ANDREW | LUPITA | KASTNER ↴
xxxxxxThe Heartbroken Risk-taker
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- Gender Girl | Age 18 | Relationship Status Single | Protector Tyler Creed | Place Woods | Tagged Tyler Creed
Drew felt a little more at ease when the wolf backed up a few paces when she pulled the blade and ever more so when it whined as if maybe it were a bit afraid. She was glad to see she had a little bit of power in the outcome of the situation, but wasn't exactly sure she liked the way she held it. She began to second guess herself. Maybe the wolf isn't afraid and maybe he's waiting for a better way to attack. Maybe he thought the knife was something else and once he figured out that it wasn't something too harmful, he'd attack. Maybe he was giving her a chance and if she didn't take it, he'd kill her. Or maybe he really wasn't a threat, he didn't want to attack.
The last thought stuck in her mind and held a firm grip. But Drew wouldn't let it stay forever. She didn't want to believe it was true. To her, there was nothing good left in the world and no good thoughts left in her mind. She felt as though everything were a threat and there was nothing one could trust. All she had left in her was turned morbid and dark. In her theory, she thought that once a child grew up and opened its eyes to lose its innocence, they'd find reality. But then again Drew herself was still a child and all her thoughts were dark and cold like she had nothing good left to think about.
She was brought out of her mind to see the white wolf again, but she noticed something different about his golden optics, something that was all too familiar to her. They were distant as though watching a bad memory fold out. She thought about taking her chance then, while he wouldn't know what hit him. But she couldn't move, something was holding her back. Something in the wolf's optics that showed a soul. Perhaps this beautiful creature was more than just that. Of course, right when she realized this, he began to shift.
The boy that stood over her had the same soft golden optics as the white wolf that once stood before her. There were other similar traits such as his structure, but she didn't dwell on it. Drew didn't take pleasure in being the weakling on the ground, making for an easy target so she attempted to get to her feet. She managed, but winced once or twice as she had applied pressure to her right ankle. But because she didn't like to appear weak so she applied some of her weight to it so he didn't look like she was favoring her injury.
The girl held the pocket knife out in front of her, her hands slightly shaking. When the boy began to speak in his calm tone, she wanted to scream. Not in the way that she was afraid, but frustrated. For a split second, she looked at the boy and didn't see him, but another. This one was maybe two years younger, had shorter hair, wore a and unbuttoned red plaid shirt a pair of worn out jeans. They were at the end of the woods and it was much darker in the day. Her pocket knife in her shaky fingers was now a gun. The boy's optics were green like sparkling emeralds and his skin tone a few shades lighter. He began to speak the same words.
This time, Drew couldn't hold back. She let out a shriek of pain and dropped the gun which returned to its original form of her pocket knife, the trees returning to cover the scene around her and the boy with golden optics in front of her. She clamped her hazel optics shut afraid of the reoccurring dream. When she did this, she stumbled and placed too much weight on her ankle and collapsed to the ground.
She didn't look up, she couldn't. She had just shown three of her great weaknesses and didn't want to look into the eyes of the one who now had power over her. She didn't catch his last words however, but if she had she probably wouldn't believe him. Perhaps she had heard them however, because they began to ring in her ears coming out from her memories.