Sloane with something like shared momentum.

Behind them, Kacper watched both girls move forward, jaw set, pulse still traitorously loud in his ears.

"Almost done," Sloane said with a weak smile, doing her best to reassure Kat, and herself. She was starting to run out of steam and wanted nothing more than to leave that damn arena. Running an obstacle course a second time was one thing. It didn’t compare to the embarrassment, or whatever emotions she couldn’t explain that boiled up and tinged her cheeks whenever she needed—how did he word it?—a dramatic save? The last thing she needed was another protector getting themselves wrapped up in the chaos of her life. It wasn’t fair to him or anyone else. Her burdens were her own to carry, no matter how heavy. She didn’t need to scare away more people like she did with Liam. It’d just be better… for everyone if he remained the grumpy brother to her friend… over there.

Sloane approached the side of the pool and looked down at the crystal clear water with her hands on her hips. The flush that touched her pale cheeks was persistent, fading much too slowly as she glanced back over her shoulder at them. Her gaze landed on Kat before jumping to Kacper. "Weren’t you the one looking forward to the pool?" She pointed at the water lazily as a small, reluctant smile teased to life against her better judgement. It seemed she wasn’t the best at taking her own advice. Her head shook imperceptibly and she knelt down, scolding herself internally as she started unlacing her shoes. There was nothing worse than soggy feet and while she assumed River would be kind enough to dry them a second time, she wasn’t in a rush. So she took the time to remove her sneakers and socks, then set them aside.

Without any flair, Sloane approached the side of the pool, pushed off the edge with her bare feet and dove into the water. She transitioned into a casual freestyle, stroking here and there but generally let the momentum carry her for several feet in between. The cool water was a nice reprieve from the sweat and exhaustion of the course… and helped drain the heat from her face that was determined to linger without welcome. When she reached the opposite side, her arms rose out of the water and crossed along the edge. Her chin lowered until it rested on top of her hand and her eyes slowly closed. She wasn’t in a rush to get out, content to enjoy how the water soothed her muscles as she waited for them to finish.

Katryna trailed after Sloane, slower now, the fight leeched out of her limbs and replaced with a quiet, bone-deep tiredness. She knelt at the edge of the pool and worked her laces loose with clumsy fingers, slipping off her shoes and socks and lining them up with unnecessary neatness, as if order might make the rest of the world behave. For a moment she only watched Sloane cut through the water, dark hair fanning like ink, body finally unburdened by gravity. Then Kat inhaled, soft and steady, and followed.

She dove cleanly, no splash worth noting, arms stretching forward as she slipped into a gentle freestyle. The water greeted her like a held breath finally released—cool but kind, almost warm really, weightless without being cold. Her muscles loosened in slow increments, tension unspooling from her shoulders, her spine, the place behind her eyes where pain liked to nest. She swam lazily, unhurried, drifting closer until she surfaced beside Sloane, chin breaking the surface with a small ripple. For a few strokes she closed her eyes.

It felt like home.

Not truly, not entirely, but close enough that her chest tightened anyway. Pool at dusk. The sound of insects. The smell of wet earth. Meadowsweet blooming under her window. If she pretended hard enough, she could almost believe she’d wake up there instead of in a camp carved from prophecy and bone. She exhaled slowly, pushing away the dream she’d had about this place, about some of these campers, water lapping at her jaw, and opened her eyes again.

Behind them, Kacper was already grinning like a boy who’d just been handed permission to be reckless. He stripped off his shirt without ceremony, kicked his shoes aside, and sprinted the last few steps before launching himself into the pool in a cannonball that sent water exploding skyward in silver arcs. The splash echoed off stone and sand.

Katryna flinched at the wave, blinking water from her lashes, then turned her head slowly toward him with the long-suffering expression of someone who had survived childhood alongside a natural disaster. “Gods,” she muttered flatly, water dripping from her hairline. “It really is just like home.”

Kacper surfaced a second later, slick hair plastered to his forehead, laughing under his breath as he wiped water from his eyes. He shook his head once, sharp and unapologetic, spraying droplets like a mutt fresh from a riverbank. “You’re welcome,” he said, voice bright with victory. “I bring realism to every environment.” He leaned back against the pool’s edge, arms braced, shoulders gleaming with water and heat, grin still crooked and alive. “Admit it,” he added, glancing between the two of them. “You’d miss the chaos if I wasn’t here.”

Katryna snorted softly through her nose, rolling her eyes, but she didn’t move away.

Sloane heard him run toward the edge of the pool but still wasn’t braced for the splash of water that sprayed against the back of her head and startled her. It was a small flinch, one she could easily play off as shock rather than anything else, but she still felt the cold wave that shot up the back of her neck and chilled her blood. She slowly lifted her chin from where it rested on her crossed arms, finding her head felt heavier having to hold it up once again. She tilted back just enough to look around Katryna toward her brother who was acting like it was a relaxing day at the pool and not a miserable military agility course.

"It all makes sense now." She shook her head slightly, the sarcasm more apparent in her facial expression than beneath her tone that was starting to reflect her own exhaustion. "It’s like an Eris curse. I attract chaos." Sloane didn’t elaborate further knowing it would only ruin the joke if she had to explain it. Honestly in the small amount of time she had known Kacper, he seemed rather mild in the realm of chaos. But perhaps she was used to the chaos… or chaotic people like Sylas and her mother. It had a way of skewing her perspective. But when she ran over the list of people who found their way into her life, chaos always followed. Perhaps it was them, or maybe… just maybe it was a force that hovered in the air around her, tainting anything that got too close. A quiet and brief chuckle murmured behind her closed lips at the irony of it all, which could also be seen as her laughing at her own joke.

Sloane then braced her hands against the edge of the pool and hoisted herself up. Her arms, fatigued from the strain of training, trembled traitorously beneath her weight. She just barely managed to lift her leg and slip her knee over the edge before her elbows buckled. "Fuck," she cursed under her breath before raising her other leg and forcing herself to her feet. Water dripped from her body, leaving behind a trail of darkened sand and foot prints in her wake as she circled the pool back to the start. She stopped beside her shoes, looking down at them like they had done her a great offense existing on the ground. It was tempting, too tempting, to let herself sit and slip them back on. But that was a slippery slope and she knew once she found comfort on the ground, getting up would be impossible. Instead she did the awkward hop as she tugged socks over sand covered soles, then shoved her feet back into the shoes.

Kacper lingered at the pool’s edge a moment after Sloane exited, water still sliding from his hair in thin clear threads. He watched her go with an expression that tried very hard to be casual and failed in the quiet ways that mattered. Then he glanced sideways at his sister and waggled his brows, mouth already pulling into something insufferably pleased with itself.

“So,” he said lightly, stretching the word out like taffy, “does that mean she thinks I’m attractive?”

Katryna didn’t even look at him at first. She simply shut her eyes, drew in a slow breath through her nose, and then turned her head with the long-suffering patience of someone who had shared a womb with this man. “I think,” she replied flatly, barely resisting the urge to splash him in the face. “She’s more likely to think you were dropped on your head as a baby.”

Sloane slowly walked the length of the pool a second time, heading for that dreaded log ladder. It somehow seemed far taller and more imposing the second time. Stopping to stand beneath it made her heart sink and her stomach churn violently. She recalled her fall, the way it violently stole the air from her lungs and rattled her teeth. Gods, she prayed it didn’t happen again. Sloane didn’t need more ‘dramatic saves’ clouding her mind. Not in a huge rush to make an enemy of gravity, she waited patiently for Kat to join, however long that took. When the raven haired girl stepped up beside her, she looked over at her with a wary smile. "So… Do we just… tackle this together?" she asked, uncertainty tinging her words.

Katryna pushed herself out of the pool with a small, undignified grunt, water streaming from her clothes as gravity reclaimed her. Her limbs felt heavier on land, bones remembering exhaustion all at once. Wet fabric clung in all the wrong places as she padded back to her shoes, muttering dark, irritated curses in Polish under her breath while she forced damp socks over sandy feet. By the time she straightened, shoes half-laced and posture already slumping with preemptive defeat, Sloane was several steps ahead toward the log ladder. Katryna followed, slower, shoulders rounded, the earlier fire replaced with a weary resignation that settled deep in her ribs.

When she reached Sloane’s side beneath the looming shadow of the ladder, she tilted her head back to take in its height, lips pressing into a thin line. “I guess,” she said, voice tired but dryly practical, “but if I fall, don’t try to catch me.” A faint, crooked smile that was similar to her brothers tugged at her mouth as she glanced toward the pool they’d left behind. “Kacper isn’t strong enough to carry both of us back. So only one of us is allowed to take a tumble.”

The thought of Sloane attempting to catch anyone made a quiet cynical laugh build in her chest while she looked up at the ladder. "Yeah, if I fall… just let me die," she replied with a dry sarcasm as she placed her hands on the lowest rung, and hoisted herself up with a grunt. Once her stomach was braced against the log, she swung one leg to the other side and pushed herself upright so she was seated, straddling the wood. "Take care of Rocco when I’m gone," she added with a wary chuckle, gaze drifting toward Kacper as he approached.

Katryna snorted despite herself, the sound torn loose from her chest before dignity could stop it, and tipped her head back to squint up at Sloane perched on the log like a doomed gargoyle. There was fondness in her eyes, buried under exhaustion and grit and the shared misery of sore muscles.

“Absolutely not,” she muttered, voice dry as ash. “If you leave me alone with him, he’ll be insufferable for the rest of our lives about how you tragically fell to your death.” One corner of her mouth twitched. “So no. If you go, we both go. Suicide pact.”

"What?" Sloane laughed softly, looking down at her with an expression that was equal parts confused and amused. "I highly doubt an annoying girl he knew for a single morning would stick with him that long." Her gaze drifted toward Kacper like a silent plea for him to back her up, but when she met his gaze there was a weird pang in her chest that whispered some truth she ignored. She cleared her throat, quickly looking back over at Kat. "I think if I got you killed he’d find a way to haunt me in the afterlife."

As if summoned by the insult, Kacper was already making his way toward them, cutting across the sand with lazy strides. His hoodie hung loose in one hand, darkened with water, while his shirt clung to him like a second skin—thin fabric outlining the lines of his stomach and shoulders, still slick from the pool. He looked annoyingly unbothered, hair damp, expression easy. “Wow,” he called as he approached, lips quirking, “I risk my life once and suddenly I’m reduced to emergency transportation.”

Sloane waited patiently for Kat to join her, legs swinging lazily on either side of the long while her fingers idly picked at splinters in the wood. "I think the point is for you to not risk your life over a stupid obstacle course," she mused with a tired smile, looking down at him from where she was perched. The rope climb was one thing, but this ladder was daunting and far taller. Gravity was a fickle mistress and one tumble could send one or more of them straight to the infirmary and into the healer girl’s care… again. "You are hereby demoted to cheerleader, Heathcliff." Her smile grew, just a fraction, before she turned her gaze upward. She grabbed hold of one of the rising supports and shifted to her feet. Then she hooked her arms over the next rung, prepared and waiting.

Katryna followed Sloane up the ladder with the stubborn devotion of someone who had already decided that quitting at this point would be useless. The first rung stole her breath, the second set her arms trembling in open rebellion. By the third, her jaw was clenched hard enough to ache, shoulders burning, muscles quivering like overdrawn bowstrings. She climbed anyway, inelegant, slow, stubborn as winter. A low, aggravated sound crawled out of her chest as she hauled herself level with Sloane, forearms shaking as she braced against the wood.

“This is cruel and unusual punishment,” she muttered darkly, more to the log than to anyone else, coming in short, irritated bursts. She inched higher, shoulder brushing Sloane’s, offering a sideways look that was half misery and half camaraderie.

Below them, Kacper stared up, water still clinging to his hair and collar, hoodie twisted in one hand like a surrendered flag. His face pinched in immediate, theatrical offense. “Excuse you?” he sputtered, gesturing vaguely at himself. “I’m not sure if I should be more insulted by being demoted to cheerleader or—” He cut himself off, eyes narrowing as the second half of her sentence finally caught up to him. A beat passed. Then another. His mouth twisted. “…No. No, it’s definitely the Heathcliff part.” He shook his head slowly, solemn as a man betrayed by literature itself. “That one hurts.”

Katryna snorted despite herself, the sound sharp and helpless and entirely unladylike, nearly losing her grip for half a second before catching herself again. Her laughter echoed thinly against the wood and open air, brittle but real, and for just a moment the ladder was not an enemy, the arena not a punishment, only the three of them suspended in sweat and effort and ridiculousness, held together by shared suffering and the fragile, foolish relief of not facing it alone.

Sloane climbed alongside her, pulling herself up with trembling muscles and pushing off with unsteady footing. When Kat laughed, she mirrored it briefly before quickly reaching out a hand to grab her arm when it looked like she might have lost balance. Sloane’s laugh shifted to something a little more nervous and thankful considering she wasn’t doing very well with that whole ‘don’t try and catch me thing.’ Her own foot slipped but thankfully her hold was sturdy enough she was able to situate herself before continuing to climb once again.

When she reached the top, Sloane straddled the top rung and gave herself a second to catch her breath before attempting the precarious downward descent. "Do you even know who Heathcliff is?" she called down to where Kacper watched and waited. It wasn’t until she how small he was standing below them that she noticed how high up she truly was. Her head immediately began spinning and her stomach flipped. She quickly straightened, gripping the log tight between her thighs and bracing her palms against the wood. Her eyes snapped shut as she tried to center herself with steady breaths in her nose and out her mouth. "Stupid heights," she muttered under her breath.

Katryna managed a crooked, breathless smile when Sloane’s hand shot out for her arm, fingers closing in with instinctive certainty. The contact steadied more than her balance; it anchored the tight, rattling place in her chest where panic liked to coil when her body betrayed her. She swallowed, nodding once in quiet thanks before forcing her attention back to the climb, the grain of the wood beneath her palms, the rough scrape against her knees, the slow, tidal burn in her shoulders that rose and fell with each breath. Still, she couldn’t help the soft huff of amusement that slipped out of her.

“That’s… really not very suicide-pact of you,” she murmured up at Sloane, voice thin with exertion but threaded with warmth. “I thought we agreed—dramatic, tragic, very inconvenient for Kacper.” The joke was gentle, deliberately clumsy, offered like a small bridge between them as she climbed another rung. Her arms trembled, lungs burning, but she kept moving, stubborn as frost creeping over glass, letting the rhythm of effort drown out the height, the fear, the way the world seemed to tilt too far away beneath her boots.

Below them, Kacper prowled the base of the ladder like a restless shadow, eyes never still, tracking every shift of their weight, every tremor in their hands. When Sloane called down, his snort cut through the air, sharp and unmistakably his. “Of course I know who Heathcliff is,” he called back, folding his arms only to unfold them again a second later, unable to settle. “Do I look illiterate?” A beat passed. He tilted his head, considering, then scowled faintly at the thought.

“Don’t answer that,” he added, voice dry, almost pleading beneath the sarcasm. “You’ve bruised my ego enough for one day.”

The smile he wore after that was light, practiced, an easy curve meant to pass for humor, but it didn’t quite reach his eyes. Those stayed sharp and vigilant, pale and intent, following the line of their bodies inching higher against the sky, his heartbeat ticking too loudly in his ears as if it were counting their steps for them.

Sloane waited on the top log, hands pressed tight against the splintering wood as she let Kat start her descent first. She thought it was best if they alternated lowering themselves, to limit them both falling at the same time… if possible. Once Kat was down a rung, Sloane slowly swung her leg to the other side, gripping the log tight as she stretched and swung her foot until the tip of her toes found the next step down.

She couldn’t help but snort at Kacper’s comment, which almost made her lose her balance, but thankfully her hold was secure enough that she didn’t fall. She rested her chin against the wood for a second to calm her racing heart and catch her breath. "Brooding, dark… grumpy. I don’t see the issue," Sloane called back down to him but didn’t risk sparing him a glance. One look down had made her head spin, the last thing she needed was to get dizzy. No amount of dangerous saves could make that fall less deadly.

The remaining descent was slow and paced. Sloane paused while Kat lowered herself another step and then she followed. She was too short to lower herself with confidence, having to loosen her hold and extend a leg beyond her comfort to find the next level. More than once she slipped and more than once she swore that was it. Her arms were trembling, existing somewhere between numb and burning. It grew more difficult to get a secure hold with every rung. By some miracle of persistence or perseverance she made it two logs from the bottom, the fatal step where she fell on her first attempt.

She was far slower on those last two rungs, like she didn’t trust them not to betray her when she was in the home stretch. But standing on the last log, five or so feet above the ground, Sloane was too relieved to be so close to finishing that she didn’t care about grace. She half slipped, half jumped backwards, landing with a thud that stirred up the sand and dirt around her. She teetered there for a second or two before her momentum tipped her backwards and she fell on her butt with a soft oof. Rather than hurry to her feet, Sloane just laid back, letting gravity have her victory. She draped one of her arms over her eyes to block out the sun and the looming presence of the ladder overhead. Her chest heaved as she struggled to draw in enough air, while dust and grit clung to her sweat dampened skin.

Katryna descended like a prayer whispered through clenched teeth, slow, deliberate, threaded with quiet curses that slipped free each time the ladder shifted beneath her weight. Her hands burned; her arms trembled with the thin, reedy fatigue that lived somewhere between pain and surrender. Every rung felt carved from doubt. Still, she kept one shoulder angled toward Sloane, one eye always flicking upward or down, gauging distance, timing her movements so they would never be vulnerable at the same moment. When Sloane’s foot slipped, Kat’s breath caught sharp in her chest, and her fingers flew out on instinct, brushing fabric, steadying where she could.

“Damnit, this thing is cursed,” she muttered under her breath at one point, voice thin with strain, then softer, almost embarrassed by her own fear.

Step by step, splinter by splinter, they traded gravity for stubbornness. Kat’s lungs burned like paper touched by flame, but she would not rush, would not leave Sloane alone in the worst stretch of it. When Sloane finally dropped the last few feet, and landed in the dirt with the wind knocked from her, Katryna scrambled the final rung with shaking legs and hit the ground moments later, knees buckling as relief rushed through her too fast to be graceful. She turned at once, dropping to one knee beside Sloane, breathless, sweat-streaked, eyes bright with the fragile disbelief of survival.

Waiting for them at the bottom, Kacper had watched the descent like a man counting heartbeats instead of seconds, muscles coiled tight as wire, jaw set hard enough to ache. Only when both their feet were on the ground did he finally exhale, slow and controlled, as if he’d been holding his breath since they started down. He stepped closer, eyes flicking once over Sloane’s sprawled form to make sure she was truly intact before his mouth curved into something like a smirk.

“For the record,” he said dryly, voice pitched just loud enough to reach her beneath her arm, “Heathcliff is terrible.” He gestured vaguely with one hand, as though dismissing the entire literary canon. “Moody, obsessive, emotionally constipated. Absolute disaster of a man.” A beat. Then, softer, more thoughtful than he probably meant to be, “You can do better than that.”

Katryna snorted despite herself, scrubbing a dirty hand over her face, exhaustion finally winning its small, private war as she settled onto the ground beside Sloane.

Sloane slid her arm back, squinting her eyes while using her forearm and hand to block the sunlight that haloed Kacper as he spoke to her. She couldn’t help but laugh at his assessment of Heathcliff. Of course she didn’t know him very well, but he wasn’t saying he wasn’t Heathcliff, just that Heathcliff was a horrid person. Her giggle was soft and frayed around the edges from exhaustion, but she couldn’t help but find his final comment even more poignant.

She gave herself a few more seconds to rest but not to the point that her body would no longer heed her commands. The last thing Sloane wanted was to waste away in that damn arena for the rest of the day. She slowly shifted her weight so she was propped up on one elbow while holding out her other hand toward Kacper expectantly. Her fingers wiggled in a silent request for assistance accompanied by a faint smirk that curled at the corner of her lips.

Once on her feet, Sloane’s hand that wasn’t still clutched in Kacper’s patted his chest in the same almost playfully demeaning way she had earlier. "Then I guess we’re both lucky that you don’t plan on dating me." Her own words struck something inside her that she couldn’t put into words, something off kilter that felt like… no. She shook her head and chalked up her own thoughts to exhaustion induced delirium. She buried it beneath a smile that was teasing and light before she slipped free.

Sloane turned her attention toward Kat, offering the girl her own hand in assistance. "Come on. One left… Then we can die."

Katryna accepted Sloane’s hand with the solemn gravity of someone rising from a battlefield rather than a sand-packed arena, her fingers cool and a little unsteady as they clasped. She let herself be pulled upright, boots scraping, knees protesting, lungs still burning like they’d been dusted with ash. An exaggerated, theatrical sigh spilled from her as her spine straightened at last, shoulders slumping forward as though the weight of the sky itself had settled there.

“If I fail this last time, just roll me into the water,” she muttered lightly, voice dry with fatigue. “And leave me there.”

"Just step over it. Who cares if you do it right?" Sloane shrugged her shoulders with a weak laugh that sounded more like a tired sigh.

Kat waited until Sloane turned away—until the other girl’s focus narrowed to the final obstacle, until her back was offered in trust and distraction, before her gaze flicked sideways.

Kacper had gone utterly still.

Not the relaxed, coiled stillness he wore when he was alert. Not the bored slouch of his usual sarcasm. This was different, rigid, arrested, as though someone had reached into his skull and replaced his thoughts with a complicated equation written in a language he’d never learned. His face was twisted into something almost comical, brows knit, mouth parted, eyes fixed on the space Sloane had just occupied—as if her words had struck him mid-stride and forgotten to let him land.

He opened his mouth. Katryna did not allow the universe to find out what would have come out of it. She brought her heel down on his toes with surgical precision.

Kacper’s entire body jolted. A sharp, strangled sound tried to escape him and was forcibly swallowed, turning into something between a hiss and a choke as he hopped once, then twice, one hand shooting out to the air like it might hold him upright through sheer audacity alone.

Katryna didn’t look angry. She didn’t look amused. She looked deadly calm, the expression of a sister who had threatened her brother many times in the past. One finger rose between them. A warning. A promise. Then she turned back toward Sloane, posture smoothing, expression rearranging itself into gentle exhaustion and harmless sincerity, as if she hadn’t just committed a quiet act of sibling warfare.

“I can go first,” she offered sweetly, stepping past Sloane with a slow, careful determination.

Behind them, Kacper stood in the sand, jaw clenched, dignity in ruins, nursing his foot and whatever fragile thought had just been violently interrupted, suffering in absolute, well-earned silence.

"Sure." Sloane stepped aside and rested her hands on her hips. As she waited, her gaze drifted back toward Kacper who looked pained, confused, or… constipated? Her lips parted and brows curled upwards curiously like she missed something. She thought to ask, but when neither sibling said anything, she snapped her mouth shut and shook her head slightly. Perhaps it was better if she didn’t know.

Once Kat finished, Sloane had decided with a resolute stubbornness that this course sucked and she could be lazy on the last obstacle. So rather than trying to build up the strength for a run or a jump, she simply walked up to the hurdle, lifted one leg over and then the other. Her feet landed in the shallow puddle in soggy victory. She stepped out and threw her head back with a triumphant and exhausted groan. "Gods, I might actually sleep tonight," she mused to herself more than anything. Maybe exhaustion had its benefits if it meant dreamless sleep, but she doubted she’d be so lucky.

Sloane didn’t dare let herself sit or rest. No, that was dangerous and she had already slipped up once. Instead she pulled on her last remaining well of energy and turned back toward the stands. As she passed Kacper, she looked up at him with a small smile, faintly mischievous around the edges. There was a second where she nearly let a quip slip free, but where a joke was so supposed to fill the silence, something more genuine and real escaped. "Thanks for the help." No sarcasm or hidden meaning, just a quiet appreciation for the assistance he didn’t owe her. The reality that she would have struggled through that all if she hadn’t ran into them that morning wasn’t lost on her. As someone who often faced adversity alone… the help meant more than she could put into words.

She continued onward, hardly noticing the water wicking from her clothes and hair as she walked. Sloane returned to their seats where her hoodie and coat were laying across one of the benches. She knew it was cold outside of the arena, but the thought of putting her sweatshirt back on while being overheated sounded horrible. Her cabin wasn’t too far away, so she could brave winter with one less layer… She hoped. Her desperation for a shower and desire to see Rocco would be enough to give her the final push to trudge through snow back to her cabin.

Katryna gathered what little strength remained in her legs and gave the final hurdle an honest, ragged attempt, arms pumping, breath tearing from her chest in thin ribbons, knees trembling like reeds in a current. For half a heartbeat it almost looked graceful. Then momentum betrayed her. She clipped the edge, pitched forward, and landed squarely in the shallow water with a defeated splash, sitting there for a stunned second like a drenched, deeply offended cat. Dark hair clung to her cheeks, water soaked through her clothes in cold, creeping fingers. She scowled at the pool as if it had personally insulted her lineage. Only when Sloane passed did Katryna sigh and drag herself upright, shoes squelching, shoulders sagging under the weight of exhaustion. She glanced at River as she dried off, lips pressing into a firm line before she looked away, begrudgingly thankful.

“Sleep is the one beast I can’t defeat,” she muttered hoarsely, trudging after her. “Same as this damned course.”

Kacper watched Sloane go with an expression that had lost most of its sharp edges, something quieter living there now, unguarded in a way he didn’t often allow. When she thanked him, the words seemed to land somewhere just behind his ribs, soft but deliberate. He answered her with a small, real smile, the kind that didn’t try to be clever about existing.

“Didn’t mind,” he said simply. “Really.” Then, a fraction more hesitant, like he was stepping onto uncertain ground without armor. “You still up for coming by one of our cabins later?” Behind him, Katryna trudged closer, scowling at the universe, while Kacper stood there in the humid warmth of the arena, watching Sloane walk away and hoping, quietly, that she wouldn’t say no.

Sloane slipped her arms through her coat and shifted the heavy fabric up onto her shoulders. She started zipping it up as she turned to face them both. "Coffee and Pandora’s box, right?" Her smile was small and weary, but resolute in that she had given her word and intended on following through. Although that didn’t mask the heaviness in her tone knowing what was likely to be divulged in the impending conversation: her connection to all of it, the campers who died, the campers who left… Liam. Her shoulders immediately slumped as a deep sigh fell from her lips. Rocco. "I can’t." Her voice was quiet and apologetic as she met Kacper’s expectant gaze. "This is the first time I’ve left Rocco alone and… I can’t do that to him twice in one day."

Kacper stared at her like she’d just announced the sky had decided to turn green out of spite. For a heartbeat he only blinked, slow and deliberate, rain-blue eyes narrowing as if he were recalibrating reality to account for this new, baffling information. Then his mouth twisted, disbelief bleeding into something dangerously close to offended concern.

“Did you hit your head when you fell earlier?” he asked flatly. “Do I need to go hunt down that healer again and make sure your brain isn’t scrambled?” A beat. Then the edge dulled, replaced by something lighter, easier, the familiar armor of casual warmth sliding back into place.

“Bring him with you,” he added, already shrugging one shoulder like the solution had been obvious all along. “I love dogs.” The words came unceremoniously, like stating the weather. No hesitation. No calculation. Just fact. He rocked back on his heels, hands slipping into his pockets, posture loose in that way that pretended nothing ever weighed much on him, even when it did.

“We’ll probably be at my cabin anyway,” he continued. “Kat’s is smaller. Mine’s right next to yours, and it’s bigger.” A pause, then a crooked smirk. “Clearly superior real estate.”

Sloane laughed softly and shook her head at Kacper’s incredulity. She drew in a deep breath and draped her hoodie over her shoulder before crossing her arms. "Forgive me for having manners and not wanting to be one of those annoying people who takes their dog everywhere." She paused for a second as her head tilted to the side a bit in defeat. "Ok, well I already do that. But I wouldn’t take him to someone’s cabin without their permission. Especially when they have cats." Her brows tugged together and she held up an index finger. "Not that it matters because Rocco is a proper gentleman and wouldn’t hurt a fly."

She shook her head once again, but that time it was because of her own ramblings and her concerns around what was proper and well mannered. You could take the girl out of the debutant but not the debutant out of the girl she supposed. Sloane’s gaze drifted over to Kat who still seemed to be huffing in her frustration before looking back up into Kacper’s eyes and seeing his devious smirk. Superior real estate. She hummed quietly with raised brows. She wasn’t a mind reader, but… "Yours must obviously have the better view of the lake," she mused with a smile that was laced with feigned innocence and mischievousness.

"I need to shower… and give Rocco like a million apologies," She took a few steps toward the exit, letting the wait of her refusal sit with him for a second or two. "But..." Sloane dragged out the word as she slowly turned around, continuing to walk backwards as she addressed him one final time. "I guess I can make an appearance." Her smile grew almost imperceivably, lingering in playfulness before setting in something softer, warmer, and more genuine. Then, before the heat that rose from her chest could reach her face, she spun back around and disappeared out the exit without another word.

Kacper didn’t realize he’d stopped moving until she was already halfway to the exit. He stood there, hoodie looped uselessly over one arm, watching the space Sloane had just occupied like it might echo back if he stared long enough. There was a softness in his expression that he would have denied under oath, something unfurled and unguarded, caught mid-bloom before he could shove it back into its usual box. Confusion threaded through it, too. Not the irritated kind he wore so easily, but the quieter sort, the kind that came when something slipped past his defenses without asking permission. Coffee and Pandora’s box. A dog named Rocco. An almost-promise left hanging in the air like a held breath.

Then pain sparked up his ankle. He hissed sharply and jerked his foot back, scowling down at his sister. “Jesus, woman—stop that!”

Katryna looked entirely unrepentant. She straightened, pointed a warning finger at his chest, eyes narrowed with feral sibling authority. “Don’t you dare make a move on her right now,” she said, low and deadly. “We just met her. She’s going to be my friend, my friend, before she’s whatever nonsense you’re already spiraling toward.”

Kacper snorted, the moment snapping, the softness folding back into sarcasm like it had never existed. He rolled his eyes skyward, rubbing at his ankle with exaggerated suffering. “I’ll do whatever I please,” he replied, utterly unapologetic.

Kat scoffed, but there was a smile tugging at the corner of her mouth despite herself, satisfied, watchful, protective in a way only a twin could be.



interactions ....|.... none ............... mentions ....|.... tapeesa, nate, blair, colton, iliana, rae, zelia & river ............... collabs ....|.... @Mjolnir

<Snipped quote by Sleepy Tani>

FWIW, IBB is fine, it's just Imgur to be avoided, otherwise I get this instead of seeing what you actually hosted:


Fun!


No, not fun 😅 thank you for letting me know!

*sighs*



🤣🤣 I love this! I’ll be re-watching Friends for the 100th time after I run my errands today because of you. Was too brain dead last night to mention it, but Hayden was a fun read! 😊
I couldn't sleep, so... yeah, sorry if there's any typos sprinkled in there. I can only re-read my stuff so many times before the urge to delete it all and start over wins. If there's any formatting issues, let me know, please! First time using the image hosting on the site instead of imgur or ibb, and I am never confident in my ability to not screw something simple up. 😅


#8e2d35 ....|..... outfit .....|..... new york city - the mark > the marquee skydeck

The lobby of The Mark breathed money the way old cathedrals breathed incense, quietly, thoroughly, as if the air itself had been trained to move with discretion. Charles crossed its marble floor with the same unhurried composure he carried into boardrooms and courtrooms, his coat draped perfectly over one arm, his expression softened into something that suggested fatigue rather than calculation. Rebecca Harmon moved a step ahead of him, tablet in hand, already halfway through the choreography of arrival; confirming names, verifying floor access, cross-checking the private elevator schedule.

Jonah lingered close to Charles’s other side, a dark, solid presence, his gaze tracking reflections in polished brass and glass as if threat might manifest in the decor itself. Behind them trailed Mara Kessler, her pace slower, her attention betraying her, eyes lifting to the chandeliers, the vaulted arches, the hushed luxury that seemed to press down gently on her shoulders like a hand reminding her where she stood in the world.

Jonah began cataloguing dangers before they reached the front desk. Too many entrances. Too many blind corners. Staff turnover during holiday week. Deliveries coming in all hours for the party that would happen in the lobby this evening, not that they’d be attending. He set in then about the actual party they'd be going to later, about all of those risks and threats and... really, it was nothing Charles hadn't heard a thousand times before. He spoke low, clipped, every sentence shaped like a risk assessment. Charles listened the way he always did, head slightly inclined, eyes thoughtful, as though each concern were a bead being added carefully to a rosary. When Jonah finished, Charles answered without breaking stride, voice mild, almost affectionate. “The risk isn’t outweighed by the gain,” he said, “It’s not like this will be the sketchiest party we’ve ever attended,” A pause, gentle in its kindness. “I’ll be fine.”

Jonah did not argue. He rarely did when Charles spoke that way. Mara caught a fragment of the exchange and looked between them, uncertain, as though she had glimpsed machinry behind a velvet curtain and wasn’t sure whether to be impressed or afraid of how efficiently it functioned.

The attendant recognized Charles immediately, not by name alone, but by the particular stillness that followed him; the kind that money and certainty conspire to create. Keys were unnecessary, access was digital, silent, invisible. Rebecca confirmed the booking aloud, penthouse suite, six bathrooms, library lounge, dining room set for twelve, two powder rooms, private rooftop terrace, panoramic views over Central Park and the city skyline, perched discreetly on the sixteenth floor as though altitude itself were a courtesy extended only to those who could afford it. Jonah insisted on taking point upstairs, vanishing into the private elevator first to sweep the space. The rest of them waited in the hushed corridor, the hotel’s carpets swallowing sound. It was there, with the city muted behind glass and velvet, that Rebecca finally allowed her professional mask to loosen.

“I think I’ll stay in tonight,” she said quietly to Charles, her voice gentler than it ever was in meetings. “I want a bath. And the view. It’ll be the only chance I get to actually rest while we’re in New York.” She did not apologize for the request. She had earned the right not to. Charles turned to her, studying her face with something that bordered on fondness, but was closer to ownership softened into affection. “Whatever makes you happy, darling,” he replied, the endearment delivered lightly, as though it were an idle kindness rather than a carefully placed anchor. The elevator chimed. Jonah reappeared, nodding once. Clear.

The penthouse opened around them like a held breath finally released. Light poured in through towering windows, late afternoon gold slipping across pale wood floors and settling into the soft geometry of white couches and low marble tables. The ceilings arched high above, ribbed with subtle beams that drew the eye upward before guiding it gently back down into the room’s quiet opulence. Rugs lay like deliberate clouds beneath their feet, textured and soundless. To one side, the library lounge unfolded in hushed elegance, dark shelves, leather chairs, the promise of silence arranged into furniture. Beyond it waited the dining room, long and ceremonial, a table set for twelve like a stage awaiting its actors. Everything was elegance and space and expensive calm, a kind of luxury that did not beg to be admired because it assumed it would be.

Charles moved through it without pause, already shedding the space the way one shed a coat, heading for one of the larger bedrooms as if drawn by a private gravity. Inside, the room was cool and immense, dressed in pale linens and glass and steel softened into comfort. He set his bag at the foot of the bed, his gaze drifting immediately, not to the view, not to the art, but to the gray chair positioned in the corner, its modern lines too sharp, its presence too deliberate. Something in his expression tightened infinitesimally. His phone rang then, a clean, precise sound cutting through the quiet. Charles reached for it without hurry, his face already smoothing back into its habitual calm, as though the room itself had never dared to displease him at all.

Charles closed the bedroom door, the sound barely more than a suggestion, and let the phone finish its third vibration before answering. The room still smelled faintly of new linen and expensive polish, the kind of cleanliness that felt curated rather than achieved. He stood near the foot of the bed, one hand in his pocket, the other lifting the phone as though he knew the conversation about to unfold would either be boring, or amusing.

“Mitchell,” he said, softly, warmly. “I regret to inform you that I am not in a good place to chat at the moment. We’ve only just arrived, and the schedule is… unforgiving.” He began to walk as he spoke, slow and deliberate, tracing the perimeter of the room as though mapping it into familiarity. “If I didn’t know any better,” he added lightly, “I’d say you were stalking me.”

Mitchell laughed on the other end, the sound easy and unguarded. “No,” he said, “Rebecca forwarded me your itinerary.” That earned a faint curve of amusement from Charles, something that warmed his eyes without ever touching the rest of his face. He paused near the window, fingers brushing the sheer curtain as the city rose beyond it in steel and glass and long arterial lines of light. “Very well,” Charles replied. “In that case, why don’t you and Rebecca put your delightfully useful brains together and schedule an actual time for a proper conversation? I’ll even make it interesting. We’ll be here for a few weeks while I steamroll some business matters, and the penthouse is indecently spacious. You could join us. Think of it as a change of scenery.” He imagined Mitchell blinking at the offer, already weighing obligations like stones in his pockets.

There was a pause, then the doctor’s voice softened. “My wife’s due any day now. You know that.” The word hung in the air between them, round and heavy. Charles’s expression did not change, though his gaze slid from the window to the pale carpet, as if the concept had dropped somewhere near his feet and failed to interest him. “Ah,” he murmured, politely. Mitchell hesitated, then pressed on, emboldened by familiarity. “You know, Charles, maybe it’s time you thought about settling down yourself. There’s a life outside of boardrooms and press conferences. You might even enjoy it.” Charles turned fully toward the window then, the city unfurling below him in endless ambition, lights threading themselves into patterns too intricate to be accidental.

He hummed, low and thoughtful, watching traffic coil around Central Park like a living diagram. The sound lingered long enough for Mitchell to grow uncertain. “Charles?” the doctor asked. “Are you still there?” Charles smiled, a private, nearly tender thing, reflected faintly in the glass. “Yes,” he said. “I was simply entertaining the idea. For a moment.” He shifted his weight, studying his own reflection layered over the skyline. “Unfortunately, I haven’t yet met a man or a woman who quite meets my standards.” The admission was delivered gently, as though it were an aesthetic preference rather than a sharp truth.

Mitchell snorted. “You really ought to look into actual therapy someday,” he said. “Instead of treating me like I have a degree in psychology rather than philosophy.” Charles laughed then, genuinely, the sound light and pleasant and carefully unburdened by anything sharp. He wanted to tell the other man that both degrees were useless in their own measure, instead he crossed the room again, fingers trailing over the back of the offending gray chair as though dismissing it with touch alone. “Call me when an appointment is scheduled,” he said in lieu of an actual response, “or when your wife decides to introduce the twins to the world. We’ll celebrate properly when I’m home.” There was warmth in his voice, enough to be convincing, enough to be remembered.

They said their goodbyes, a ritual as practiced as any handshake. Charles ended the call and let his hand fall to his side, the room rushing back into him in quiet layers. Outside, the city continued its patient glittering, a thousand lives in motion, each believing itself to be unscripted. He stood there for a moment longer, listening to nothing at all, before slipping the phone into his pocket and turning back to the business of inhabiting the space.

He adjusted his cuffs, smoothed the front of his button down shirt, and turned toward the door, already shedding the private shape of the conversation he had just finished indulgnig. As he crossed the threshold, his voice carried ahead of him, warm and unhurried. “Rebecca, could you have room service sent up for us? Whatever they recommend when they’re trying to impress people who won’t be impressed.” He paused, glancing back once at the bedroom as though it had committed a minor personal offense. “And I did ask that the obligatory cuck chair be removed prior to check-in. The gray one. I would appreciate it if someone could come and remove it.”

Somewhere deeper in the suite, Jonah let out a laugh, the sound loose and unguarded, echoing faintly from the direction of the complimentary bar. Rebecca, unseen but vividly present in her exhale, sighed with the long-suffering precision of a woman whose competence was constantly being tested by other people’s incompetence. Charles caught the murmur that followed, something about instructions, something about expensive hotels employing people who could not read, and smiled faintly to himself. The sound of her fingers already moving across her tablet followed, brisk and efficient, a small storm of order forming in his wake. He continued forward, steps quiet against the pale floors, the vastness of the penthouse opening again around him.

Mara had claimed one of the white couches, curled into its corner as though it were a cloud shaped specifically for her indecision. The city’s gold light brushed her hair, her face softened by the glow of her phone as small electronic chirps and hollow taps filled the space between distant sirens and Jonah’s fading amusement. Charles drifted closer, curiosity unforced but sincere, and tilted his head to observe the tiny, frantic bird trying to avoid colliding repeatedly with pixelated obstacles. “That sounds prehistoric,” he remarked with a touch of humor. She startled, then laughed, embarrassed, and held the phone out to him. “It’s stupid, I have a friend that recreated the game,” she said, “but it’s addictive. You just tap to keep it in the air. Like this, no, slower, too much and you’ll kill the bird.”

He sat beside her, the couch yielding like a polite concession, their shoulders not quite touching. The phone felt absurdly small in his hand, it looked old, chipped at the corner, and he made a mental note to have Rebecca order her a new one. He tried once, failed immediately, and allowed himself the mild performance of surprise. Mara grinned, explaining again with earnest patience. Somewhere behind them, the suite waited for food, for staff, for rearrangement, for whatever shape the evening intended to take before the party later. For the moment, Charles allowed himself the narrow pleasure of learning something useless, of watching a digital creature fall and rise again at the mercy of a single, measured touch.


Jonah found him near the edge of the Skydeck, where the music softened just enough to become a pulse instead of an assault, and placed his second old fashioned of the evening into his hand with the quiet efficiency of a ritual already rehearsed. Charles accepted it with a nod, the amber liquid catching the fractured lights like something divine, gold folding into gold. He had checked his coat at the door, a practical decision, he thought, given the heat blooming from the crush of bodies and the industry of liquor, and how the burgundy of his Brioni suit had drank in the color of the room, dark and deliberate, its lines softened only by the black silk of his unbuttoned collar, it was better to keep such expensive fabrics tucked away. He let himself be still for a moment, listening to the architecture of sound assemble and collapse again, drink cooling his palm like a small, civilized anchor.

He was usually adept at these things, these curated storms of music and crowd. He knew how to step into conversations the way one stepped into elevators, smooth and inevitable, knew how to collect names, faces, promises, future leverage. Tonight, however, the machinery inside him idled. The crowd surged and loosened in luminous tides, laughter stitching itself into the bassline, sequins and sweat and perfume blurring into a single, indulgent sense of surrounding, and Charles found himself simply watching it happen, as if it were art rather than opportunity. The pleasure was strange in its purity, unproductive, unmonetized, unnecessary. He suspected this was what people meant when they spoke about living in the moment, a phrase he had always filed under sentimental exaggerations.

Jonah lingered nearby, immovable as a well-dressed shadow, scanning the crowd discreetly while pretending not to enjoy the music. Charles felt his presence the way one felt gravity; constant, reassuring, faintly restrictive. He could, at any time, lift his glass, turn, and begin the gentle work of being recognized, of trading smiles for futures and futures for control, but something in him resisted the pull. He watched the dance floor ignite when a familiar track surged through the speakers, something from Bobby Rifo most likely, the crowd answering it like a single organism. For a moment he imagined stepping into that light without purpose, without choreography, without agenda. The thought was both amusing and faintly destabilizing

He lifted the glass to his lips, the bitters blooming sharp and sweet across his tongue, and allowed himself to believe, briefly, that the night was still wide, unclaimed, undecided. There would be time later for conversations shaped like contracts, for alliances dressed as flirtation, for the careful exchange of power disguised as pleasure. For now, he remained where he was, letting the music fill the air around him, letting the heat of other lives press close without asking anything in return. One more song, he decided, indulgently, and then he would become himself again.



interactions ....|.... npcs - jonah, rebecca, mara, mitchell............... mentions ....|.... none ............... collabs ....|.... none


#5c83a7 ....|..... outfit .....|..... near the strawberry fields


The son of Apollo had pointed him toward the bathroom with the gentle authority of someone used to shepherding the half-dead back into the world, and Beckett had gone without argument. The infirmary still felt too fragile, too full of soft voices and bandages and memories that scraped raw when he looked at them too long. In the narrow tiled room, he stripped the rest of the wrappings from his torso with slow, methodical movements, the adhesive tugging at skin that was already tender. He didn’t study the new scars. He didn’t trace them or measure them or give them names the way some soldiers did.

They were just more lines in a map that had long ago stopped being blank. He pulled the orange sweatshirt over his head instead, thick cotton swallowing him up, the Camp Half-Blood logo stitched over his chest like a quiet claim. It felt strange— soft, clean, unearned. He flexed his shoulders once, testing the way fabric moved where bandages had been and where new scars remained, then turned toward the sink.

Cold water shocked his hands, his wrists, his face. He splashed it up hard, letting it run down his cheeks and into the hollow at his throat, grounding himself in the sharp honesty of it. For a second it almost worked. The fog receded, the room steadied, the low hum in his skull softened to something manageable. He breathed in through his nose, out through his mouth, like he’d been taught long before monsters had replaced mortars. Droplets clung to his lashes, slid down the bridge of his nose, darkened the collar of his borrowed sweatshirt. When he finally looked up, it was into his own eyes, too pale, too tired, carrying the reflection of things they didn’t want to remember.

The dreams lingered there, heavy as silt. The ocean rising like a cathedral, waves taller than houses, rocking him in their violence while he felt inexplicably safe. The ship buried beneath the earth, heat pressing in from all sides, the air too thick to swallow. The woman’s voice shaking stone loose from the ceiling, calling his name like a promise or a sentence. Then the jungle again. Always the jungle. Rain needling into his skin, gunfire tearing the world into jagged pieces, the familiar certainty that the ground would either hold him or open and take him. Even awake, the weight of it pressed along the edges of his thoughts, an invisible hand at the back of his neck reminding him how easy it was to fall through the cracks between moments.

But they were alive. The thought cut clean and bright through the murk. Violet, stubborn and passionate and still standing. Lux, electric, defiant, breathing. Himself, improbably still tethered to this side of things. It should have been enough. It was enough, logically, mathematically, the way survival always tried to be enough. Violet was getting the last of her healing now; he’d seen her breathing easier, color creeping back into her face. Someone had told him he was free to explore camp if he wanted, to get some air, to see where he’d landed. The words had floated past him like leaves on water. Explore. Rest. Recover. All fine ideas. None of them stuck.

What stuck was the shape of Lux’s name in his mouth. The space she’d left behind when she walked out of the infirmary, sharp as a pulled tooth. His reflection frowned back at him, mouth tugging down, lines deepening around eyes that had seen too much to be surprised by this new kind of ache. It annoyed him, how immediate it was, how physical, how unearned. He didn’t like wanting things he couldn’t explain. He didn’t like the way his chest tightened when he thought of her turning away, of words he hadn’t said, of things he didn’t understand but already feared losing.

Beckett pushed away from the sink, palms leaving faint wet prints on the porcelain. The room tilted for half a heartbeat, then steadied. He rolled his shoulders again, testing the weight of his body, the honesty of gravity. Alive. All of them alive. That was the victory. Still, his feet carried him toward the door without asking permission from the rest of him. Out of the bathroom, back into the light and the low murmur of camp, following a quiet, insistent pull that had nothing to do with orders or strategy or sense, only the need to find her again, to see with his own eyes that she was still real, still breathing, still somewhere in this strange new world they’d survived into.

He’d barely had time to register the corridor beyond the infirmary, the smooth stretch of polished wood beneath his feet, the low golden light humming softly against white walls, the distant murmur of voices threading through open doorways, before something small and solid collided with him at full speed. The impact struck his shins with a dull thump, more startling than painful, but sharp enough to rip him fully out of the fog he’d been drifting through since waking. His body reacted before his thoughts could catch up, weight shifting back, breath hitching hard as instinct flared hot and ugly in his chest, mistaking the sudden contact for danger, for teeth, for claws, for another night of blood and rain and screaming. His heart stuttered once, violently, ribs tightening around it like a cage, and he dropped his gaze immediately, already bracing for something monstrous.

Instead, there was a child at his feet.

Small in a way that made Beckett’s chest ache outright, too small for this place, for its monsters and and blood-slick borders. All narrow limbs and sharp little knees, a mop of black curls exploding in every direction like he’d lost a fight with a thundercloud, bright hazel eyes blazing upward with ferocious indignation. A crooked pink bandage was stuck across one cheek like a badge of honor, and clutched in his fist was a lollipop still wrapped in crinkled plastic, the stick jutting out between his fingers like a fragile, ridiculous weapon. The sight of him broke something in Beckett’s head, not violently, but wrongfully, as if the world had misfiled its paperwork. Children did not belong in places like this. Not in halls that still smelled faintly of antiseptic and old blood. Not in camps ringed by monsters. Not anywhere near memories like his.

He blinked once. Then again. The image did not change. “Uh—” The sound slipped out of him, useless and clumsy, his voice too rough for a hallway that held something so small and innocent. He bent slightly, slow and careful, every movement deliberate as if the boy might shatter if startled. “Are you okay?” he asked, offering his hand without thinking, palm open and steady, scarred and rough and far too large beside the child’s thin wrist.

The boy scoffed.

It was an exaggerated sound, sharp and theatrical, clearly borrowed from someone older, someone who knew how to make contempt sting properly. He slapped Beckett’s hand away with surprising force and scrambled upright, wobbling only briefly before catching his balance, cheeks flushing with embarrassment that immediately disguised itself as fury. He jabbed a finger into Beckett’s leg like an accusation that deserved a witness. “Watch where you’re going!” he snapped, voice high and fierce, trembling just slightly at the edges like anger hadn’t fully decided whether it wanted to be fear instead.

Beckett’s brows climbed toward his hairline despite himself, startled amusement tugging at his mouth. Something warm and unfamiliar loosened in his chest, easing the tight coil there just enough to let him breathe. “Sorry,” he said automatically, the word worn smooth by years of surviving people as much as war, his voice hoarse and scraped raw by nights that refused to stay buried. “I’m still pretty tired. Didn’t see you there.”

The boy deflated a fraction.

Not much, but enough that Beckett noticed. His shoulders drooped, sharp edges softening, anger draining out of him like air from a balloon. He glanced away, scuffing the toe of his shoe against the floor, then back again, jaw tightening as if bracing himself for something unpleasant. “I’m not actually mad,” he muttered after a pause. “I just—” He wrinkled his nose. “My sister says when someone’s nice you’re supposed to say sorry. So… I guess… sorry.” The word came out reluctant, chewed thin like candy he hadn’t decided whether he hated or loved.

Something in Beckett eased. Not enough to undo the ache in his bones, not enough to quiet the ghost-weight of the jungle or the thunder of memory, but enough that his lungs didn’t feel so tight around every breath. He smiled, really smiled, crooked and tired and unguarded, something human slipping through the cracks of the soldier he usually wore like armor. “Your sister sounds pretty smart.”

The boy brightened instantly, nodding hard so his curls bounced wildly, pride shining through him like sunlight through storm clouds. “Faye’s the best,” he declared. “She’s teaching me how to fight like her.” The words landed heavier than they should have. For a heartbeat Beckett saw rifles instead of lollipops. Boys with hands too small for triggers. Childhood traded for survival.

He buried it. Forced it down where it lived, behind his ribs, sealed behind bone and discipline. “That’s… pretty cool,” he said instead, voice steady, gentle. And the boy beamed, utterly unaware of the quiet war he’d brushed against, like a pebble skipping across dark water, never knowing how deep it truly was.

Beckett hesitated only a moment before straightening fully, the boy still squaring up to him like a sparrow convinced it could intimidate a wolf. He rubbed a hand over the back of his neck, fingers catching briefly in damp hair that still smelled faintly of antiseptic and rain, then offered a small, careful smile. It felt strange, introducing himself to someone whose life was still measured in school days and scraped knees instead of body counts and borders crossed in blood. His voice came out low and uneven, worn thin by too many sleepless nights and too many almost-deaths. "I’m Beckett," he said quietly, as if loudness itself might bruise the hallway. "Guess I should start with that." He gestured vaguely to the infirmary doors behind him, to the lingering smell of ambrosia and gauze and fear. "I’m… new here."

The boy’s expression shifted instantly, smugness blooming across his face like a secret he’d been waiting to unveil. His chin lifted, shoulders squaring again with renewed purpose. "I know," he announced brightly, as if Beckett had just confirmed something obvious instead of revealing anything meaningful at all.

Beckett blinked, surprised despite himself, one brow inching upward as curiosity pried gently at the edges of his exhaustion. "You do?" he asked, tone soft with disbelief. "How?"

The boy rocked back on his heels, pride practically vibrating through him. "I was spying," he said, lowering his voice dramatically even though the hall was empty. "They brought you in last night. All three of you. You were bleeding everywhere." His hands fluttered outward in a messy approximation of chaos before settling again around the lollipop stick. "My sister Faye helped carry you. She’s really strong. She told me to stay in bed but I woke up anyway when everyone started yelling and running around."

Something warm loosened in Beckett’s chest at that, quiet and unfamiliar. He let out a soft breath that almost became a laugh, the sound rusty from disuse but real. The boy clearly loved his sister a lot. "Figures," he murmured. "Sounds like everyone here is pretty nice." His gaze flicked to the pink bandage on the boy’s cheek, concern slipping back into place easily, instinctively. "So what about you?" he asked gently. "That looks like it hurt."

The boy scowled again, but this time it was thin and half-hearted, embarrassment creeping up his neck in red splotches. "My brother punched me," he admitted, voice dropping. "But it’s okay. Faye yelled at him. Like, a lot." He demonstrated with wild hand gestures, clearly satisfied with the outcome.

Beckett huffed out a quiet laugh, shaking his head. "Sounds like justice," he said, warmth threading through the words before he tilted his head slightly. "You were in a hurry when you ran into me though. Where’re you headed?"

The boy’s bravado cracked instantly. He looked down at his shoes, shoulders curling inward, thumb rubbing nervously against the lollipop wrapper. "I was gonna give this to Harper," he muttered. "Daphne gave it to me. Harper’s in the strawberry fields. I thought… anyways, maybe she’d think it was cool if I brought you." He glanced up suddenly, eyes bright again, hope flaring. "You look kinda scary. In a cool way, I bet she’d think I was super cool for even talking to you." He straightened, grinning up at him. "You wanna come with me? I can show you around too, I guess."

Beckett laughed then, really laughed, soft but genuine, the sound easing something tight behind his ribs. The idea of being anyone’s measure of “cool” felt absurd, but the earnestness in the boy’s face tugged at him all the same. He nodded once, slow and certain. "Yeah," he said. "I’d like that."

Beckett followed the boy out of the infirmary with the careful, stiff gait of someone whose body had not yet decided whether it belonged to him again. The door creaked shut behind them, cutting off the clean sting of antiseptic and the low murmur of healers, and for a moment he simply stood there on the wide front steps of the wrap around porch, blotted stillness pressed between heartbeats. He hadn’t been sure what to expect beyond those doors, more barricades, more fear, more weapons hidden in trembling hands, but the world that opened before him was nothing like the one he’d been bracing for.

Sunlight spilled freely across green hills and soft pathways, warm and generous, gilding everything it touched. Laughter drifted through the air like birdsong. Somewhere down the slope, a group of kids were clustered together, shoulders bumping as they walked, one of them nearly doubled over with laughter while another tried and failed to look stern. Farther along the path, two boys approached, one with his arm slung heavily over the other’s shoulders, limping with exaggerated misery while his friend lectured him in animated bursts, hands slicing the air as if scolding alone might knit bone back together. The sound of it all, voices, footsteps, careless joy, hit Beckett harder than any monster ever had.

It was peaceful. Obscenely so. Bright and careless and alive. After weeks of sleeping in mud and rain, after counting heartbeats between lightning strikes and measuring distance in blood and breath, the sight of it made something in his chest loosen in a way that almost hurt. This wasn’t a battlefield. This wasn’t a hiding place. It was a home, one built not out of stone walls and barbed wire, but out of ordinary, fragile moments strung together into something resilient. He stepped forward slowly, boots scuffing the pale gravel path, feeling the strap across his back rub unpleasantly against the fresh scars beneath his sweatshirt. He ignored it, as he ignored most pain, and let his gaze wander instead, over the slope where kids were gathered in loud knots of conversation, over the shimmer of water farther down the valley, over the low, colorful shapes of cabins scattered like storybook houses across the green.

They started walking, the boy a step ahead of him, small fingers occasionally brushing Beckett’s hand as if making sure he was still there. Beckett watched him for a few seconds, his bouncing curls, the determined set of his shoulders, before speaking, voice low and rough-edged with disuse. "Hey," he said gently, the word almost swallowed by the open air. "I never caught your name."

The boy looked up at him as they walked, eyes bright as sunlight on glass. "Elliot," he announced proudly, as if the name itself were a medal. And then, without pause or invitation, he launched into a ramble so earnest it bordered on breathless, about the cabins and the food and the pegasi and how sometimes the nymphs stole fries off your plate if you weren’t paying attention, and how the lake was cold but only at first, and how his sister said camp was the only place you could be weird and dangerous and normal all at the same time. Beckett listened, half-dazed, eyes lifting to the valley below as it opened wider before them. Kids splashed at the edge of the lake, shrieking with laughter. A group trained nearby, wooden weapons clacking together in steady rhythm. Others lounged outside their cabins, sun-warmed and careless, trading snacks and stories like tomorrow was guaranteed.

It struck him then, quietly, irrevocably, that this place wasn’t just shelter. It was proof. Proof that the world could be something other than running and killing and surviving. Proof that children could grow up without learning the sound of bones breaking before they learned how to whistle. His chest tightened with the strange, aching fullness of it, a feeling too big and too gentle to have a name.

Elliot tugged suddenly at his hand, small fingers insistent, nearly pulling him off balance. "There!" he said, pointing hard toward the stretch of land where neat rows of green rolled into the distance under the sun. "The strawberry fields. Harper’s there— c’mon!"

Beckett let himself be pulled along, his long stride adjusting to the boy’s shorter steps, their hands fitting together more naturally than he would have expected. He even found himself smiling, a small, crooked thing he didn’t quite recognize as his own. The scent of warm earth and crushed leaves rose around them as they descended the path, the air sweet and alive with summer. And then he saw her.

Lux stood at the edge of the strawberry fields, sunlight woven into her hair like fine thread. A small girl balanced on her toes in front of her, carefully setting a crooked crown of wildflowers atop Lux’s head, tongue peeking out in concentration. Lux laughed, soft and unguarded, something bright and real, and in that moment she looked untouched by storms or blood or lightning. Just a girl in a field, smiling like the world had never tried to take her apart. The sight of it hit him like a quiet blow to the chest, stealing breath he hadn’t known he was holding.

Elliot waved wildly, tugging his hand again with renewed urgency. "Harper!" he called at the top of his lungs, already half-running, half-dragging Beckett with him. Beckett followed, heart thudding strangely hard against his ribs, eyes fixed on the blonde girl in the distance like she was the only solid thing in a world that had just begun, impossibly, to feel safe.



interactions ....|.... elliot ............... mentions ....|.... lux, violet, faye, & daphne ............... collabs ....|.... none
█ Charles Aponte

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█ ███ ██ █ S U M M A R Y █ ██ ███ █

CHARLES MATTEO APONTE
AGE 35
GENDER Male
ETHNICITY/RACE Caucasian
MARTIAL STATUS Single
SEXUALITY Bisexual
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Charles Matteo Aponte was born between countries and temperaments, into a marriage that seemed, even in retrospect, improbably balanced. His mother, Elena Croft, was an American gifted cellist whose emotions lived close to the surface, who believed music was a moral language, a way of teaching the heart how to behave. His father, Lucien Aponte, was Swiss, a computer engineer devoted to systems, elegant logic, and the quiet comfort of precision. They met in Zurich while Elena studied abroad, two people speaking different dialects of devotion; hers loud and luminous, his restrained and exacting. Their love never burned theatrically, but it endured, and when Charles was born, they raised him carefully between New England summers filled with salt air and song, and Zurich winters shaped by glassy streets and disciplined silence.

From his mother he learned how to listen for feeling beneath words, how sorrow could be disguised as humor, how admiration could be coaxed from strangers with the right cadence of voice. From his father he learned that order was power, that patience could outlast anger, that the most durable control was the kind no one noticed being exercised. Even as a child, Charles understood instinctively which parent to resemble at any given moment. He cried easily when his mother watched, clung to her skirts, absorbed her tenderness, but with his father he was still and observant, his questions sparse and exact, his attention sharp enough to be unsettling. Adults called him sweet, thoughtful, gentle. They never realized how often he was measuring them in return.

His intellect emerged early but without spectacle. Charles did not announce answers, he waited to be asked. He did not correct classmates, he let them reach the conclusion themselves, then quietly confirmed it. By adolescence he was already practicing a careful choreography of humility, allowing others the comfort of competence while ensuring he remained indispensable. He skipped grades with apologetic smiles, graduated high school years early, and accepted attending Princeton with polite gratitude, as though opportunity were something he merely happened upon rather than something he had positioned himself to receive. At university he cultivated an image of calm brilliance, the soft-spoken prodigy who played cello late at night in empty practice rooms, who stayed behind to help classmates sort out their code, who never raised his voice even when others did. Profesors trusted him, peers confided in him. He learned that people revealed more when they felt unjudged, that secrets rose naturally in the presence of attentive silence.

After graduation, he did not chase headlines. He chose obscurity, precision, and accumulation. He moved through several tech companies, improving infrastructures, solving failures no one else could untangle, never staying long enough to threaten those above him, always leaving behind the faint impression that things worked better after he had passed through. Managers described him as reliable, gracious, unusually mature. He sent money home. He called his mother every Sunday. He listened to his father speak about restraint, about how technology was a blade that cut both ways, about how the most dangerous men were not the loudest ones.

Harvard’s fellowship program found him the way such institutions always did, quietly, reverently, as though brilliance were a natural resource that required stewardship. He immersed himself in behavioral modeling, predictive systems, machine learning architectures designed to anticipate human decisions before the mind itself had settled. He spoke often about ethics, about responsibility, about the importance of building tools that protected the vulnerable. His papers were elegant, his arguments persuasive, he asked questions that sounded like concern and functioned like reconnaissance. It was during this period that LUCENT first took shape, not as a corporation, but as a philosophy, that chaos was simply data insufficiently gathered, that morality was a variable influenced by environment, incentive, and fear, that people could be understood well enough to be guided without ever realizing they were being led.


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When Charles founded LUCENT at twenty-eight, the narrative wrote itself. The philanthropic prodigy. The half-European visionary. The quiet genius who quoted Rilke in interviews and funded youth orchestras in cities no investor could locate on a map. He spoke of privacy as sacred while designing systems that understood the precise geometry of its erosion, of connection as salvation while perfecting the architecture of observation. LUCENT grew with unnatural speed, not through spectacle but through absorption, threading itself into infrastructure, communication platforms, financial systems, and security networks until disentanglement became unthinkable. Every company he’d worked for in the past slowly folded into LUCENT, as if it were his plan all along. Charles remained, in public, unchanged by the ascent, gracious in interviews, reserved on stage, endlessly patient beneath the lights, always crediting his mother for his empathy and his father for his discipline, presenting himself as the fortunate convergence of art and logic, compassion and code.

His name became linked with countless groundbreaking donations and side projects. Millions flowed into mental health initiatives designed to modernize crisis-response technologies, into digital literacy programs for rural communities, into refugee education platforms that provided classrooms to children who had no direct access to an education, into disaster relief infrastructure that promised food and shelter first and foremost. He framed these gifts not as charity but as responsibility, as though wealth were a temporary condition and stewardship the only moral posture it permitted. He spoke in the polished cadences of a man who had practiced sincerity until it became indistinguishable from instinct, threading ethics in AI, human-centered design, and the dream of a safer internet into speeches that sounded less like corporate addresses and more like benedictions. His interviews trended. His lectures went viral.

Twice, committees spoke his name into the same sentence as the Nobel Peace Prize. Twice, journalists speculated about timelines, probabilities, inevitability. Charles responded with modest smiles, soft deflections, carefully worded statements about collective effort and unfinished work. He cultivated the impression of a man perpetually surprised by his own significance, as though success were something that happened around him rather than because of him.

Both of his parents would have recognized the truth, if they had known how to name it. Elena would have seen how easily his kindness opened doors, how naturally people leaned toward him, how quickly admiration softened into trust. Lucien would have understood how deliberately he chose which doors remained closed, how every public vulnerability was measured, how every confession offered to him became another thread in a widening lattice of influence.

Charles did not lose his gentleness as he rose. He refined it. He sharpened it into something precise enough to slip past defenses, persausive enough to gather loyalty, intimate enough to invite confession, and durable enough to rearrange entire lives without ever staining his hands. To those who know him only by reputation, he remains the rarest of men, a genius without arrogance, a billionaire without cruelty, a visionary without appetite for harm. To those who look closer, to the politicians he’s blackmailed, the whistleblowers he’s ensured were buried under lawsuits or character assassination, to the competitors he’s driven to to suicide via financial and social sabotage, he is something else entirely; a man who learned, very young, that control does not require force, only time, attention, and the discipline to be underestimated.
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Rebecca Harmon — Assistant
Rebecca Harmon has been at Charles side longer than anyone remembers to question. They met as children, two outsiders orbiting brilliance in different ways; Charles with his impossible mind, Rebecca with her unwavering steadiness. Where he learned to calculate, she learned to anticipate. Where he spoke softly, she learned to listen harder. Now his executive assistant, gatekeeper, and shadow, she manages his calendar the way others manage governments. She knows his tells, his silences, the precise moment his kindness becomes strategy. If Charles is the architect, Rebecca is the locked door.
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Jonah Snyder — Security Guard
Jonah Snyder does not look like danger. He looks like structure, tailored suits, military posture softened into corporate polish, eyes that miss nothing and forgive less. Former intelligence, former counter-terror, former things he never confirms. Charles hired him after a single conversation and never interviewed another candidate. Jonah runs LUCENT’s physical security, private surveillance, and “special containment,” which is not a department on any org chart. He calls Charles “sir” in public and “Charles” in private, and means something different by both. He does not ask why problems need to disappear. He only makes sure they do.
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Mara Kessler – Behavioral Systems Architect
Mara Kessler designs the algorithms that predict human collapse. She is brilliant, meticulous, and visibly grateful to work at LUCENT. The world knows her as the daughter of a disgraced tech CEO who leapt from his office balcony after his company imploded under scandals Charles’s firm quietly accelerated. LUCENT hired her six months later. Charles paid for her mother’s medical care. Sent flowers. Spoke gently at the funeral. Mara keeps the thank-you card framed on her desk. She also keeps copies of old financial logs buried in encrypted partitions, waiting for the day gratitude rots completely into truth.
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Dr. Mitchell Rowe – Ethics Director
Dr. Mitchell Rowe is LUCENT’s moral architecture, at least on paper. A former philosophy professor turned tech ethicist, he drafts the speeches Charles delivers and the principles the company claims to obey. He believes, earnestly, that he is there to restrain a titan. Charles believes, accurately, that Mitchell is there to make restraint look convincing. They have lunch once a month. They debate free will and harm reduction. Mitchell leaves each meeting feeling cautiously hopeful. Charles leaves with new language to justify what he was already going to do.
Thank you! I'm excited to write with you all. 😊 Excellent starter for the RP.

I wanted to wait until I was certain that I made the final cast, but @Stormyx I enjoyed Hayden’s thoughts on everyone! Charles likes to help individuals that are well known with the media, along with charities, to help keep up appearances. I'd imagine that if he doesn't already know who Hayden is and about his rotor cuff injury, if they get to talking and he learns about it he'd likely mention he has a branch at LUCENT dedicated to medical advancements, and that he could connect him with his doctors to see if they can eventually get him back in the ring... under LUCENT sponsorship, of course. 😌 (And Jonah would 100% be wondering if he could also take Hayden out in the ring.)


#ebceed ....|..... outfit .....|..... #3b9ae1 ....|..... outfit .....|..... arena


Rae released a slow breath, feeling the tightness in her shoulders soften as she turned Zelia’s words over in her mind. Her gaze drifted to the offered hand, then lifted back to Zelia’s face, taking in the sincerity in her eyes and the steady warmth of her smile. It was a simple gesture, and yet it felt like something more—like a lifeline thrown across the chasm of her own doubt.

"Okay," Rae acquiesced, her voice subdued. She reached out and took Zelia’s hand, letting the other girl help her to her feet. Together, they walked toward the rope climb. When Rae stopped at its base, she tilted her head back, tracing the thick, rough length of the rope all the way to the platform overhead. It was still imposing, still unyielding, and still a challenge that seemed to demand arms far stronger than the ones she possessed.

But the knot in her stomach wasn’t there anymore. She flexed her fingers, feeling a faint, answering heat beneath her skin, as if her resolve were kindling a modest, inner fire.

"Well…whenever you’re ready?" she said.

Zelia’s smile came easy when Rae took her hand, warm and quiet, like something settling into the right place. The contact steadied something in her too, an answering warmth that thrummed low in her chest, bright and patient. When they reached the rope, Zelia stopped with her, her fingers tightened briefly around Rae’s, reassuring, before releasing. She tipped her head back, following the rope’s long, weather-rough spine up into the grey belly of the sky. The rope swayed faintly in the warm air, a quiet pendulum between ground and platform, between doubt and possibility.

She studied it the way she studied storms before a run, reading the angles, the tension, the story written in motion. Her curls slipped over one shoulder as she lowered her gaze back to Rae, expression thoughtful but warm, eyes alive with gentle electricity.

"We can do this two ways," she said gently. "I can climb first so you can watch my form closely… or I can just give you a really good boost and let you take it from there."

Rae considered the options, her gaze shifting between Zelia and the rope as she mentally weighed each approach. She was used to appraising schematics in her head, and this wasn’t so different, she supposed. Watching Zelia climb first would give her valuable data, such as angles, timing, and visible proof that the rope could be negotiated. But she also knew herself well enough to recognize the trap in that logic. If she observed for too long, she’d get lost running simulations of every possible failure instead of actually moving.

She tipped her head back again, studying the rope’s slow sway, then exhaled through her nose.

"I think… the boost sounds good," she decided finally. "Once I’m actually on it, I can figure it out. It’s the starting part that trips me up."

She rolled her shoulders, letting the last of the coiled tension drain away, and stepped closer to the rope. Doubt hadn’t disappeared (she wasn’t suddenly fearless), but it no longer sat like a solid weight in her chest. Now it felt lighter, more like an obstacle she could maneuver around rather than one that would freeze her in place.

She planted her feet firmly in the most stable patch of sand and glanced back over her shoulder at Zelia, eyebrows lifting slightly. "Just tell me when you’re ready. I’ll try not to faceplant or take you down with me."

Zelia snorted before she could stop herself, the sound quick and bright, cutting through the tension like a struck match. "Hey, I said I’d catch you, remember?" she reminded her, grin tugging crooked at her mouth. "Faceplanting is optional. Safety net is included at no extra cost." There was something easy in the way she said it, like the promise was a simple fact of gravity rather than bravery.

She stepped in closer, brushing sand aside with the toe of her shoe until she found steadier ground, then lowered herself into position. Her knees bent, body settling into that familiar, coiled posture she’d worn a thousand times on tracks and starting lines, muscle memory unfolding without thought. She brought her hands together, fingers interlacing briefly before reshaping into a solid cradle. The world narrowed to small, practical details, the grain of sand against her palms, the way the warm air skimmed her flushed skin, the steady sound of Rae’s breathing.

When Rae stepped forward and placed her foot into Zelia’s cupped hands, Zelia looked up at her, curls falling into her eyes, expression bright and focused. "Ready?" she said softly.

At Rae’s nod, Zelia moved. She drove upward through her legs first, clean, powerful, practiced, arms extending in one smooth motion as if she were launching a relay baton toward the sky. Speed had always been her truest gift, but strength had grown alongside it over years of training, carved quietly into her bones. It was enough. More than enough.

Rae lifted, lighter than expected, momentum carrying her higher as Zelia’s hands released her into the rope’s waiting length. Zelia staggered half a step back from the effort, breath leaving her in a sharp laugh, chest rising fast— but her eyes never left Rae. Watching her catch the rope, watching her hold, sent something fierce and shining through Zelia’s ribs, like pride sparked into motion. "You’ve got it!" she called up, voice ringing bright as struck glass.

Rae clung to the rope, her breath coming fast and loud in her own ears. The coarse fibres dug into her palms, an uncomfortable but grounding sensation that demanded her full attention and left no space for her thoughts to spiral out of control. She exhaled slowly, willing her pulse to steady, and glanced down at Zelia, who was smiling up at her with unmistakable encouragement.

"I did it," Rae said aloud. The words felt tentative in her mouth, almost provisional, as though she were testing whether they were allowed to be true. She blinked, refocusing, and only then did the height fully register. The sand below seemed much farther away than it should have. The rope swayed with a faint motion, barely noticeable but enough to send a ripple of vertigo through her stomach. She swallowed, her grip tightening around the rope.

"I did it," she repeated, but this time the words sounded thin and hollow, even to herself. Her inner ear pitched a quiet revolt, sending a soft wave of dizziness through her skull.

She had to move. If she didn’t, she’d be stuck or worse, she’d fall.

Rae drew a deep breath, fighting back the swell of panic. She looked up at the platform above, then down again at Zelia, whose encouraging smile hadn’t wavered. Gritting her teeth, Rae looked back up and began to climb—hand over hand, foot by foot. The rope burned her palms and scraped against her shins as she hauled herself upward, but she kept her focus fixed on each incremental movement rather than the dizzying drop below.

She was almost halfway up when her foot slipped.

With an involuntary yelp, Rae pendulumed out from the rope, the world tilting on its axis. Instinct screamed, and she tightened her grip with desperate force as momentum swung her backward in a sickening arc. All the while, the rough fibres bit into her flesh with a vindictive glee, and all she could do was flail and kick her legs to try and regain control of the situation.

Zelia had been smiling up at her the entire time. Not the brittle kind of smile people wore when they were bracing for disaster, not the tight one that meant please don’t fall, please don’t fall whispered behind teeth, but the steady, sun-warm sort, the kind that lived easily on her face when she believed in someone. She stood with her hands loose at her sides, posture relaxed, weight settled comfortably into her hips, as if Rae climbing that rope were no more alarming than watching a friend cross a street.

So when Rae’s foot slipped, and her body swung outward— Zelia did not panic. Her smile didn’t vanish. But her body moved.

It happened without thought, without debate. Instinct rose in her like a tide answering the moon. She stepped forward into the rope’s path, boots digging into the sand, hands already reaching. The thick cord brushed her shoulder, her ribs, and she caught it cleanly, wrapping it once, twice around her left forearm, the coarse fibers biting into her skin. The friction burned, sharp and immediate, but she welcomed it, anchored herself to it. Then she leaned back.

She let her weight sink into the pull, heels carving shallow trenches into the sand, spine tilting, muscles in her legs and core drawing tight like bowstrings. The rope answered her, its wild sway diminishing, the frantic motion bleeding out until it became something solid, something reliable, something that could be trusted not to betray trembling hands. Electric warmth surged through her veins, familiar and bright, lightning unconsciously threading itself through muscle and bone as effort sharpened her into something radiant and unyielding.

The jolt of the rope’s wild swing cut short, and Rae felt it immediately. Her stomach lurched once more out of habit, but the expected follow-through never came. What followed instead was a voice, one that was clear and unmistakably Zelia’s.

"I’ve got you," she called, voice clear and ringing, steady as struck glass. "You’re okay. Keep going!" She gave another firm pull, grounding it further, making herself an anchor point carved out of breath and will.

"I…." Rae sucked in a breath, a jagged sound that filled the silence of her focus. With conscious effort, she forced her petrified fingers to loosen their death-grip, just enough to re-seat themselves properly on the unforgiving hemp. Her palms shrieked with a fresh, lacerating heat, and a deep ache, intense and urgent, radiated from her shoulders. But the wild swinging had thankfully stopped. Thank the frickin gods.

"You’re okay," she whispered to herself, Zelia’s words a shaky incantation. "Keep going."

And so she did. The climb resumed, Rae hauling herself upward in a sinew-straining conquest measured in painful inches and burning handholds. Each shift of her weight seared a new, vivid red line into her flesh, a tactile map of her progress that throbbed in syncopation with her pulse. Her arms developed a violent tremor, muscles aquiver with spent effort, but she clenched her jaw until her teeth ached and forced another reach, another pull.

The platform hung above her, close enough now to feel tangible and to mock her exhaustion. It occupied that agonizing space between possible and impossible, so unlike the controlled, cerebral projects Rae usually tackled. Her chest tightened with the strain of not looking down, of not measuring the distance she would plummet if her grip truly gave way. Then, finally, Rae dragged herself over the last few inches with a sound caught between a gasp and a growl, her forearms shaking so intensely she could feel the vibration in her bones. Her fingers found the solid feel of the platform, and for a suspended heartbeat, she froze there, fingertips pressed flat against the wood as if it might dissolve if she trusted it too soon.

“Holy shit,” she breathed, the words half reverent, half disbelieving. Then, softer, as though afraid the truth might startle and flee: “I actually fucking did it.”

She lingered for another moment, forehead nearly touching the platform, letting the fierce tremor in her arms rise and gradually fade. The rope hung taut beneath her, and she could almost feel Zelia’s steadying presence bleeding upward through it like reassurance made physical. But the climb itself was over. That alone meant something.

Rae drew a slow breath and shifted her weight.

Getting down, she discovered, was its own particular brand of terror.

The descent demanded a different kind of courage: a controlled capitulation. She inched her hands downward, allowing the rope to burn a path through her already raw palms, her thighs clamped in an awkward, bruising embrace around the coarse fibres for stability. It was a jumble of inelegance and discomfort, but it worked, progressing at her characteristically meticulous pace. Halfway down, a deep, earned fatigue turned her arms to liquid, sending them into helpless tremors once more. She hissed through clenched teeth, paused to let her full weight rest on the rope, and carefully readjusted her grip with scrupulous patience rather than brute force. The remainder of the descent then became a series of small, careful negotiations with gravity: lower a hand, breathe; lower a foot, breathe again.

When her shoes finally met solid sand, her knees gave way in pure relief.

Zelia saw the moment it happened, the instant Rae’s fingers found the platform and her whole body seemed to lock around the truth of it. For half a heartbeat, the world narrowed to that small figure against the height and sky, red hair bright as a struck match against the grey. Then Zelia’s breath tore free of her in a laugh that was half relief, half pure, unfiltered joy. Her hands tightened on the rope where it was still wrapped around her arm, muscles burning, skin aching, but she barely felt it.

“You did it!” she called, voice ringing across the arena like a bell struck clean and bright. She bounced once on her heels despite herself, electricity skittering under her skin, heart kicking hard against her ribs. Pride bloomed in her chest so sudden and fierce it almost hurt— pride that had nothing to do with victory or speed or how it might look to anyone else. Just this, Rae had been afraid, and she had climbed anyway.

Zelia stayed braced as Rae began her careful descent, adjusting her grip on the rope, feeding it through her arm inch by inch to keep it steady. The fibers bit deeper now, heat building along her forearm, but she leaned into it, anchoring the sway, turning the wildness of the rope into something dependable. She tracked every movement Rae made, the pauses, the tight breaths, the way her shoulders shook with effort, ready to move, ready to catch, ready for anything.

Only when Rae was close enough that Zelia could see the grit on her palms, the tremor in her legs, did she finally loosen the rope and let it slip free, coiling back into itself. She stepped forward just in time to see Rae’s knees buckle. She caught her by the arms, hands warm and steady, grounding her before the sand could. Their foreheads nearly brushed with the closeness of it, Zelia’s grin bright and breathless and utterly unguarded.

Rae slumped into Zelia’s waiting hold, her arms hanging like dead weights at her sides. A shuddering, cathartic breath escaped her as the coiled tension in her muscles began its slow release. Her eyes drifted shut, light lashes brushing her dust-smudged cheeks as she drew in a deep, grounding breath. The air was rich with the scent of warm sweat, sun-baked sand, and something else underpinning it all—something vibrant and electric and purely, unmistakably her. This sensory recognition made Rae’s eyes flutter open again.

Zelia’s face was mere inches away, so close Rae could trace the liminal space between them and count the faint, umber flecks scattered like stardust through her irises. The intensity of her gaze felt like a physical touch, a radiant warmth that seeped into Rae’s skin and kindled a quiet fire within her. It made her breath catch, and her heart stutter into a new, frantic rhythm—a reaction Rae knew, in some sanctum of her mind, was completely disentangled from the climb.

“Hey,” Zelia said softly, joy sparking in her eyes. “I knew you could do it.” She gave her arms a soft squeeze and leaned back some, looking Rae over. She’d need water after this, and sleep, but she’d get her to eat too if she could manage it. Her body would need the extra calories with all the work she was putting in.

When Zelia finally stepped back, breaking the supportive embrace, Rae lifted her head. A flush mantled her cheeks, a commingling of exertion and the lingering heat of that unspoken truth. She met Zelia’s eyes and found a bright, carefree joy and unmistakable pride shining there, a reflection that felt more validating than any trophy she’d ever won.

“Hey,” Rae breathed back, her voice rough from effort but genuine.“You saw that, huh?” She gave a shaky laugh, flexing her fingers and watching the angry red marks left by the rope slowly fade back to her skin’s natural colour. Her gaze dropped to Zelia’s hands, which were, strangely enough, completely unmarked by the ordeal. Nonetheless, she reached for them, turning them over just to be sure.

“I don’t think I could’ve done it without you,” Rae admitted, her tone soft and absentminded. “I would’ve definitely fallen.”

Zelia felt the moment Rae’s laugh left her, thin, shaky, real, as keenly as if it had brushed her own skin. Some of the brightness in her expression softened then, melting into something quieter and more tender, like sunlight easing at the edge of evening. She let Rae turn her hands over, palm by palm, fingers loose and compliant, watching her inspect them with that careful, earnest attention she seemed to give to everything that mattered. There were no burns there, no angry lines, no rough red welts— only the faintest blanching where Zelia had gripped the rope too tightly, muscles still humming beneath her skin with the memory of strain.

She hadn’t let the rope slide. Not really. She’d fed it through her arm in controlled inches, keeping the slack tight, steadying its wildness with her own weight, her own balance, her own stubborn refusal to let it become a failure for Rae. Tomorrow, her forearm and shoulder would ache, deep, slow soreness blooming like a bruise in the marrow, but it was the good kind. The honest kind. The kind you earn by holding something up instead of letting it fall.

Zelia watched Rae’s hands around hers, warm and careful. The contact sent a quiet, foolish flutter through her chest, something small-winged and bright, beating just behind her ribs. Maybe it was simple of her. Maybe even childish. But the pride swelling there, round and golden and too big to hide, felt like the truest thing she owned.

When she spoke, her voice was gentle, threaded with certainty. “You might have fallen,” she said softly, meeting Rae’s eyes again, unflinching in the warmth she let show there. Then her smile curved, not teasing, not dazzling, just real. “But you would’ve gotten back up and tried again,” she added. “Even if I wasn’t here.”

She squeezed Rae’s hands once, light but deliberate, as if sealing the thought in place. Because helping had mattered. Holding the rope had mattered. Being there had mattered. But Rae— Rae had done the climbing.

Rae huffed out a sound that might have become a laugh had it not caught in her throat, strangled by exhaustion and residual adrenaline. Her fingers remained curled loosely around Zelia’s hands, her thumbs moving in absent, circular patterns over the smooth skin, as if the contact alone could anchor her to the solid ground below them.

"Mm. Yeah. I don’t know about that one," she said, her tone dry but not unkind, a faint lilt of self-deprecation threading through the words. Her gaze dropped again, shoulders lifting in a small shrug. "I’m stubborn, sure. But I’m not heroic about it. More like…annoying in a very persistent way, maybe?"

A tacit understanding passed between them before Rae finally loosened her grip, letting Zelia’s hands slip from her own. The ghost of their warmth seemed to imprint itself on her palms. She rolled her wrists slowly, testing the protest of stiffening muscles, before tipping her head toward the next formidable stretch of the course: the rope bridge.

"Still," Rae added, her voice stripped of the joking facade and layered with a sincerity that felt almost too raw for the dusty training ground. "I’m really glad you were here."

Zelia felt the warmth of Rae’s thumbs long after their hands parted, a small, lingering heat that climbed her wrists and brushed faintly against her cheeks. She told herself it was just exertion, just the sun, just the leftover echo of effort— but her breath still slowed, careful and deliberate, as if she needed a moment to set her ribs back into place. Then she smiled, soft and real, the kind that came from somewhere behind her sternum instead of her mouth alone.

“I’m glad too,” she said quietly, and meant it with a sincerity that surprised even her. The words felt simple, but they carried weight. She couldn’t imagine herself back on the sidelines now, hands folded uselessly, heart pacing in her throat while Rae struggled alone through the maze of wood and rope and doubt. This, running beside her, sharing the dust, the strain, the small victories, felt right in a way that watching never could. Like choosing to step into the weather instead of listening to the storm through glass.

Rae took a step toward the rope net bridge, her body moving with a new, though weary, determination. Peering up, she assessed it with a mixture of deep skepticism and resigned focus.

"Okay so," Rae began, hands finding her hips. "What fresh nightmare is this one pretending to be, if we’re still doing the whole ‘playground’ thing?"

Zelia’s gaze drifted to the rope net bridge as well, its woven body swaying faintly in the warm air, a strange lattice of knots and spaces suspended between platforms. Instead of dread, something gentler touched her expression. Almost fond.

“It kind of looks like the one at the park I used to go to,” she murmured, more to the space between them than to the obstacle itself. “My mom would take me when I was little. There was a rope bridge like this one, smaller, tighter, way safer. I used to bounce on it on purpose, just to see how high I could make it move before she started panicking.”

A quiet breath left her, half a laugh, half something softer. The memory lived behind her eyes, summer-dust light, the creak of rope, her mother’s voice tight with worry even as she smiled. “She always pretended she wasn’t scared,” she added, the words gentle, a little sad around the edges. “But I could tell. Her hands would grip her bag like it was the only solid thing in the world.”

Zelia looked back at Rae then, as if just remembering herself, her smile still there, but thinner now, threaded with tenderness and something unspoken. “I promise I won’t bounce on this one,” she said lightly, trying to lift the moment again, her eyes bright despite it all. “For your sake, so it’s less of a nightmare.”

Rae snorted softly at the attempt at levity, a wry smirk tugging at her mouth despite the lingering trepidation that sat like a lodestone between her shoulders. The image of a miniature Zelia bouncing with glee on a rope bridge, under a mother’s watchful eye, was unexpectedly endearing. It was a vignette of the person behind the poised warrior Zelia seemed to be, a glimpse that left Rae feeling both intrigued and disarmingly off-balance.

"Well, I appreciate the restraint," she said, her voice laced with dry amusement. Before her courage could wane, she took a small, decisive step forward, hands clenched at her sides with fingertips pressing white crescents into her sweat-slick palms. "Okay, here goes nothing."

Rae reached out, her fingers brushing the nearest rope that was thick with a rough, fuzzy texture. Testing its give, she gave it a tentative shake, the entire network swinging wildly enough to send a fresh frisson of unease tracing her spine. "I’m not sure about this," she muttered. Logic insisted it had held her before, but memory supplied the terrifying wobble she’d had to deal with while crossing it on her first run. She could only hope its strength remained constant this round as well.

With a final, fortifying breath, Rae’s fingers curled around the rough hemp. The coarse fibres bit familiarly into her palms as she committed her weight. She swung one leg up and over, the net depressing beneath her in a deep, yielding dip. Her breath hitched as she found a precarious footing, then carefully transferred her other foot, pressing down to test the stability. The structure bounced slightly but held firm, thankfully.

What followed was a slow, gruelling negotiation with momentum. Rae shifted her weight incrementally, the rope net dipping and flexing beneath her like the breath of some great beast. Each step initiated a complex wave of motion that travelled up through her legs and into her core, forcing her to pause, recalibrate, and only then move again. She fixed her gaze on the knots directly before her, treating them like nodes on a circuit board to be solved through focus alone. One step. Then the next. The world beyond the ropes dissolved into a blur.

Her hands slid along the guide ropes, already aching as they clenched and unclenched with each minute correction. Once, the net pitched with a sudden lurch, and Rae froze, her heart a frantic drum against her ribs, waiting in suspended terror for the motion to subside. When the world stilled, she let out a slow, shaky breath and continued, her jaw set in a line of pure determination. Halfway across, a deep burn ignited in her calves, muscles trembling from the sustained, unnatural strain. The net was indifferent to haste; it demanded a plodding, exhausting patience. Adjusting her stance into a lower crouch, Rae moved on, muttering a low, steady stream of commentary that sounded, to anyone who might listen, suspiciously like encouragement.

When her foot finally found the last knot and solid ground greeted her sole, Rae exhaled a shuddering breath that seemed to come from the very marrow of her bones.

"Thank gods," she murmured, tipping her head back with a weary, relieved laugh. She wiped her palms against her pants before glancing back at the undulating net, disbelief and hard-won pride tangled in her expression.

Zelia stood very still as Rae stepped onto the bridge, as if any movement of her own body might somehow transfer into the ropes and make them sway more than they already did. She drew a slow breath in through her nose, then let it out just as carefully, counting the rhythm the way she sometimes did before races, four in, four out, trying to keep her pulse from climbing into her throat.

From the outside, it looked almost gentle; a red-haired girl moving one deliberate knot at a time across a woven span of rope and sky. But Zelia could see the truth written in the tight set of Rae’s shoulders, in the way her hands clenched and unclenched as if the bridge were something alive and unpredictable. Heights, maybe. Or maybe it was the simple terror of surrendering control to a structure that breathed and shifted beneath your weight, a figurative creature made of braided fiber and gravity.

Zelia’s fingers curled into the hem of her jacket without her noticing. Each wobble of the net tugged at her ribs like a hooked thread. She found herself leaning forward, weight balanced on the balls of her feet, as though she could will Rae steady just by wanting it badly enough. When Rae finally reached the far side, when solid grounding answered her footfall and the tension bled from her frame in a long, exhausted breath, Zelia’s chest loosened all at once. Relief rushed through her so suddenly it almost stung. She lifted both hands high, thumbs pointed skyward, her face splitting into the brightest smile she had worn all morning, sun-warm and unguarded, pride glowing through her like light through glass.

“Yes!” she called, unable to keep it in. “You did it!”

Rae managed a shaky grin and a wave in return.

Then it was Zelia’s turn.

Zelia stepped onto the bridge with a quieter ceremony, her movements careful but unafraid. The ropes dipped under her weight, the familiar, living sway rising up through her legs, but she welcomed it the way she welcomed wind during a sprint, something to listen to, something to answer, not something to fight. Her hands slid along the side ropes for balance, fingers tracing the rough weave, while her feet sought each knot with patient precision. She could have gone faster. Her body knew how. The bridge whispered invitations to bounce, to test its spring, to turn the crossing into a game of daring and air.

But she did not.

She kept her smile small, contained, respectful of the battle Rae had just fought. This crossing was not about her joy. It was about companionship. About arriving on the other side together. Step by step, she closed the distance until the last knot gave way to solid ground beneath her feet. Zelia straightened, breath light, curls shifting in the cold air, and looked at Rae with a grin that was softer now, fond around the edges.

“I think the one at the park was a lot more bouncy,” she said gently. “Probably safer too.” Her eyes sparkled as she said it, not with triumph, but with shared warmth.

Rae shook her head even as a laugh escaped her. She rubbed her palms together, flexing her fingers to dispel the deep, residual ache the ropes had left behind.

"I’ll take your word for it," she said, glancing back at the bridge as if it were a sentient adversary that might overhear and take offence. "I think I’ve had enough rope-related training for one day."

Unfortunately, the course disagreed.

End of Part 1



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Near Descendant's Tower


Rune had kept a running list of things she wanted to do if she ever reached Midgard. It had begun when she was thirteen, a quiet catalog of possibilities she revisited whenever Hel felt too still. Stealing clothes from a mannequin had never been part of it. She wasn’t even certain what people here usually wore, for one, and stealing, in general, left an unpleasant prickle in her chest. Not wrong, exactly. Just… unsettling.

She had meant to be practical. Judging by the looks she’d earned so far, she might have missed the mark. The white knit shirt over a gray turtleneck, the teal trench coat, the orange-and-purple plaid skirt, perhaps it was more colorful than necessary. The coat matched the funny little hat, at least. The neon yellow socks matched nothing at all, but they had been part of the display. Surely that counted for something. Mannequins, she reasoned, were meant to give guidance.

What bothered her most was that her mother’s portal had delivered her into a locked clothing store instead of her actual destination. It felt oddly discourteous, if portals could be accused of such things. Still, Rune was capable of adapting. She decided to add hiking to her list, if only out of principle, because that was what she was doing now. Hiking.

Her mother’s instructions had been simple: follow the road, seek the large edifice, and pledge allegiance to the organization that had sent out the call for aid. It sounded promising. Rune had always wanted to be part of something larger than herself. Some of the spirits spoke fondly of teams and the shared purpose of having a place where you were needed, wanted. Honor came with that, she supposed, but what she really wanted was the experience. The walking, however, was proving less charming than she’d hoped, especially in the borrowed shoes. Shiny white, sharply heeled, and entirely unforgiving. After some consideration, she decided they were designed less for travel and more for endurance.

“I could take them off,” she said lightly, thinking aloud as she often did. Long conversations with spirits had taught her there was nothing wrong with that, as long as she didn’t argue with herself. “I imagine they’d be easier to manage that way.”

That decided it. She stepped off the road and carefully eased herself out of the shoes, one and then the other, mindful not to scuff them. For a moment, she weighed leaving them behind, but that felt unkind. Instead, she tucked them under her arm and carried on, her steps immediately lighter. She tried to whistle as she walked. The sound came out soft and uneven, but she didn’t mind. Practice was part of learning.

The day itself was lovely. Blue sky stretched overhead, scattered with drifting clouds, and though the sun had warmed her more than expected, it was a pleasant sort of warmth. Rune wondered why Midgardians didn’t travel more often in those rumbling metal vehicles, they seemed far more efficient, but she suspected there were rules about such things. Still, the thought made her smile, and she made a mental note to ask someone later. She followed the road without hurry, balancing carefully along its center line when she could, attentive and content, as though Midgard were already beginning to meet her halfway.

Some dozens of yards behind her, a black SUV rolled over the asphalt in the direction of the Tower. With a clear line of sight to Rune's back, the vehicle began to slow before it came to a stop. In the driver's seat, Jules leaned forward on the steering wheel with a set of binoculars held up to her eyes. She took in the sight, a short barefooted woman with an audacious sense of style walked calmly. Jules’ eyes shifted to a small screen in the center console that displayed strange readings of radiation unfamiliar to this realm. She leaned back into the seat, setting the binoculars down on a tray near the center console.

The agency was right: a fresh god straight from another realm had touched down suspiciously close to the old academy. Everything about the readings read as vaguely Asgardian. Jules glanced at the large sidearm resting on a holster connected to her door and took a deep breath. First contact was never her strong suit, but someone had to make the first move. Worst case, she'd have to make sure to spam the buttons on her pager and hope the agency got the SOS in time.

The SUV rolled up a few yards behind Rune, sliding to a halt on the shoulder of the road. Jules popped open the door and stepped out, readjusting her jacket to hide the freshly holstered gun under her arm. She took a deep breath as she slammed the car door shut, approaching the stranger. She still couldn't quite muster up a greeting, settling for the most direct opening. "Good Morning… Are you lost?"

Rune slowed at the sound of the engine, turning with an unguarded curiosity rather than alarm. The woman who stepped from the dark vehicle looked purposeful in a way Rune recognized from stories, someone accustomed to being the first to speak, even when she would rather not. She adjusted the shoes under her arm and let her bare feet settle against the warm road before smiling, bright and open, as though being stopped like this were simply another part of the journey.

“Lost?” she echoed gently, tasting the word as if it were new. Her head tipped to one side, thoughtful rather than confused. “I am not quite certain I qualify for that yet. I have never been to Midgard before, so I do not actually know where I am meant to be standing at any given moment.”

Her gaze drifted briefly down the road, tracing the painted line beneath her toes, then lifted again, earnest and mildly amused. “The roads are very strange, though. I expected them to be… bigger, I think. Or perhaps louder. In Hel, paths are more a matter of intention than construction.” She gave a small, apologetic shrug, as if she hoped the comparison wasn’t rude.

Rune shifted the shoes against her side once more and straightened, her tone warming with purpose. “I am looking for a large edifice,” she continued, the word pronounced carefully, tone matter-of-a-fact. “Something important. An organization, I believe. My mother sent me there.” A faint note of pride slipped in despite her best efforts to keep things simple. “Hela thought I might be of use, after the call for aid.”

She paused, then smiled again, soft this time, hopeful rather than certain. “If you happen to know the way, I would be very grateful for the direction.”

Jules’ mind raced as she stared at the demigod straight-faced. Midgard was a very specific term, one used by the Tower's resident Asgardian. Hel, as spoken, could refer to the resident biker's ‘dark passenger’ or an Asgardian domain. But the name Hela clicked things in place. Daughter of the Queen of the Hel… on any other day, the protocol was simple. Jules would bring her in to the office and let the bureaucrats deal with this. Given things with Zaria and Tobias, letting another powerful being out of her sight seemed like negligence. After all, they hadn't been able to stop any abductions so far… but the folks at the old academy had.

"You're in luck," Jules replied, turning her head to monitor the horizons. "I am working with the folks you are looking for." That wasn't a lie, but Jules wasn't entirely certain on which exact organization this extraplanar traveler was referring to. "I can take you to them… save you some of the effort."

Rune’s smile warmed like sunlight on frost, brightening her whole face as though gratitude were something that glimmered out of her. The shoes remained tucked beneath her arm, but she stood a touch straighter at Jules’ words, relief softening the quiet tension in her shoulders.

“Thank you,” she said, voice clear and earnest, each syllable shaped with the careful diction of someone who had learned speech from books and spirits rather than other people. “That would be most welcome. I have been told the journey would be simple but, as it happens, simplicity is a matter of perspective.”

She turned her attention to the looming metal contraption behind Jules, expression curious but edged with caution. It was a wary sort of wonder, like someone standing at the shoreline of an unfamiliar sea. Rune stepped closer by degrees, bare feet whispering against the pavement, her gaze tracing the shape of the vehicle as though trying to locate the heartbeat within it.

“If I may ask,” she ventured, head tilting slightly, “What is it powered by? It moves without hooves, and I do not sense magic. I had thought perhaps Midgard relied upon enchanted machinery, yet there is no tether of power that I can feel.”

Her smile flickered back, soft with sincerity rather than embarrassment. “My mother spoke of Midgard as a realm built upon innovation. I am beginning to understand her meaning. Though everything is very… flat.” She drew in a steadying breath, gathering both her courage, and her shoes, and inclined her head in a small, formal nod, courtly without pretension.

“If you are truly one of the people I have been sent to find, then I am very fortunate indeed. I would be grateful for your guidance. And I promise,” her gaze shone with a hopeful spark, “I shall be a useful aid to the cause of the organization."

Jules looked back at the vehicle as Rune approached, asking questions about its function. She paused, readjusting her jacket again as she mulled over the questions. She was never the “first point of contact” for dealing with folks like this. When undercover, she could fall back on an identity and the profile assigned to the role. As herself, there was a vulnerability and a loss for words in how to approach the situation. Unlike her acquaintances at the tower, jumping in the sack probably wasn’t the easiest approach… especially if she would have to walk the godling through it. "It’s got wheels instead of hooves so it can just roll forward. As for how it moves…" Jules trailed off, sighing slightly as she wasn’t even sure how to conceptualize an engine in terms the stranger would get. "It’s complicated. We’ve got nerds at the Tower who can explain."

The description of Earth as flat was… amusing, given her time abroad. The smallest of smiles pierced the professional mask she presented, taking a look around at their surroundings. "Midgard can vary more than out here," Jules simply remarked, shrugging her shoulders. She took a couple steps back towards the van, nodding towards it with her head. "Why don’t you hop in so I can take you to meet the others? We’ve got someone there who would be very interested to see you."

Rune paused before the metal beast, toes curling against the warm road. The peculiar handle beckoned, an invitation of polished metal, and she reached for it with careful curiosity. It yielded beneath her fingers with a soft click, the entire side of the contraption swinging outward like a door to some hidden chamber. Her breath caught, wonder blooming bright across her features, eyes lighting up. “Ooooh…” The sound slipped from her, quiet and delighted, before she remembered herself and straightened, spine elegant despite her uncertainty. She climbed inside with the same cautious reverence one might show a temple, gathering her skirt and tucking her knees as she settled. The door thudded, too gentle to latch properly, and she winced, cheeks warming as she tried again, this time coaxing it closed with a firmer push.

Her borrowed shoes sat primly in her lap, like small, obedient animals she was determined to keep in line. For a moment, she smoothed the teal coat around her, steadying her nerves with the familiar texture of its sleeve. When Jules joined her, Rune offered a bright, grateful smile, one hand curling loosely around the shoes as though they tethered her to bravery.

“Thank you for assisting me,” she said, tone formal but warm, like sunlight filtered through silk. “It is most kind of you. If I may… what is the proper name by which I should address you?” Her gaze lingered on Jules, not demanding, merely earnest, as the engine’s hum stirred beneath them.

Jules opened her door to the SUV and turned her back to Rune for a moment, removing her sidearm and slotting it into the holster in the door. She readjusted her suit jacket and turned to face the side of the SUV, checking her reflection carefully. She looked put together enough, a good first impression. Some habits from going deep cover were hard to shake, even when she had no character to play. A moment later, Jules slotted herself into the driver’s seat and quickly buckled up, looking her passenger over.

"My name is Jules. What’s yours?" She hesitated a moment before throwing the car in drive, considering whether to try and get the Asgardian to put her seatbelt on. If she was anything like her kin, a car accident was unlikely to even leave a mark. Without much fanfare, Jules began to pull out from the shoulder and onto the road proper. Her eyes remained fixed on the road, only flicking away to check the mirrors or horizon. "Did I hear you say something about Hela?" The question was swift, simple, and to the point.

Rune paused for a heartbeat as the vehicle rolled smoothly beneath her, eyes tracing the contours of the interior with a mixture of fascination and caution. She dipped into a gentle curtsy within the confines of her seat, the motion subtle yet deliberate, and offered a bright, almost radiant smile.

“I am Rune Helasdottir,” she began, her voice lilting like a soft breeze through the branches of Hel’s ever-silent woods. “It is a pleasure to make your acquaintance on such a sun-kissed morning, though Midgard is… most curious to me.” She drew a delicate hand to her chest, gaze dropping briefly to the shoes she had tucked into her lap, before rising to meet Jules’ eyes once more.

“Yes, I did speak of Hela,” she continued, a faint blush touching her pale cheeks. “She is my mother, sovereign of Hel, and this is the first occasion I have ventured beyond the borders of my home. To blend, as it were, I found it necessary to acquire garments from a… doll within a shop. I trust my attire is… passable?” Her words lingered in the air, soft but earnest, carrying the quiet wonder of someone seeing the world for the very first time, and the careful, sincere attempt of a daughter eager to do her mother proud.

"It’s…" Jules hesitated, keeping herself as focused on the road as possible. She did sneak a glance back towards the interesting assortment of fabric and colors. She tilted her head slightly in acquiescence. "It seems to suit you." Jules offered the tiniest smile as she took in a breath, processing everything else she said.

Rune’s arrival was certainly no coincidence, especially given her mother seemed to receive the call for aid. From her recollection, Hela didn’t seem to be on the same side as the Avengers or Justice League. The fact that she picked up the signal meant that nearly anyone could have, and that would certainly be a problem for the folks at the old academy. Another headache, and another reason to limit these solo excursions away from its grounds. Certainly the Waynes and Starks had made plenty of defenses for the Academy grounds to prevent a direct assault, or buy them time to escape.

Jules let out a small sigh, trying to wipe her usual pessimistic paranoia from her mind. She had a job for now, a simple one: survey the situation. "So… what did the sovereign tell you of the situation in Midgard?" The question felt ridiculous to utter, but the wording was probing enough to try and get Rune talking. It was best to determine everything she could before walking a potential threat straight in the front door of her new home.

Rune’s face brightened at once, the approval settling over her like a benediction. Her shoulders eased, and she dipped her head in a small, graceful nod, as though Jules had bestowed something more meaningful than a simple compliment.

“I am glad to hear it,” she said warmly. “I feared I might appear… improperly assembled.” The corner of her mouth curved with gentle humor, and she smoothed the skirt in her lap with careful fingers, the shoes resting neatly atop the fabric as if they, too, were listening. At Jules’ question, Rune turned her gaze toward the passing world outside the window, watching the landscape scroll by like a living tapestry. When she spoke again, her voice carried a thoughtful cadence, unhurried and sincere.

“My mother has watched Midgard for a very long while,” she explained. “It has ever been a realm of… contradiction. Fragile, yet relentless. Brief in its lifespans, yet endlessly inventive. I believe she finds it fascinating.” A pause, then a soft addition, almost fond. “One might call it a hobby, though she would not.”

Rune shifted slightly, offering a small, almost careless shrug, as if what followed were of little consequence rather than cosmic weight. “Of late, however, her attention has sharpened. The call for aid did not reach her by chance, nor did she answer without deliberation. She feels the balance here has begun to… tremble.” Her fingers traced an idle line along the edge of her coat sleeve. “Not in a manner that is wholly dire,” she added, gently reassuring, “But enough that observation alone no longer suffices. Thus, she sent me.”

The explanation did little to soothe Jules’ growing concerns. From her recollection, Hela was an adversary to the allies of the IHA in Asgard. If she had a vested interest in Earth at such a precarious time, the odds were she wasn't on their side. That being said, years of experience had honed Jules’ gut. She could tell in her core, with a high degree of certainty, whether someone posed a danger. While Rune was almost certainly strong, her defenselessness made it clear she wasn't like most soldiers she faced. She was not being careless because she thought herself better, she seemed curious more than anything.

If Hela had chosen this girl as a spy or a weapon, she had certainly chosen poorly. Perhaps whatever danger the descendants faced even had gods and goddesses fearful that they were next. If that was the case, then having another demigod on their side would prove a great boon. Still… Jules could relate, in some way. "So… she sent you here to help out…" The statement hung more like a question than a fact, Jules’ gaze briefly flicking to her passenger. "We could use any help we can get at this point, but they might be a bit… weary. You'll need to convince them if you plan on sticking around."

Rune hummed softly at that, a low, thoughtful sound that lingered in her chest like the echo of a distant bell. She considered Jules’ words with care, eyes drifting once more to the road unfurling before them, to the steady certainty of its direction even as the world beyond it shifted and blurred.

“I am here to be of help, if they will have me,” she said at last, her voice gentle but sure, shaped with the gravity of an oath even though she spoke it lightly. “It would please me greatly to lend what strength I possess, though I would rather it be given than imposed. Aid is best when it is welcomed, I think.”

Her hands folded neatly over the shoes in her lap, fingers resting there as though they were upon a small, patient creature. She lifted her gaze to Jules again, open and unguarded, without the slightest hint of offense at the notion of mistrust.

“If there is doubt, I shall answer it,” she continued, a faint, hopeful warmth threading through her words. “I will speak to them of my mother’s intent, and of my own, and of the place from which I come. So long as they will listen, I shall explain all that I am able. Truth is not fragile, even when it is quiet.”

A smile touched her lips then— small, sincere, almost shy in its brightness.

“I have never belonged to such a gathering before,” Rune admitted, with the soft wonder of confession. “The thought of standing among others with a shared purpose… it is a rare and precious thing to me. Even if they decide I am unsuited, I will be grateful to have tried.” She tilted her head slightly, as though already imagining the faces of those she had yet to meet.

Jules’ grip on the steering wheel tightened, her face remaining blank as it continued to observe the road in front of them. The one kindness her father had shown was taking over the responsibility of teaching her so that she could ignore tedious topics like plays and poetry. Every word Rune spoke felt like a rhyme in some grand poem about happiness or grief or whatever topic poets felt like wasting a reader’s time litigating. Getting a straight answer felt like pulling teeth, though the pain of that would arguably be a bit more bearable.

Despite the frustration, Jules’ face remained an expressionless mask. She loosened her grip on the wheel, letting the tension in her shoulders relax slightly. There was a through-line, one that was becoming increasingly clear: this girl was isolated. Isolation was often a means of coercion, a tool to mold someone in their own image. This Rune, whether she knew it or not, was another pawn on the chessboard. Whether she liked it or not, there was nothing really she could do about her now except to bring her to the heart of the operation. She could let the others determine the truth, parse through the jumbled mess of metaphor and verse to figure out who exactly she was.

So, for now, Jules drove down the lonely road, clicking her tongue slightly as she considered a response. When she did speak, her tone was flat. "A… gathering like this isn’t all it’s cracked up to be." It was an oddly vulnerable statement, one masked under an almost dismissive tone. "It’s a bit easier to work alone. It’s a more controlled environment, less variables. Mistakes are your own, not the fault of anyone else. And the gathering we have is… volatile. Tense. This whole thing is bound to collapse at any time, and a lot of people are going to wind up hurt when it does." She let out a soft sigh, her eyes drifting briefly to the girl dressed in a visual cacophony. There was a part of Jules that felt sorry for her, seeming to acknowledge truly for the first time just how unprepared the stranger seemed for what laid ahead.

"So… I would be careful of getting too attached."

Rune hummed again, soft and distant, the sound threading itself between the low growl of the engine and the whisper of air against the windows. Her gaze drifted from the passing fields to Jules’ rigid profile, then back to the long gray ribbon of road, as though the answer might be written there in motion rather than words.

She did not seem troubled by the warning itself. The emotion beneath it, weariness, caution, the old ache of disappointment, registered only dimly, like a language she understood in theory but had never needed to speak. That, she supposed, was something deeply human, to bruise so often upon hope that one learned to keep it folded small.

The danger, however. The volatility. The promise of fracture.

That was interesting.

“The darkness of the storm determines the brightness of the rainbow,” she said at last, voice light, almost conversational, as though remarking upon the weather.

A small smile touched her lips as she watched the world slip by, green bending into brown, sky thinning into distance. There was no fear in her expression, only a quiet, thoughtful sort of anticipation. To Rune, collapse was not merely an ending, it was a crucible. Mortals forged meaning in such moments, from loss, from ruin, from the fragile bravery of standing together even when standing promised pain. They carved their songs and poems and stories from it, spun beauty from the ache, called it art, called it love, called it living.

If this gathering was destined to be volatile, to wound and be wounded, then it would be real. And reality, in all its brief, burning strangeness, fascinated her more than any untouched eternity ever could. She said nothing more. The smile lingered, gentle and unreadable.

The corner of Jules’ eyebrow raised as she passed a glance towards her passenger. The optimism was a change of pace, once that she wasn’t acclimated to. Maybe a splash of color in the tower wasn’t a bad thing, with all the brooding badasses and self-obsessed narcissists. Jules merely shrugged her shoulders, turning her head back to face the road. She muttered her response under her breath, more an internal monologue than a statement. "Well aren’t you a ray of sunshine… they’re going to love you.."



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<Snipped quote by Sleepy Tani>

TOM HIDDLESTON <3


I was talking with Qia about my character concept when the idea came to me 😂 it was also a great excuse to just looks at pictures of Tom Hiddleston in a suit.

@Sleepy Tani, Charlie is over here about to win a Nobel Prize, and Elly’s biggest inspiration just got banned from the Ukraine. 🤣


I really enjoyed reading Elly! Charlie has 100% read her books 😂

On that note, took a little longer than I'd planned but I've wrapped up the supporting cast and he's all good to go. 😄
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