More added.
“Luke! Luke!” I yell at the top of my voice, using my broadsword like a machete and slashing through the grasses in front of me. He has to be around here somewhere, I think to myself for the twentieth time. Even though I know that Luke wouldn’t leave me in the grasses – in fact, he could very well be in a different part of the grasses looking for me right now – he could have been taken by other champions or even by a nearby colossus, since there could very well be other colossuses besides the one Marshall found. The grasses almost make very good sound and scent blockers, since they’re so thick, so I can’t find Luke that way, and he’s not heavy enough to vibrate the grasses like Marshall and the colossus did. That means the only way I’m going to find him is by yelling and hoping he’s near enough to hear my call and then yell back.
“Lizzie!” I hear someone call, and my heart leaps as I recognize the voice as Luke’s. For a second I pause, my brow furrowing into a question mark as I wonder why on earth I would have a reaction like that to just hearing Luke. It then occurs to me that it just must be because I was worried about him and thought he might be hurt, and I force myself to believe that and not even think about the other possibility.
“Luke! Luke, I’m over here!” I shout, jumping up and down in the grass in an attempt to lead him to me. When I realize that the grass around me isn’t even moving and that my efforts are all in vain, I stop jumping and continue to yell. I shouldn’t start moving again, since I could be walking away from Luke without realizing it and lose him again if I do.
“Lizzie?” His voice is definitely closer now and definitely coming from the left, and a smile breaks out across my face as I run through the grasses towards him.
“Luke!” I cry when I finally see him, and, dropping my sword, I run to him and throw myself at him.
“Lizzie,” he murmurs in my ear, his arms wrapping around me tightly. He takes a few deep breaths and kisses my neck softly, and, as a palpable wave of relief rolls off of him, I realize how worried he was too. “Don’t do that to me again, alright?” He pulls back and stares into my eyes, his expression completely serious. “Don’t make me leave you, because I don’t think I can again, alright?”
“Alright,” I agree quietly, and kiss him lightly on the lips. I then just let him hold me for a few more moments, content with the fact that he isn’t asking any questions, until I remember that I have a promise to keep.
Pulling back and out of Luke’s arms, I turn away from him, pick my sword up off the ground, and allow myself an inconspicuous sniff at the air in an attempt to pick up Marshall’s scent. When I don’t smell anything except the grass and Luke, I shake my head and turn back to him. The grass really does make a good scent barrier.
“What’s the matter Lizzie?’ Luke asks me, his ice-blue eyes concerned as they focus on my face. I meet his gaze for an instant and am reminded that his eye color really is my favorite color on the planet.
“The thing that came out of the ground wasn’t really a monster,” I begin, to immediately concede, “Well, it was a monster, but it was a monster that Marshall Moore had tamed and was riding.”
I see Luke’s face darken at the mention of Marshall, but I brush past it for now. Luke’s going to have to get over the fact that he’s our one ally left eventually.
“Anyways, Marshall and I talked for a little bit, and, before I left to come find you, I promised him I would come back for him.” Luke’s expression gets even stormier, but I keep on talking. There’s no point in snapping at Luke now when there’s something so much more important to do.
However, just as I am about to continue, Luke interrupts me. “What did you talk about?” he asks me quietly, a dangerous undertone to his voice.
I meet Luke’s ice-cold gaze for a long second, wondering why on earth he’s so jealous when it’s over, when he’s the one marrying me, before replying truthfully, “Fear and honor.”
“Sounds like it must have been an interesting conversation,” Luke says lightly, but he’s not fooling me at all. The lethal tone to his voice is still there.
“It’s always interesting talking to Marshall, because he has lots of interesting things to say,” I murmur, staring Luke down. I give him my ice-cold golden glare for a few tense, silent moments until he drops his hostile gaze. I then turn away from him again and begin to march off into the grasses, trying to follow the path of flattened vegetation that I created walking towards Luke.
It’s a few moments before Luke calls from behind me, “Well, wait for me!” and I hear the swoosh of his footsteps on the grass.
“You actually want to come?” I ask him incredulously, looking over at him, when he catches up to me. “I thought you didn’t like Marshall.” Actually, that’s a lie: I know Luke doesn’t like Marshall.
“I don’t,” he begins, his expression hard, “but you are my fiancee, and I want to keep an eye on him around you.” Luke stares over at me for a moment, clearly trying to read me for a reaction, before looking away again.
A small smile briefly flits across my face, and I ask him, making my voice teasing even though I’m really not, “Jealous?”
“Very,” he replies, his tone honest and not at all taken aback by my question. “After all, there’s a lot for me to jealous of,” he adds quietly, and I glance over at him for a moment.
I can hear Max screaming at the top of his lungs, “Say it, say it! Damage control!” and I take a deep breath to prepare myself for the lies and deception about to come out of my mouth. “Luke, there’s nothing for you to be jealous of,” I tell him quietly as I meet him gaze, forcing my best fake smile onto my face and stiffening when Luke leans in to kiss me.
Luke immediately pulls back to ask me, a concerned look on his face, “Lizzie, what’s the matter?”
I want to tell him everything that’s the matter. I want to tell him about all of the lies I’ve been feeding him, and all of the things I’ve said that I haven’t meant, and about how I feel terrible for using him in such a way. I also want to tell him that not everything is a lie, that I’m not acting all the time anymore, that I do actually feel something for him… but I know that I can’t, and that’s what hurts the most.
After taking another deep breath, I force the fake grin back onto my face and tell him, as sincerely as I can muster, “I’m fine,” and kiss him, my hands knotting themselves in his hair.
However, Luke immediately pulls away from me again, reaches up to untangle my hands from his hair, and says, more insitently this time, “No you’re not. Now what’s the matter?”
I sigh, partly at myself for not acting well enough to convince him anymore and partly at Luke for being more perceptive than usual, and turn away from him. I will lose everything if I lose the ability to deceive Luke, so now I have to do damage control in our relationship too.
“Luke,” I begin, thinking that I can maybe tell him part of the truth, “I just feel bad that I don’t feel the same way about you that you do about me. I mean,” I backtrack, “I love you, to an extent, but not nearly to the extent that you love, and it hurts me to know that I’m not as loyal to you and don’t care as much about you as you do about me, because you are perfect for me, Luke. I guess there’s just something inside of me that hasn’t realized that yet.” My voice trails off and I turn away from him again and take a deep breath. Breaking down and crying will do nothing except make me look weak, and I think I’ve already made myself look weak enough.
“Lizzie,” he starts, and my eyes are drawn to his face by the sheer power and emotion of his voice, “it doesn’t matter that you don’t feel the same way about me that I do about you, it really doesn’t, because I will always feel this way about you.”
He pauses for a moment, then continues, “When I said I would be there always, I meant it, in every aspect that I can be there, which includes how I feel about you. I will never stop loving you, Lizzie, and I will wait till I die for you.”
He reaches a hand up to gently caress the side of his face, a small smile curving his lips that does not reach his incredibly serious eyes. “Besides, you have nothing to feel bad about. You’ve said that you love me, and that’s all I ever wanted to hear.”
His grin gets bigger now and finally warms the ice crystals in his eye sockets, and, when he bends over me again, I kiss him back this time.
“You really don’t have any competition, Luke,” I murmur as he pulls back, allowing my thoughts to wander onto the forbidden subject of Jackson for a moment. Instantly I jerk my mind away, because I don’t want to put myself in any more pain. I think I’ve had enough of masochistic for now.
“For the moment I laid eyes on you, Lizzie,” Luke breathes, his eyes locked on mine, “you never had any competition.” He raises a hand to my face again and gives me one last smile before turning away to gaze out into the grasses before us.
My heart is honestly going to crack if Luke keeps this up, I think to myself as I follow the path of downed grass blindly, not noticing or caring where we’re going.
My thoughts are interrupted by Luke’s voice. “You went this way, right?” he asks me, and I jerk my head up to see a continution of the trail of flattened grass.
“Yeah,” I reply quietly, then drop my eyes back to the ground and continue to follow the path when Luke starts walking again.
We’ve been walking for about a minute in silence when the iron tang of blood – most definitely human blood – fills my nostrils. I can’t ignore it, since it means that Marshall or another champion nearby has run into trouble with a different champion or with a colossus, so I freeze and ask Luke, “Do you smell that?”
Like I predicted, he sniffs the air and replies, “No,” to look over at me in confusion.
I think idly that I have no idea how he doesn’t smell, even with him being a human, because the scent is so strong, but I don’t voice these thoughts. Instead I just say quietly, “I smell blood, human blood, and it’s coming from somewhere nearby.” I refuse to let the concern and panic I’m feeling creep into my voice, and somehow manage to keep my tone completely calm and level.
I glance over to find Luke looking at me in shock and amazement, and I realize what must have happened: my hyperactive senses must finally be creeping him out. “You can distinguish between different types of blood?” he asks me, his tone dripping astonishment.
“Yeah,” I reply simply, shrugging my shoulders. There’s no point in lying now, since it won’t achieve anything; besides, I don’t know if I’d be able to make myself lie to Luke again, even if I had to. “There are different levels of iron in different types of animal blood, so the scent is sharper or milder accordingly.”
“Oh,” is all he says in response, absolute amazement still written all over his face. The air around us then lapses into silence, as neither one of us is very good at keeping a conversation alive, and it stays that way for a while as we walk.
Even though I probably shouldn’t be, I’m really worried about Marshall and the possibility that the blood I smelled is his. Despite the fact that he said the colossus he was riding is completely under control and won’t hurt him, I still have my doubts. After all, a creature that size could hurt Marshall without even trying.
Of course, there’s also the potential that Marshall came across other champions and got into a fight with them. I’d rather think that’s the case, because Marshall has a very good chance at winning any fight he gets into. In fact, the only fight he’s lost so far was the one against me, and you can’t really pin that loss on him, as no one has had a chance against me.
All of a sudden, an undeniably human cry of pain rings through the air. Fearing the worst, I immediately pick up my pace and note with concern that the stench of blood in the air has gotten more powerful.
“Be very quiet,” I whisper, loud enough for Luke to hear but not so loud as for my voice to carry through the grasses. “If there’s a colossus up there, we need to make sure we aren’t detected, because we’re toast if the colossus does find us.” Even though the colossuses are incredibly stupid and don’t have the best of senses, I have no doubt that one of them could rip Luke and I to shreds in an instant if it were to detect us.
“I thought you said Marshall had tamed the colossus!” Luke whispers back, doubt and distrust clouding his voice.
“I said he tamed a colossus,” I reply, my tone icy. I don’t like that Luke is prejudiced against Marshall; I mean, I trust Marshall and he hasn’t done anything to break that trust, so isn’t that enough for Luke? “For all I know, there could be tens or hundreds or even thousands of colossuses under the grasses.”
“Oh,” Luke mutters in reply, hanging his head low in defeat, and I can’t help but smile. Even though Luke is my fiancé and we are supposed to be supporting each other, I still am happy when it turns out I’m right on an issue we disagree on.
Another human cry of pain bursts out, and I tighten the grip on my sword. The source of the blood and the cries is right in front of us now, only separated from us by a wall of grass. I’m very nervous about what we’re going to find, since right in front of us is exactly where I left Marshall, and I have a sinking suspicion that the cries of pain I’m hearing and the blood I’m smelling are his.
“Get ready,” I tell Luke quietly, and he draws his knife in answer. Even though he was only doing what Max told him to do by getting away from the Giving Hands, I still wish that Luke had managed to grab a weapon before he cleared out. Our current situation – and every fight we might get into with other champions or animals of the arena – would be a lot easier if he had.
I turn to look at Luke, and meet his determined gaze for a moment before pulling the grasses in front of us aside and bursting through to see Nick Hill, standing in front of a dead colossus, put a sword through a kneeling Marshall’s neck.