Entry tags:
(no subject)
Who| Maximus, Wyatt and Howard - CLOSED
What| Howard coming to crash the party
Where| In the trees
When| Nightfall after the Cornucopia
Warnings/Notes| Bullheadedness, teenage emotions and heart break probably
As fast as Maximus meant to move, he couldn't keep it up. Despite the leg being healed almost completely, he was still weaker than he had been, and the hours of walking saw him moving slower and slower, lagging behind Wyatt. He never said anything of course, just grit his teeth and kept moving, but there was a certain amount of relief when he saw the first red golden streaks of dusk.
"We'd best make camp."
With all of their supplies it hadn't been difficult. They'd debated camping in the trees, versus on the ground, but one of the trees was exceedingly large and had a hollowed groove between its roots which offered good cover from either side. Their waterproof ponchos provided good cover from above, and the small fire they made could only really be seen if you stood directly in front of the shelter. It wasn't necessarily ideal, but it was close enough to it.
Once he had a moment to sit down, Maximus carefully inspected the entirety of his prosthetic leg. He'd ended up with one that wasn't fashioned to look real - obviously metal and highly articulated, with no false skin. He ran his fingers along every ridge and groove, removing dust and mud and leaves, as careful with it as he was with his blade.
He cooked one potato each, for him and for Wyatt, roasting them next to the fire. He wanted their supplies to last as long as possible.
What| Howard coming to crash the party
Where| In the trees
When| Nightfall after the Cornucopia
Warnings/Notes| Bullheadedness, teenage emotions and heart break probably
As fast as Maximus meant to move, he couldn't keep it up. Despite the leg being healed almost completely, he was still weaker than he had been, and the hours of walking saw him moving slower and slower, lagging behind Wyatt. He never said anything of course, just grit his teeth and kept moving, but there was a certain amount of relief when he saw the first red golden streaks of dusk.
"We'd best make camp."
With all of their supplies it hadn't been difficult. They'd debated camping in the trees, versus on the ground, but one of the trees was exceedingly large and had a hollowed groove between its roots which offered good cover from either side. Their waterproof ponchos provided good cover from above, and the small fire they made could only really be seen if you stood directly in front of the shelter. It wasn't necessarily ideal, but it was close enough to it.
Once he had a moment to sit down, Maximus carefully inspected the entirety of his prosthetic leg. He'd ended up with one that wasn't fashioned to look real - obviously metal and highly articulated, with no false skin. He ran his fingers along every ridge and groove, removing dust and mud and leaves, as careful with it as he was with his blade.
He cooked one potato each, for him and for Wyatt, roasting them next to the fire. He wanted their supplies to last as long as possible.

no subject
That Max would never forgive him for it if he dared.
So he'd pressed on, until Max finally gave in.
After they'd set the camp (it wasn't the hidden, cozy cave of the last arena, but entirely serviceable), he left Max to tending his new leg and the fire and took a quick tour through the nearby area. He returned just as the scent of roasting potato was beginning to rise and drift, his stomach clenching and gurgling in response.
"Found a stream," he said, after announcing his approach with some pointed rustle of branches, not particularly keen on catching an arrow with his neck. "Fresh, an' it seems clean enough."
He tucked under the stretched ponchos and held out one of the filled canteens as he sank down beside the flames. The other one he tied securely back to the pack.
"No signs that anybody else's been through this way."
At least, none that he could see. No prove that the nagging weight he'd felt on and off all day had any truth to it.
no subject
He stays in the trees, moving with significantly more grace than he did last Arena, or the one before that. He's managed to stay uninjured during this Cornucopia, and he's been practicing climbing in general. Since Max started slowing down, Howard's been able to go back and forth once to his hidey-hole and drink some dressing, check his net trap, and then find Max and Wyatt again, but he's been following them in the trees most of the day.
He should have known that Wyatt would have put Max before him. That doesn't make it burn any less. He watches the fire, letting it ruin his night vision as he ties himself with a cut of his net into the tree so he won't fall out.
no subject
He reached out, taking the water, using just a little of it to wash out some stubborn grit from the creases in his leg.
"There's beer, still," He reminded Wyatt. "If you're not convinced you can trust the water."
no subject
"I ain't sure the arena's really the place to be tyin' one on," he sighed, leaning into the curve of the tree roots, boots crossing at his ankles. "'Sides, it's likely warm by now," if it had ever been cold to start with, "an' we'll have to risk the water sooner er later anyways."
The beer and drink they'd gotten from the Cornucopia wouldn't hold forever. Especially the milk.
Which, speaking of, he tugged on the zip of the pack and pulled the carton out, giving it an experimental shake (milk had come in bottles, or cans, in his day) before tearing at the top and giving it a sniff.
"We aughta start with this. This heat'll curdle it up, iffen we don't use it first."
no subject
He handed it back.
no subject
He took it back, sniffing again, before taking a measure draw. He held it in his mouth a moment, considering, as he scanned the carton, and then nodded, swallowing.
"Tastes alright."
Pinching the tear closed, he set the carton down between them so they could share, shifting as he settled, content to rest and wait as the sun continued to sink and the shadows deepened around them.
"Still see any--"
He broke off, going still and silent.
He'd been about to say that he still hadn't seen any animals, anything to eat or be eaten by, as the case might be, but there, where his eyes were fixed, was a strange shadow, cast by the slanted sunlight filtering through the trees.
Something, or someone, above them.
His fingers twitched and began to drift toward his boot.
no subject
Slowly, carefully, he notched the arrow and moved out of the shelter, his eyes tracing up to where Wyatt had been looking.
no subject
"Don't shoot, don't shoot!" he yells, hoping that Wyatt will intervene.
Some dark part of his mind wonders if Wyatt would even care if Max did. He certainly didn't seem sorry about Max hacking Eponine up, although Howard avoiding broaching the subject in any sort of direct manner. He doesn't know if he can hold it back anymore.
no subject
"Howard?" Relaxing immediately, he put a hand on Max's arm, urging him to lower the bow as he stepped past, peering up in the green, Howard's location clear now as he wrestled and thrashed. "It's alright, son, it's me, Wyatt. Yer safe here."
no subject
But it seemed they were safe for now.
no subject
He wonders where Eponine is now.
He walks towards them, pointedly keeping Wyatt between himself and Max. "Safe as anyone can get in this place, right?"
no subject
It wasn't so much that Howard was acting cagey, he always flighty, but more how direct it was. How unapologetic.
As if they last chat hadn't happened. As if the teary confession and familial embrace hadn't occurred.
As if he were some half-stranger, passing on the street.
"Everythin' alright, son? Are ya hurt?"
no subject
"I'll put another potato on," He murmured to Wyatt, turning his attention back to the shelter as he ducked inside.
He couldn't read Howard anywhere near as well as Wyatt could. He didn't really understand him on any level, but Wyatt cared about him, and vouched for him, and that was enough. But he knew when it was his place in a conversation and when it wasn't, so he gave them their space and went back to cooking.
no subject
But as soon as Max is out of sight, Howard seems to relax significantly, tension departing him so quickly his body seems to almost crumple in on itself. He covers the ground between himself and Wyatt quickly and gets close, close enough that Wyatt can see the stamp of fear that wraps around Howard like a second skin.
"Aunamee's back," he breathes.
no subject
He started to reach out, an automatic gesture, reaching to take the boy's shoulders in hand. Ready to ask what was wrong, how he could help... but Howard beat him to it.
His hands hesitated, but still came down, warm and heavy on Howard's shoulders.
"I know, son," he breathed, a low, weary sound. "Max, he told me, I..." His head shook, his hands squeezed. "I'm sorry, Howard. I thought it was done. I hoped it was."
For all their sakes.
no subject
He feels so much smaller now. So precariously positioned between life and death, between the hell of the outside and the hell of his mind. He shrinks under Wyatt's hand, shrinks in the light of the setting sun.
"Let's go. I got enough stashed for the two of us. Max'll be fine here."
no subject
"We don't have to go, Howard. Ya can stay here with the both of us." One hand lifted, gesturing lightly to the stretched ponchos, to the light flickering beneath. "He'll have a hell of a time tryin' to get us all three of us."
Arguably, Howard would likely be the safest with Max, as far as that went, considering Wyatt's track record. For all his attempts, he had yet to actually protect the boy from anything, somehow, horribly, always falling short.
Aunamee, Hyperion, the Capitol... they'd all gotten past him.
no subject
The blood seems to drain from his face, coursing through swollen veins down the bones of his wrist.
"Please. Please, Wyatt, please, let's just go."
no subject
Yes, he'd known about Eponine (it was a name he heard everywhere now - this sweet, dear angel he'd so far as he could recall had never met but that everyone loved), but even when Howard had mentioned her, he hadn't brought up the arena, hadn't followed Sigma's hissing, spitting lead.
Hell, Howard had been afraid of her, at the time.
He'd thought it was done. That Howard, at least, was willing to put it behind them, as they all did so many things that transpired in the arena.
"Howard, don't do this. I beg ya, don't."
Don't turn on him too.
Don't make him choose.
no subject
Should he get over the feeling of revulsion that courses in his guts when he thinks of the footage he watched? Get over the nightmares that cling to him like so many demons when he sleeps? Maybe he can just put Aunamee away in the Arena too, like a postcard in a box or a time capsule.
no subject
It was worse.
Howard was one of his own, tossing in the towel on him. Someone he would have thought would have given him a chance, would have tried at least.
"It ain't that simple, Howard. Ya can't judge it all the same."
A part of him wondered why he was even trying anymore. Obviously, as with Sigma, judgement had already been reached.
They were all, unto themselves, judge, jury, and executioners.
no subject
He let out a breath and pulled the potatoes away from the fire so they wouldn't burn before pulling himself back out of the shelter.
Slowly, he wiped his hands against each other, the dirt settling into the creases of his palm. His leg creaked as he stood up straight.
"Is there a problem?" He asked, almost rhetorically.
no subject
There's a beat. A cry, somewhere out in the darkness, human or animal, who knows.
"No. There's no problem. I think it's pretty clear when I'm not wanted somewhere."
no subject
Wyatt's hand hung there, as if hoping the boy would come back, but the moment stretched and as it became clear that wasn't going to be the case, it sank, along with his heart. Face draining like the light from the sky.
"Stay, son, we'll talk about it, I'll try an' explain...."
no subject
His knife was already in his belt but he leaned into the shelter to grab the bow and quiver, slinging both over a shoulder and grabbing his potato. He left the other two by the fire.
"I'll keep lookout. You can call if you need me," He added, glancing at Wyatt, but he didn't wait for permission - already heading off in the direction opposite to Howard.
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)