rehearsal — joseph zada and his costar are prompted to spend a night alone rehearsing their intimate scene in their current project, we were liars
friends — after an interview forces joseph and his coworker to confront the chemistry they’ve been ignoring, that night at their hotel turns their friendship into something frighteningly irresistible
famous — joseph zada is forced to confess his unspoken feelings for his childhood best friend as he navigates his new fame and the excruciating distance between them
the hunger games
↳ haymitch abernathy
smoke — a hidden meeting behind the hob pulls down the walls between haymitch abernathy and the classmate he’s spent years pretending not to want
together — when the eldest donner volunteers for the fiftieth hunger games in place of her sister, survival is the last thing she expects. trapped in an arena designed to punish rebellion, she is forced to confront loss, violence, and the boy she always hated: haymitch abernathy. as the games twist toward an unprecedented ending, she learns that some special things endure even when the capitol tries to erase them
percy jackson and the olympians
↳ percy jackson
caught — sneaking around camp half-blood is easy until your secret relationship with percy jackson is discovered by the one god who was never supposed to find out
hush — when a normal school day fractures and she sees something she was never meant to, percy makes a desperate choice to calm her down
tides — poseidon notices where percy jackson’s heart rests, and the sea makes sure she knows it
while he slept — an accident at camp half-blood leaves percy unconscious and changes everything for the girl who heals him
↳ luke castellan
friends — she has to live with the excruciating fact that her and luke can never be just friends again after she ends their year long relationship
stranger things
↳ mike wheeler
mistaken — a fight leaves her groggy and mistaking her boyfriend for his older sister
rant — what starts as harmless complaining spirals into teasing and bickering at lunch. when lucas crosses a line, mike wheeler surprises everyone by taking her side
turnbow trap — when erica refuses to help, mike wheels a new plan into motion—one that involves the eldest turnbow, a fake study session, and a makeout he definitely wasn’t prepared for
turnbow trap² — the second attempt at the turnbow trap goes better than the first—until the eldest turnbow returns home early and discovers a mike wheeler who is nothing like the boy who panicked out of her room last night, but a fighter ready to drag her out of danger and kiss her silent
↳ steve harrington
rivals — after a tense rivalry game leaves steve harrington frustrated and the captain cheerleader for the opposing team buzzing with victory, a generous ride home turns into something neither of them were supposed to want
walker scobell
melted — walker immediately melts into his girlfriend's kiss when she tries a tiktok trend on him
we were liars
↳ johnny sinclair
summer heat — cadence's best friend joins her on beechwood for the summer and johnny instantly takes a liking to her
summer heat² — after another day of beachwood sun and the liars’ chaos, things between cadence’s best friend and johnny shift in a way neither of them can ignore
tethered — after a fight leaves everything unresolved, johnny turns a boat party into a punishment, wielding jealousy and distance to protect his pride
first night — when the liars sneak to a boat party their first night back on beechwood, a tiny shirt and one dance push johnny and his lifelong best friend past the edge of friendship for the first time
burnt — after a lifetime of summers on beechwood island, falling in love with johnny sinclair is the easiest thing she’s ever done but surviving it is not
summary walker immediately melts into his girlfriend's kiss when she tries a tiktok trend on him
you’re stretched out on your bed with your feet in walker's lap, your socks brushing his thigh every time you move.
your room smells like vanilla from the candle you’re not technically allowed to light when he’s over, and something warm and savory drifts up from downstairs—your parents cooking dinner.
walker is half-sitting, half-slouched against your headboard, phone in one hand, the other arm draped lazily over your legs like it belongs there.
you’re both scrolling your phones. occasionally you show each other something. occasionally he laughs out loud and you tell him to shut up even though you like that he’s loud, that he takes up space in your quiet room.
your next scroll is a trend you've been seeing for days: the boyfriend stands there with his arms out while the girlfriend kisses him to see if he'll melt into the kiss or not.
you bite your lip, heart kicking up just a little.
walker notices the way your leg stills under his arm. “what?” he asks, already suspicious.
you don’t answer as you sit up.
his arm slides off your legs reluctantly. immediately, he frowns.
“hey,” he says, soft but dramatic. “where are you going?"
“hold on,” you say, trying not to smile as you climb off the bed.
he watches you prop your phone up on your dresser, angling it just right.
“what are you doing?” walker asks again, his blonde curls frizzing over.
you turn back to him. “come here.”
he squints but stands anyway, shuffling over in his socks. “this feels like a trick.”
you tap the screen a few times, making sure it’s framed, then look up at him. “put your arms up—like a t-pose."
his eyebrows knit together instantly. “why?”
“just do it.”
he hesitates. then slowly lifts his arms out to his sides, stiff as a board.
“i swear,” he says, nervous laugh slipping in, “if you tickle me, i’m actually gonna scream.”
you laugh but don’t explain, just pressing record.
forever by barbara mason starts playing softly from your phone, tinny but sweet as it fills the room.
walker glances toward the sound. “what ar—”
you kiss him before he can finish.
it’s not rushed; it’s slow enough that you feel the exact second his resolve disappears. one heartbeat he’s holding himself still, trying to be brave, and the next—
he folds.
his arms come down immediately, hands cupping your head like he forgot they were supposed to be anywhere else. his thumbs slide along your jaw, your hair, pulling you closer like it’s instinct, like there was never any other option.
walker kisses you back harder, deeper, smiling into it without meaning to. you feel him lean in, body softening, completely abandoning whatever plan he thought he had.
“oh my gosh,” he murmurs against your mouth, already gone.
you laugh quietly into the kiss but he doesn’t let you pull away. he keeps kissing you, again and again, completely ignoring the song repeatedly looping on your phone.
by the time the audio restarts for the sixth time, you’re both breathless.
you pull back first, foreheads touching.
his eyes are a little dazed. “you’re evil,” he says fondly.
you grin and reach past him to see your video.
you watch it together, shoulder to shoulder on your bed now; the way he melts immediately, the way his hands grab you like he can’t help it.
walker groans and hides his face in your shoulder. “i didn’t even last a second.”
you kiss his cheek. “you have zero self-control.”
“only for you,” he corrects.
looking back at your phone, you hover over the caption bar before you ultimately tap save to drafts.
“okay,” you say quickly. “i'm drafting it but i'll send it to you.”
walker lifts his head immediately. “what? why?”
you glance at him. “your fangirls. i don’t want to get hate.”
he frowns, thoughtful for half a second, then shakes his head. “no.”
“walker—”
he sits up, serious now, taking your phone gently from your hands. “hey. it’s cute. it’s us. and i want it up.”
you blink. “you’re sure?”
“yeah,” he says without hesitation. “i’m not embarrassed. i want everyone to see i’m with you.”
your chest tightens, nerves buzzing under your skin. “you don’t think they’ll be weird?”
he shrugs, easy, then smiles at you in that soft, boyish way that always disarms you. “they’re always a little weird—it’s fine.”
he hands the phone back to you, nudging it toward your chest. “post it.”
you hesitate one last second, thumb hovering.
then you hit share.
the video uploads and your phone buzzes almost instantly.
walker grins like he just won something, arm sliding back over your legs, tugging you closer. “see? they love you.”
downstairs, someone calls that dinner’s almost ready.
up here, with his arm warm and solid over you and the song still echoing in your head, you hope he melts forever.
would it be slay if i request a mike x harrington!reader where she either passes out or gets in a fight or something (somehow, someway) & when she wakes up, nancy’s in front of her holding an ice pack to her head, and reader thinks it’s mike (tying back to the scene in s2 when steve wakes up and thinks mike is nancy). i think it’s such a funny thing to do, especially since time has passed since season 2. (& finn did mention how it was funny to film because he and nat do look alike).
summary a fight leaves her groggy and mistaking her boyfriend for his older sister — request
you come back to yourself in pieces.
first the smell—antiseptic and metal and that sharp, clean cold that always makes your nose sting. then the sound, a low murmur somewhere close, a steady shh shh like someone’s trying to calm a skittish animal. your head throbs in slow, pulsing waves, each one blooming behind your eyes.
something cold presses to your forehead.
you groan, shifting slightly, and the world tilts unpleasantly.
“don’t move,” a voice says quickly. calm, firm. familiar in a way that makes your chest loosen before your brain catches up.
you squint, lashes heavy, vision still swimming; dark brown hair, worried eyes, a hand steady against your temple.
“mike?” you mumble, voice rough. "what happened, mike?"
there’s a pause.
a very specific pause.
“wow,” the figure finally says. “okay. rude.”
your eyes finally focus.
oh no.
it’s not your boyfriend.
it's his older sister; she's crouched in front of you, one knee on the floor, holding an ice pack to your head with a look that’s torn between concern and disbelief.
your stomach drops.
“oh my god,” you croak. “nancy. i— i thought you were—”
“yeah,” she cuts in dryly. “i know.”
she adjusts the ice pack when you wince, surprisingly gentle. “you just pulled a full steve harrington.”
that jolts something loose in your foggy brain.
“…he thought mike was you,” you murmur weakly. "wait how did you know that?"
you recall the events from a couple years ago as max drove your older brother's bmw while he was unconscious in the back seat.
nancy snorts despite herself. “dustin never shuts up about it."
you let out a breath that turns into a pained laugh. “guess it runs in the family.”
“apparently it does,” she says, lips twitching. “except you actually earned it.”
you try to sit up again and immediately regret it. your head protests violently, and nancy’s hand is there again, firm on your shoulder.
“easy,” she says. “you got clocked pretty hard.”
“did i win?” you ask.
nancy blinks. “you started a fight with a senior twice your size.”
“that’s not an answer.”
she sighs. “no. but you landed a solid hit, so i’d call it a moral victory.”
you groan, letting your head tip back against the wall. “is mike here?”
nancy’s expression softens instantly. she glances over her shoulder toward the hallway. “he’s pacing a hole in the floor. i told him i’d sit with you until you woke up.”
“he’s gonna freak out,” you mumble.
“already did,” she says. “now he’s moved on to apologizing for things that aren’t his fault.”
that sounds like him. the thought makes your chest ache in that quiet, fond way that sneaks up on you.
nancy watches you for a beat, then smirks. “you know, when you said his name, i almost told you to keep your eyes closed and commit to the bit.”
you smile despite the pounding in your head. “missed opportunity.”
“next time,” she says lightly, then softens again. “but seriously. you scared us.”
“sorry,” you whisper.
she shakes her head. “don’t be. just… try not to get knocked out in public places, okay? it’s very on-brand for steve. less so for you.”
“tell that to harrington blood,” you mutter.
she laughs quietly, then stands, offering you a hand. “i’ll go get him. try not to mistake anyone else for your boyfriend.”
you squeeze her fingers gratefully. “no promises.”
as she walks away, you close your eyes again, head still aching—but you're smiling now, already bracing yourself for mike’s worried voice, his hands hovering like he’s afraid to touch you.
hii gorgeous! i love your style of writing and i wanted to request a little fic with mike wheeler where the reader is a cheerleader or more on the popular girl side and she’s sitting down, hanging out with the party at the cafeteria, and she’s ranting and being expressively sulky about practice or something and mike is just like staring instead of listening but then lucas cuts her off to tease her or something, causing them to bicker but mike goes to her rescue immediately and acts defensive against lucas!! idk if this makes sense and it’s totally fine if you can’t write it but i just wanted to put a lil request out since i love your stranger things and hunger games fics!!💓
summary what starts as harmless complaining spirals into teasing and bickering at lunch. when lucas crosses a line, mike wheeler surprises everyone by taking her side — request
you drop your lunchbox onto the cafeteria table harder than you mean to, the material scratching against the dingy wood.
the cafeteria smells like fries and bleach and something burnt, the kind of noise that makes your head feel louder instead of quieter.
the party is already at the seated around their unassigned-assigned table, each picking at their school lunch.
“i’m just saying,” you start, already mid-rant, words spilling out unchecked, “if coach wants us to hit a new routine every single week, maybe she shouldn’t schedule practice right after pep rally rehearsals. like my calves are actually screaming.”
you slump down onto the bench, dramatic on purpose, shoving your pom-poms deeper into your backpack with more aggression than necessary. your uniform skirt rides up a little when you sit, and you tug at it absently, irritation buzzing under your skin like static.
dustin snorts beside you; both max and will hum in vague sympathy; lucas is halfway through chewing, eyes already glittering with that look that means he’s about to say something annoying.
but mike—
mike isn’t reacting at all.
you’re facing the table, elbows braced, hands flying as you talk, so you don’t notice it right away. it’s only when your voice trails off for half a second—when you’re searching for the right word to describe how your ankles feel like they’ve been personally betrayed—that you glance up.
and mike wheeler is staring at you.
his dark curls are falling into his eyes the way they always do when he forgets to push them back, shoulders slightly hunched like he’s still growing into himself. his sweater sleeves are tugged down over his wrists, hands wrapped loosely around his untouched soda can.
your hands slow mid-gesture before you realize it.
his chin is tipped slightly forward, lips parted like he forgot to close them, eyes fixed on your face with this quiet, almost stunned focus. like you’re not complaining about cheer practice in the middle of a loud, sticky cafeteria, but doing something important. something worth memorizing.
it throws you off enough that you falter.
“—and another thing,” you finish lamely, rolling your eyes and dropping your hands to the table.
lucas swallows his bite and immediately pounces.
“wow,” he says, leaning back and folding his arms. “rough life. running around, cheering, being popular. don’t know how you survive.”
you whip your head toward him. “oh, i’m sorry—did i ask for commentary from the peanut gallery?”
“i’m just saying,” lucas shrugs, smug, “some of us have real problems. like work or math tests... or monsters.”
will winces a little. “i mean… practice still counts as work.”
you smile sympathetically at will before scoffing and tilting your head towards lucas; giving him a slow, deliberate once-over. “that’s rich coming from you.”
lucas raises a brow. “what’s that supposed to mean?”
“oh, i don’t know,” you say sweetly, gesturing vaguely at him, “starting varsity, winning games, half the school knowing your name? you’re literally a popular athlete. you do not get to act like you’re above this.”
“thank you,” dustin says, pointing between the two of you. “i’ve been saying this for months.”
lucas opens his mouth, then closes it. “that’s different.”
“how?” you press. “because you wear a jersey instead of a skirt?”
there’s a beat of silence before he scoffs, shaking his head. “wow. okay.”
you lean back, arms crossing. “yeah. okay.”
“see?” he finally smirks. “energy. that’s why coach keeps you.”
you scoff, heat creeping up your neck. “you’re impossible.”
“you’re dramatic.”
“you’re lucky i’m sitting down,” you warn, already leaning forward.
and before you can fully launch yourself into the argument—before you can really dig into him—mike moves.
he straightens abruptly, chair legs screeching faintly against the floor as he turns toward lucas, lanky shoulders squared in a way that makes your stomach flip a little.
he’s all sharp lines when he stands, taller than he looks when he’s slouched at the table, jaw set beneath that familiar mop of dark hair.
“hey,” mike says, sharp. defensive. “lay off.”
lucas blinks. “what?”
“she’s allowed to complain,” mike continues, voice steady but edged with something protective. “practice sounds hard. and you’re being a jerk.”
the table goes quiet.
max’s eyebrows shoot up. “wow,” she murmurs. “did not have that on my bingo card.”
you freeze, caught halfway between annoyance and surprise, your mouth parting just slightly. you hadn’t expected that. not from mike, who usually stays quiet unless it’s about d&d or something genuinely apocalyptic.
lucas stares at him. “dude. since when do you care about cheer practice?”
mike doesn’t even look away from him. “since now.”
there’s a beat. then another.
max smirks into her drink. will fidgets nervously. dustin’s eyebrows shoot up. your chest tightens in a strange, warm way.
lucas raises his hands. “okay, okay. sorry.” he glances at you, less smug now. “didn’t mean to gang up on you.”
you huff, crossing your arms, but the edge is gone. “whatever.”
mike finally turns back toward you, and when your eyes meet, his expression softens instantly. like he’s worried he went too far. like he’s checking to see if you’re okay.
“your calves really hurt?” he asks quietly.
you nod, a little stunned. “yeah. a lot.”
he frowns, thoughtful. “you should ice them. my mom says that helps.”
the earnestness of it makes your lips twitch despite yourself.
“thanks, wheeler,” you murmur.
he ducks his head, ears going pink, but he doesn’t stop looking at you.
and this time, when he stares, you don’t mind at all.
summary after a fight leaves everything unresolved, johnny turns a boat party into a punishment, wielding jealousy and distance to protect his pride
warnings established relationship, micro-cheating? — request
i’m barefoot on the beechwood dock when the party boat pulls in, toes curling against the warm wood like it might steady me if i hold still long enough.
it doesn’t.
the lanterns strung along the posts blur together when i blink. the water slaps gently against the wood, rhythmic and patient, like it knows something i don’t. my dress keeps catching on my thigh when the breeze lifts it, and i tug it down out of habit, nerves buzzing under my skin.
i try to focus on the conversation that the liars are having—something about where cady secured our fake i.d.'s—but it's almost impossible when all i can think about is my room back in clairmont and how much i yearn to hole myself inside of it.
johnny and i fought this afternoon.
he’d been sprawled on the counter, feet dangling, beer sweating onto the marble. i told him i didn’t love how careless he’d been lately. how fast he drives back in new york. how hard he's been drinking. how it scares me sometimes.
he laughed like it was nothing.
“you worry too much,” he said. “you’re always trying to fix me.”
and something in me snapped.
“i’m not trying to fix you,” i replied. “i’m trying to keep you.”
that’s when his face changed. the walls instantly coming down.
“see?” he said. “that. that’s what i mean. you don’t get to decide who i am.”
i laughed back, because if i didn’t, i would’ve cried.
now he won’t look at me.
the boat docks before us and a few locals are hoisting us up the ramp. music is already thumping through the hull, and he is there with it—johnny sinclair, golden and grinning, like nothing in the world has ever weighed on him.
i step onto the boat anyway. because that’s what i'm supposed to do. because staying at clairmont and not showing up would mean he won. because i still love him in that sick way that doesn’t care about pride.
cadence brushes past me, warm and familiar, murmuring something soft i barely hear. mirren smells like sunscreen and sugar. gat gives me that gentle, knowing look that makes my throat tighten.
johnny wanders through the tight crowd, arm slung loose, a can of beer already tipped against his mouth. his jaw flexes when he swallows. i can tell he knows exactly where i am.
he just doesn’t turn.
the boat pulls away from the dock. cheers go up. someone turns the music louder. bodies press closer together, heat and laughter and careless joy tangling in the air.
johnny stays by his lonesome near the bar, jaw tight.
i stand near the side of the boat, where the balcony opens up into the main room—i'm gripping the rail with white knuckles, watching my boyfriend from my peripheral vision.
then she shows up.
she’s laughing too loudly, already loose with drink and confidence, leaning in close to say something in johnny's ear. she’s pretty in a way that feels effortless, like she’s never had to think too hard about how she’s seen.
my stomach twists.
she reaches for his arm.
he lets her.
okay, i think. okay. it’s nothing. he’s just being johnny.
then the music shifts—slower, heavier—and she moves closer, hands sliding to his shoulders like they belong there.
johnny looks up.
right at me.
it’s not accidental, it’s not a glance—it’s deliberate.
his blue eyes lock onto mine, dark and challenging.
my breath leaves my body like i’ve been punched.
he doesn’t put his hands on her. he doesn’t pull her closer. but he doesn’t step back either. they dance in that way that’s just close enough to feel intimate. her arms loop around his neck. his hands stay loose at his sides, fingers flexing.
he never stops her.
every time the boat rocks, every time the music swells, his eyes find mine like a challenge, like he’s daring me to say something, do something, react.
heat crawls up my neck, shame and jealousy tangling tight in my chest. i feel stupid for caring this much. stupid for standing here letting him prove a point on my skin.
i don’t wait for it to get worse.
i turn and walk fully onto the balcony before my eyes can betray me.
the night air hits hard, cool against my flushed skin. i keep walking the perimeter of the party boat until the music fades into nothing, until the concrete is cool under my feet and the water stretches dark and endless in front of me.
i sit by a set of tables and chairs, hugging my knees, staring out at the black waves.
johnny doesn’t come after me.
that hurts worse than if he had.
i don’t speak to him the next day.
or the day after that.
it’s not petty. it’s not calculated. i just can’t. every time i think about opening my mouth, all i can see are her manicured hands on his shoulders. the way he looked at me like daring me to feel something.
johnny tries to break the silence at first.
a knock on my door. “you alive in there?”
i don’t answer.
a comment tossed over breakfast. “you gonna glare at me all summer or what?”
i don’t look up.
by day three, he’s unraveling.
i can feel it. the way he lingers in doorways. the way his eyes follow me when he thinks i’m not looking. the way his knee bounces when we’re in the same room, restless and sharp.
johnny sinclair hates being shut out. hates not knowing what i’m thinking. hates not being able to charm his way back in.
i hate how much i notice.
i finally break on the fourth night.
we’re alone in the living room, cicadas screaming outside, the windows open to thick, humid air. i’m on the couch with a book i’ve reread three times without absorbing a word when johnny drops down across from me.
too close.
i can smell him—salt, beer, something warm and familiar that makes my chest ache.
“are you gonna talk to me,” he starts, “or are we doing this forever?”
i keep my eyes on the page. “doing what?”
“pretending i don’t exist.”
that makes me look up.
his face is tight, jaw clenched, eyes dark with something like frustration and something else—longing, maybe—he doesn’t know what to do with.
“you danced with her,” i say quietly.
he exhales hard, running a hand through his blonde hair. “yeah.”
“you wanted me to see it.”
a beat. then, honest and rough, “yeah. i did.”
my throat tightens. “did you touch her?”
his eyes don’t waver. “no.”
“not once?”
“i didn’t touch her,” johnny says firmly. “that was the point.”
the words hit harder than i expect.
“why?" i whisper.
his laugh is bitter. “because i was mad. because i felt like you were trying to own me. because i wanted you to stop looking at me like i was something fragile you had to manage.”
i stand. i can’t sit anymore.
“i was scared,” i say. “you scare me when you don’t care if you get hurt.”
his face flickers—something soft, something guilty—before the wall snaps back into place.
“you don’t get to decide how i live,” he says, standing as well. "or who i am.”
“and you don’t get to hurt me just to feel free.”
silence crashes down between us, heavy and loud.
johnny steps closer. close enough that i can feel the heat radiating from his tanned skin.
his hand lifts—hesitates—then cups my jaw anyway.
my breath catches. i almost push his hand away.
his thumb brushes my cheek like he’s memorizing me, like he’s afraid he might lose the right to touch me if he waits too long. those blue eyes drop to my mouth as his breathing goes uneven.
“i’m still mad,” he murmurs. “and i still feel like you’re trying to cage me.”
“i don’t want to cage you,” i say. “i just don’t want to lose you.”
that’s when he kisses me.
it’s sudden and desperate—like he’s been holding himself back for days. his lips press hard against mine, all frustration and longing and things neither of us knows how to say right. it’s not soft. it’s not gentle.
it’s need.
after a beat, he pulls back just enough to rest his forehead against mine; eyes closed, breath shaking.
“you make it hard,” he whispers. “to feel free. because i want you too much.”
my hands twist into his shirt, because letting go feels impossible.
loving johnny sinclair is knowing exactly how dangerous it is and wanting him anyway.
pairing percy jackson x daughter-of-dionysus!fem!reader
summary sneaking around camp half-blood is easy until your secret relationship with percy jackson is discovered by the one god who was never supposed to find out — request
i love that percy is poseidon’s only child at camp half-blood.
not for the prestige. not for the prophecy implications. but because it means cabin three is quiet at night.
it means there are evenings like this—where the torches outside have burned low, where the lake breathes slow and steady like it’s asleep too, where the rest of camp feels far away. it means i can sit cross-legged on percy’s bed with my back against the wall, his knees nudging mine, his fingers absentmindedly tracing circles on my wrist like he doesn’t even realize he’s doing it.
it means privacy.
which, when your father is dionysus—camp director—is a miracle.
when it comes to our relationship we're careful. painfully careful. only annabeth and grover know. they both found out the same way—walking in on us standing just a little too close, my hand still fisted in the hem of percy’s shirt, both of us going rigid like we’d been caught committing a felony. annabeth had stared for a long second, sighed, and said, “i’m not telling mr. d,” like she was already tired. grover had turned red and immediately started guarding doors for us without being asked.
everyone else? absolutely not.
that includes my half-brothers.
actually—especially my half-brothers.
i had cornered castor and pollux over a month ago now, armed with snacks, a promise to cover for them during chores for a week, and the threat of “i will tell dad everything you’ve ever done.”
they agreed instantly.
their job was simple: distract our father when i wasn’t in my cabin. redirect him. mislead him. lie, if necessary.
they were very confident about this.
“we got you,” castor had said, clapping me on the shoulder.
“professionals,” pollux added, nodding solemnly.
i know my confidence in them should be limited, i know i should be more careful—i know i should go home—but i can deal with all of that later.
right now, percy's mouth is warm and familiar, the kind of familiar that still makes my chest feel too small for my lungs. his lips move against mine slowly, careful in the way he always is at first—like he’s still asking even though we’ve done this a hundred times. his blonde curls brush my forehead when he tilts his head, soft and slightly damp from the lake, and i hook my fingers into the back of his sleep shirt just to keep him close.
his hands are warm at my waist, thumbs pressing in lightly like he’s grounding himself there. every time he kisses me, he does it like he’s afraid i might disappear if he lets go.
i pull back just enough to breathe, my nose brushing his.
“you’re thinking too hard,” i whisper.
his mouth quirks. “i’m literally always thinking too hard.”
i smile and lean in again, slower this time, letting the kiss linger. his breath stutters and his grip tightens a fraction, like he forgot for half a second where we are. his cabin is quiet, shadows stretching along the walls, the only sound the low crackle of a dying torch outside and the soft shift of fabric when he moves closer.
i swing one leg over the edge of the bed, turning toward him fully. my knee bumps his thigh and he lets out a quiet laugh into my mouth, the vibration sending a spark straight through me.
“we should stop,” he murmurs, but his lips chase mine when i pull away, eyes half-lidded, lashes dark against his cheeks.
“you don’t mean that,” i say back, and this time when i kiss him, he kisses me back without hesitation.
his hand slides up my side, stopping just below my ribs, fingers splayed like he’s memorizing the shape of me. i feel every place we touch—my palm against his chest, the steady beat of his heart under my hand, the way he leans into me like the world makes more sense up close.
it feels safe.
it feels stupidly, dangerously normal.
until the door slams open.
“jackson—”
the sound hits like ice water.
percy goes completely still beneath my hands. not stiff—frozen. his eyes fly open, blue wide and panicked, mouth still parted from the kiss like his brain hasn’t caught up yet. my stomach drops so fast i feel dizzy.
my father stands in the doorway.
his purple camp shirt is rumpled, his expression already twisted into irritation mid-rant—and then it shifts. confusion first. then realization. then something dangerously close to disbelief.
his eyes flick from percy’s face to where percy’s hands are still very obviously on my waist. to me. to the space between us.
the silence stretches.
i slide off the bed immediately, feet hitting the floor too hard. “hi, dad.”
percy makes a noise somewhere between a gasp and a choke, scrambling backward so fast he nearly knocks into the bedpost. “sir—i mean—mr. d—i—”
“out,” my father snaps, already reaching for my wrist. his grip isn’t rough, but it’s firm, decisive. “now.”
he drags me out into the night air before i can say another word. the sudden cool hits my skin, raising goosebumps along my arms. my heart is pounding so loud i’m sure he can hear it.
“of all the—” he starts, then stops abruptly.
castor and pollux come sprinting up the path like they’re being chased by hellhounds.
“we tried!” castor blurts, hands on his knees as he gasps for air.
“he zigged when we thought he’d zagged,” pollux says desperately.
“you can’t blame us for that,” castor adds.
“enough,” my father cuts in just as pollux is opening his mouth again.
both of them shut up instantly, shoulders slumping.
my dad releases my wrist and pinches the bridge of his nose, eyes squeezed shut like he’s fighting a headache the size of mount olympus. when he opens them again, he looks… tired. not angry. not thunderous. just deeply, personally exhausted.
he looks at me.
then, slowly, he looks back at percy, who is hovering in the doorway like he’s afraid to breathe too loud.
“him,” my father says, pointing vaguely at him. “out of every boy at this camp.”
i lift my chin. “yes.”
his brows knit together. “why?"
i glance back at percy. he looks like he’s about to pass out, hands clenched at his sides, jaw tight. i turn back to my father.
“because he’s kind,” i say. “and because he listens. and because he treats me like i matter, not like a complication.”
my father stares at me for a long, searching moment.
then he sighs. long and theatrical.
“gods,” he mutters. “this is why i hate heroes.”
he straightens, waves a dismissive hand. “fine. whatever. i don’t want details. i don’t want to hear about it. and i definitely don’t want to walk in on it again." he pauses, glancing back toward the cabin. “go back inside. tell the boy goodnight.”
my eyes widen. “that’s it?”
he’s already turning away, stalking off into the dark. “don’t push your luck.”
i stand there for half a second, stunned, before slipping back into the cabin.
percy is pacing.
the second he sees me, he rushes over, words tumbling out all at once. “what did he say? are we dead? am i cursed? do i need to pack—”
i start laughing. i can’t help it. it bubbles out of me, light and breathless and a little hysterical, and before he can finish his sentence i grab the front of his shirt and pull him down.
his questions die on his lips as i kiss him again.
he melts instantly, both hands coming up to hold my face, thumbs brushing my cheeks like he’s checking that i’m really here. when i pull back, his forehead rests against mine.
summary she has to live with the excruciating fact that her and luke can never be just friends again after she ends their year long relationship
it's the kind of morning where the air is cool enough to sting when i breathe in, where the cabins are still half-asleep and the lake looks like it’s holding its breath. i can hear my own footsteps too clearly on the path, can feel my heart knocking around my ribs like it’s trying to get out ahead of me.
luke is already there, sitting on the steps of the hermes cabin, elbows on his knees. his sword is beside him, bare steel catching the light. he looks up when he hears me, that familiar half-smile flickering on like muscle memory—and then faltering when he sees my face.
i don’t sit next to him.
“hey,” he says softly.
i swallow. my throat feels tight, like i slept wrong, like i’ve been clenching my jaw all night. “i can’t do this anymore.”
the words land between us and don’t move. the birds keep going. somewhere down the hill, someone laughs. the world refuses to pause.
he blinks once. twice. his hand curls on his knee.
“do what?” he asks, even though he knows.
i stare at the dirt between my feet because if i look at him i won’t finish. “us.”
almost two years ago now, luke and i slipped into friendship the way you do when you’re both already tired of being alone—long patrols that turned into conversations, shared meals that stretched until the sun dipped low, inside jokes born from half-failed training sessions and stolen moments by the lake.
for over a year, we were the easiest thing i knew how to be. he became my constant before i ever named it as such, the person i looked for without thinking, the one who noticed when i was quiet and didn’t force me to explain.
when we finally crossed the line into something more, a year ago now, it didn’t feel like a leap so much as a gentle shift, like acknowledging what had been there all along. being with him was familiar and charged at the same time—his presence steady, his attention intense in a way that made me feel seen and chosen. loving him felt like building on a foundation we’d already laid, brick by careful brick, until it was impossible to tell where friendship ended and something deeper began.
silence stretches. i can feel him thinking, can almost hear the way he rearranges things in his head, tries to find the angle where this makes sense.
“did i—” he starts, then stops. his voice drops. “just tell me what i did.”
that’s the worst part. because it isn’t one thing. it’s a hundred tiny moments that added up to something heavy and sharp and exhausting. it’s the way i feel like i’m always bracing for something with him. like loving him is standing too close to a fire.
“you didn’t,” i say. “that’s the problem.”
he laughs once, short and humorless. “wow. okay.”
my hands shake. i press them into my pockets. “luke, please don’t do that.”
his eyes finally meet mine, and they’re bright in a way i don’t like. “do what? react?"
“turn it into a joke so you don’t have to actually feel it.”
that lands. i see it. his jaw tightens, his scar pulling faintly.
i take a step closer before i can stop myself. “i don’t want to lose you,” i say, too fast. “i just—i can’t be with you. not like this. but i still want you in my life. i still want us to be friends.”
friends.
the word sits there, small and fragile.
he looks at me for a long moment. then he nods. once. “yeah,” he says. “okay. yeah, we can do that.”
he says it like he means it. like it doesn’t hurt.
i leave before i can change my mind.
i realize quickly that day one of trying to be friends is nothing short of a disaster.
the pavilion is bright with morning light, all clattering plates and half-awake chatter, and for a split second i almost believe i can do this. i almost believe we can just slide back into something simpler.
then we reach for the same plate of strawberries.
it’s instinctive, the way my hand moves at the same time as his, the way our fingers brush—warm, familiar, wrong. my breath stutters. his hand jerks back like he’s been burned, knuckles rapping softly against the table.
“sorry,” luke mutters, already retreating, already folding in on himself.
“sorry,” i echo, even though neither of us did anything wrong.
we sit across from each other instead of side by side, the space between us heavy and deliberate. i used to tuck my foot against his under the table without thinking. now i keep mine planted firmly on the ground like i’m afraid it might betray me. he asks about my training, voice careful, measured. i tell him about mine, about something chiron corrected, about how my arms are sore. none of it feels real. every sentence feels edited down, stripped of the parts that used to matter.
he laughs at one of my comments—too quickly, too loud—and the sound hits me straight in the chest. i loved that laugh. i loved pulling it out of him. now he seems embarrassed by it, like it slipped out when it shouldn’t have. he drops his gaze to his plate, pushes yogurt around that he never eats.
i watch him not look at me and feel something ache low and constant.
after breakfast, we end up walking in the same direction, pretending it’s coincidence. the path curves toward the training grounds, sunlight filtering through the trees. luke’s hands are shoved deep into his pockets, shoulders tight beneath his shirt. his curls are a mess, dark against his forehead, and i have the stupid, traitorous thought that i used to smooth them back when they fell into his eyes. that i used to know exactly how close i could stand without him moving away.
i fold my arms across my chest even though the sun is warm, even though the air smells like pine and lake water. i don’t trust my hands not to reach for him.
when we split off, he hesitates like he’s forgotten how to leave without me.
“see you around,” he says.
“yeah,” i reply. “see you.”
we stand there a beat too long, the moment stretching thin. then he turns away first, and i watch him go until i hate myself for it.
the second day is worse because we try even harder.
we get paired together at the archery range, chiron saying our names like it’s a gift, like he’s helping. luke just nods. i do the same. we stand shoulder to shoulder, close enough that i can feel the heat off him, close enough that my body remembers before my brain does.
the smell of cut grass and sweat hangs in the air. my bow feels heavier than usual, the string biting into my fingers.
“wind’s coming in from the left,” he says automatically, the way he always used to. the way he taught me.
“i know,” i say, maybe sharper than i mean to.
he glances at me, then looks away. “right. sorry.”
there's that word again.
we loose our arrows. mine lands a little wide, grazing the outer ring. his hits dead center. he doesn’t smile, doesn’t even look pleased. i know that look too—the one where he refuses to enjoy something because it feels wrong to do it alone.
i adjust my grip, frustrated, and before either of us can think better of it, luke reaches out. his fingers brush my wrist, warm and sure, correcting my angle like muscle memory takes over before permission does.
we both freeze.
he pulls his hand back instantly, like the contact startled him. “sorry,” he says, quieter now, like he’s afraid someone else might hear.
“it’s okay,” i tell him, even though it isn’t, even though my pulse is racing and my wrist still feels like it’s buzzing.
he steps back, putting space between us, shoulders tense like he’s holding himself together with effort. i hate that i did this to him. i hate that i needed it anyway.
between rounds, i catch him watching me. not guarded. not angry. just soft—aching. his eyes linger like he’s memorizing me again, like he’s afraid i’ll disappear if he looks away too long. when our gazes meet, he snaps his eyes elsewhere, jaw tight, scar pulling faintly against his cheek—the same scar i’ve traced with my thumb, kissed in the dark like it was something fragile.
that night, i lie in my bunk staring at the ceiling, listening to the quiet hum of camp settling around me. i think about the way his hand felt on my wrist. about the way he didn’t let himself smile. about how close we still are and how far away we’re supposed to be now.
sleep takes a long time to come.
on day three, the lot of us sit around a campfire just past sunset.
the flames crackle and throw sparks into the sky. everyone’s louder at night, braver. someone shoves a cup into my hand. someone else pulls luke into a story halfway through.
i sit across the fire from him on a rough log, the heat drying my eyes, the smoke stinging. the flames paint his face in gold and shadow, catching on his curls, outlining the familiar slope of his nose, the curve of his mouth i know too well. he laughs at something someone says—real laughter this time—and my chest tightens because i miss being the reason for it. because i remember nights where it was just us and that sound was mine.
later, when the crowd thins and the songs turn softer, he ends up beside me anyway. not touching, but close enough to feel his warmth.
“you okay?” he asks, like he always has, voice low and familiar.
i nod. “yeah. you?”
he exhales slowly, staring into the fire. “yeah.”
we sit in silence, cicadas loud in the trees, embers glowing like quiet stars. my fingers curl in the fabric of my shorts. his hand flexes at his side, restless, wanting.
“we’re really bad at this,” i finally say quietly.
he huffs a laugh. “being friends?”
“yeah.”
he nods, staring into the fire. “yeah. we are.”
there’s a pause, heavy and full of things unsaid. his voice drops. “but i’m trying.”
i turn to look at him then. his face is tired. honest. stripped bare of bravado and charm. it hurts how much i still recognize him.
“me too."
luke swallows. his hand flexes at his side, like it wants to reach for mine and knows it can’t.
“i still—” he starts, then stops. shakes his head. “never mind.”
the words hang there anyway.
i don’t push. i don’t pull away. i just sit with him, close and careful, letting the wanting exist without acting on it.
the fire pops. a spark drifts up and disappears.
friends, i think. and feel how much it costs us both.
pairing percy jackson x clear-sighted-mortal!fem!reader
summary when a normal school day fractures and she sees something she was never meant to, percy makes a desperate choice to calm her down
“if he slams that locker one more time, i’m actually going to lose it,” my best friend mutters beside me, chewing gum like it personally offended her. she’s leaning against the row of metal doors, scrolling on her phone.
i twist the dial, metal cold under my fingers. “it’s eight in the morning. everyone’s mad at the world.”
“yeah, but some people make it their whole personality.”
down the hall, someone does slam a locker. hard. the echo rattles through the corridor, bouncing off the tile floors and trophy cases. a few heads turn.
i don’t have to look to know who it is; it's percy jackson.
he’s always been a presence. not loud in a show-off way—just noticeable. like the room subtly tilts when he walks in, like your attention drifts whether you want it to or not. messy blonde curls that never stays where it’s supposed to. shoulders always tense, like he’s bracing for something. eyes that look tired in a way teenagers aren’t supposed to be.
we’ve had classes together for years. english. algebra. a disastrous group project in seven grade that we never talk about. we’ve never been friends; barely acquaintances. the kind of people who share space but not lives.
and yet, somehow, i always know when he’s near.
“speaking of,” my best friend says under her breath.
i glance up.
percy’s walking down the hall toward us, backpack slung over one shoulder, jaw set. beside him is someone new. or at least, someone i’ve never seen at school before.
this guy is huge.
not just tall—big. shoulders like he could block a doorway without trying. his clothes look a little too small, stretched tight across his arms. his steps are careful, like he’s worried about bumping into things. his hair is darker and curlier than percy's, falling into his face from under his ball cap.
students weave around them without a second glance. someone nearly crashes into the big guy’s shoulder and just keeps walking. no apology. no reaction. like their eyes slide right past him.
my stomach tightens.
“who’s that?” i ask.
"no idea. transfer, maybe?”
percy’s gaze flicks up.
for half a second—just one—his eyes meet mine.
it’s like being caught mid-thought. something twists in my chest. sharp and unfamiliar. like i’ve been noticed in a way i’m not used to. his expression shifts—subtle, sharp—like surprise flashes across his face before he can hide it. like he didn’t expect me to be looking.
then the bell rings, shrill and sudden.
students groan and surge forward.
“come on, we’re gonna be late.”
i shove my books into my locker and slam it shut, the sound swallowed by the noise of the hallway. when i look back, percy and the big guy are almost past us.
the hallway feels wrong instantly. the air thickens, pressure building behind my eyes. my ears ring softly, like i’ve gone underwater.
and then i see him—really, truly see him.
the bigger guy all but shape shifts.
it's wrong in a way my brain can’t immediately process. his shoulders hunch, spine curving. his face seems to stretch, features pulling apart like clay under too-warm hands.
and his eye—
there’s only one.
one massive, dark eye in the center of his forehead, blinking slowly, reflectively, like it’s looking straight through me.
my breath locks in my chest.
my books slip from my hands and hit the floor with a loud, sharp crack.
“what the—” i choke, stumbling back, heart slamming so hard it hurts. “what is that—what is he—”
the sound that comes out of my mouth next is not a word. it’s a scream.
hands grab my wrists, strong and steady.
“hey—hey—look at me,” percy jackson says urgently, his breath hot against my ear.
the hallway is chaos. lockers rattling. someone shouting. i don’t know if anyone else sees it—i don’t think they do—but i can’t stop staring, my vision tunneling, panic clawing up my throat.
“percy, get away from it!” i gasp, trying to pull back. “it’s not—he’s not—”
“i know,” he says. “i know. but you have to stop talking. now.”
he yanks me sideways.
the supply closet door bangs open behind us, metal clanging against concrete. i stumble inside, the smell of cleaning chemicals sharp and overwhelming. shelves dig into my back as percy slams the door shut with his foot.
it’s dark and cramped.
"hey, hey! please be quiet," he grits through his teeth somewhere in the darker room, "please just hush!"
i suck in a breath to scream again but percy's mouth is instantly on mine.
it’s not gentle. it’s desperate.
his hand cups my jaw, fingers warm and solid, thumb pressing into my cheek like he’s anchoring me to the moment. his mouth covers mine, cutting off the sound before it can escape. i freeze, shock shooting through me, every thought scattering.
his lips are warm. slightly chapped. he tastes like mint and something salty. my heart is beating so hard i’m dizzy.
for a second i think this is some kind of panic hallucination piled on top of another panic hallucination.
then i realize i’m gripping the front of percy's hoodie like it’s the only thing keeping me upright.
he pulls back just enough to rest his forehead against mine, breathing hard. his eyes are wild, terrified—not of that thing in the hallway, but for me.
“i’m sorry,” he whispers. “i’m so sorry. i didn’t know you’d see.”
“see what?” i hiss, voice shaking. “percy, what the hell was that?”
he swallows.
the noise of the hallway muffles outside the door. footsteps. voices. lockers slamming again. normal sounds. like nothing is wrong.
his thumb brushes under my eye, gentle now. grounding.
“if i tell you this,” he says quietly, every word careful, weighted, “you have to promise me something.”
my chest rises and falls too fast. my hands are still shaking.
“what?”
he meets my eyes, serious in a way i’ve never seen before.
Yn has never considered her feelings for Percy until one day he goes unconscious after demonstrating a fight & she helps hsal him (daughter of Apollo plz). He's out for a couple of days and reader stays with him until he finally wakes up.
pairing percy jackson x daughter-of-apollo!fem!reader
summary an accident at camp half-blood leaves percy unconscious and changes everything for the girl who heals him
warnings slight description of violence — request
i never thought of percy jackson as more than a fellow camper.
he’s just percy. loud in the way crashing waves are loud. always moving, always talking, always somehow soaking wet even when there isn’t water anywhere nearby. he’s a constant at camp half-blood, like the smell of strawberries in june or the way the creek gurgles at night.
as a member of cabin seven—a daughter of apollo—i heal and preserve others. i notice injuries the way other people notice freckles or scars. i catalog pain and then i fix it. it’s methodical and deeply practiced. i was raised on sunlight and steady hands.
which is why, when percy volunteers to demonstrate sparring techniques in the arena, i don’t think anything of it.
i’m sitting on the bleacher steps with a roll of gauze in my lap, the linen warm from the sun. chiron’s voice carries across the sand, calm and instructional. percy’s grinning like he always does, sword loose in his hand, blue eyes bright in that way that makes you think he’s already won before the fight’s even started.
“watch this,” he says, cocky, flashing a look toward the crowd.
i roll my eyes without truly looking up.
the blade comes down wrong.
it’s subtle. most people don’t notice it at first. a slip of footing. a misjudged angle. the way his body hesitates—just a fraction of a second too late. the other camper’s sword clips his shoulder, the sound ringing too sharp, too final.
percy stumbles.
then he drops.
the sound his body makes when it hits the sand knocks the air straight out of my lungs.
everything slows. the campers' reaction reaches me in pieces—gasps, a shouted name, someone laughing nervously like it’s a joke that just hasn’t landed yet. chiron’s voice cuts through it all, suddenly urgent.
but i’m already on my feet.
my sandals kick up sand as i run, heart pounding hard enough to hurt. the world narrows to the stillness of his body. percy’s eyes are half-lidded, unfocused, lashes fluttering. his chest rises shallow and uneven. a bruise is already blooming at his temple, dark and ugly, and the light around him feels off. dimmer. like a torch sputtering.
“don’t move him,” i bark at chiron, sharper than i mean to, dropping to my knees beside him. my hands are shaking. i hate that. i never shake.
i press two fingers to his wrist. there’s a pulse—thank the gods—but it’s weak. too weak for someone who’s faced monsters and storms and gods and walked away with a grin.
chiron kneels across from me. his voice feels far away. “can you—?”
“yes,” i say immediately. “i’ve got him.”
and i do. gods help me, i do.
a couple of our strongest men carry percy to the infirmary on a stretcher, but i keep my hands on him the entire time. i don’t know why. i tell myself it’s medical. monitoring vitals. channeling apollo’s light—that’s what daughters of apollo do.
except when i close my eyes and let the warmth gather in my palms, it hurts.
healing usually feels like sunrise. gentle. controlled. today it feels like staring straight into the sun until my eyes water. my magic meets resistance—something deep and stubborn inside percy, like the ocean pushing back against the shore.
“don’t,” i whisper without realizing it, leaning down closer. "don’t do that. don’t fight me.”
i swear his brow furrows, even unconscious.
the infirmary is too bright when we burst through its doors. white curtains, white sheets, the smell of nectar sharp in the air. i settle him into a bed near the window, checking his pupils, adjusting the compress at his temple, smoothing the blanket when it bunches around his legs.
then i stay.
at first, it’s because i should. head trauma is unpredictable. i tell myself i’ll leave after the first hour. then after dinner. then after he wakes up.
he doesn’t wake up that night. or the next morning.
camp doesn’t stop just because percy jackson is unconscious, but it slows around his bed. people shuffle in and out—annabeth first, eyes red-rimmed, leaving a folded note and straightening his sword like it might wander off without him. grover comes next, placing a small blue flower in a cup of water, lingering like he wants to say something and can’t. clarisse drops a card onto the table with a scowl and mutters, “tell him he’s an idiot,” before leaving.
someone brings chocolate. someone else leaves a stack of get-well cards that i line up neatly even though i don’t know why. i move them when they get too close to his arm. i don’t want anything touching him that i didn’t put there myself.
i chart his vitals. i refresh the compress. i count his breaths without meaning to. every time i stand up, his fingers twitch in the sheets, like his body knows i’m moving away.
by the second day, the camp goes back to normal.
i don’t.
i skip archery practice. i miss meals. someone from my cabin brings ambrosia and i set it on the table and forget about it until it’s gone soft around the edges. i sit in the chair beside his bed and memorize him like it’s my job. the freckles scattered across his arm. the faint scar at his knuckle. the way his mouth hangs slightly open, like he’s mid-sentence in a dream.
his face looks different like this—soft. stripped of motion and sarcasm and noise. his lashes are darker than i expect. his hair falls into his eyes and i have to physically stop myself from pushing it back.
i talk to him.
quietly. stupid things. updates about camp drama. how clarisse pushed someone down again. how the berries are finally ripe and he’s missing them. i tell him he’s an idiot—not for clarisse—for pushing himself so hard. i tell him he scared me, and my voice cracks on that one, so i don’t say it again.
it’s on the third day that it hits me.
i’m re-wrapping his shoulder, my fingers brushing his skin, when the light in the room shifts. afternoon sun slants through the window, catching in his hair and turning it almost gold. dust motes float between us. my chest tightens so suddenly i have to sit down.
oh.
that’s new.
it’s not dramatic. just the quiet, awful realization that i’ve built my days around the rise and fall of his chest. that i measure time by whether or not his eyes open. that the thought of him not waking up leaves something hollow and wrong in me, like a note played slightly off-key.
i press my palms flat against my knees, grounding myself.
don’t be ridiculous, i think. he’s percy. he’s always fine.
except he’s not waking up.
until another day later goes by and he does.
it’s subtle. a breath that catches. fingers curling into the sheets. i’m on my feet instantly, chair scraping softly across the floor, heart pounding so loud i swear he can hear it.
“percy?” my voice barely makes it past my throat.
his eyes flutter open, unfocused and glassy, and for a terrifying second i think he doesn’t know where he is. then his gaze finds me
there’s no confusion there. just exhaustion; and something softer.
“hey,” he croaks. his voice is wrecked. “you’re… you’re glowing.”
i laugh, breathless and wet-eyed, pressing a hand to his shoulder to keep him still. “you’re not allowed to flirt with the medic.”
his lips twitch. “worth a shot.”
relief crashes through me so hard my hands shake. percy notices almost instantly—of course he does—his eyes flicker down to my one hand loose against my hip.
“how long was i out?” he asks after a beat.
“three days,” i say. “you scared everyone.” i motion toward his array of flowers and cards.
his eyes don’t leave my face. “you stayed.”
it’s not a question.
i swallow. “yeah.”
something shifts between us then—quiet and electric. like standing in the first light after a storm, when everything feels newly possible and a little terrifying.
he squeezes my hand, weak but deliberate. “thanks,” he murmurs. “for not leaving.”
i lace my fingers through his without thinking. his hand is warm and solid. alive.
summary poseidon notices where percy jackson’s heart rests, and the sea makes sure she knows it
the ocean never touches my shoes.
i notice it one evening when the sky over camp half-blood is fading into that soft, bruised purple that means dinner’s already been missed and no one’s going to care. the shoreline smells like damp earth and salt, even this far inland, and the cicadas are loud enough to make my head buzz.
percy walks beside me, hands shoved into the pockets of his hoodie, shoulders hunched like he’s trying to make himself smaller than he is. he keeps glancing out at the water like it might jump him.
the waves roll in. pause. stop just short of my toes. then pull back again; obedient, careful.
“that’s weird,” percy comments.
i look down, then shrug. “you’re literally the son of poseidon. i think weird comes with the territory.”
i’m joking. i can tell because i smile. i expect him to smile too—his crooked, uncertain one, the one that always looks like it arrived half a second late. he doesn’t. instead, his brow furrows, eyes darkening as he watches the water retreat again.
“yeah,” he says, but his voice sounds tight. distracted. “guess so.”
we keep walking. i try not to think about the way the water only moves when i move. how it mirrors my steps like it’s waiting for permission.
that evening, i tell myself it was all a coincidence.
camp is full of them—strange things, unexplainable moments that fade if you don’t stare at them too hard. i eat dinner, listen to the chatter echoing through the pavilion, let the smell of burnt bread and strawberries ground me. percy sits across from me, quieter than usual, eyes flicking toward the horizon like he’s listening for something no one else can hear.
by the time i crawl into my bunk, the image of the obedient waves has dulled around the edges. i decide not to name it. not to wonder.
the next morning, the lake is calm again. too calm. when i kneel at the dock to rinse sand from my hands, the water settles the moment my reflection breaks its surface, smoothing itself like it’s been waiting.
i pull back, heart ticking a little faster than it should.
i don’t say anything.
it keeps happening after that.
little things. easy to ignore, if i try.
when i sit on the dock with my feet dangling over the edge, the lake smooths until it’s glassy, reflecting the sky so clearly it looks fake. when i laugh—really laugh, the kind that shakes my chest—the breeze picks up, cool and gentle, lifting my hair off my neck like a hand.
percy notices before anyone else does. he’s always been good at noticing; monsters, lies, shifts in the air right before something goes wrong.
he starts hovering. not in an obvious way. just close enough to feel, far enough to pretend he’s not.
he walks a half-step ahead of me now. when we sit together, there’s space where there wasn’t before. his hands stay clasped tight in his lap, knuckles pale, like he’s afraid to move them too suddenly.
“you okay?” i ask one afternoon as we’re heading back from training. the sun is high, heat pressing down on my shoulders, my shirt sticking to my spine.
he blinks at me, like i caught him somewhere far away. “what? yeah. yeah, i’m fine.”
he smiles then. quick. wrong.
i don’t push it. i tell myself i’m imagining things. i tell myself he’s just tired.
except the days keep stacking up like that—small moments i don’t know what to do with. percy forgetting to wait for me outside the arena. percy choosing the edge of the table instead of the seat beside mine. percy watching the water like it’s a clock he doesn’t trust.
when i catch his eye, he always looks guilty. like he’s been caught thinking about something he doesn’t want to explain.
once, during training, i trip—nothing serious, just a clumsy misstep—but the air shifts so suddenly it makes my ears ring. the lake sloshes hard against its banks. percy swears, breath hitching, and for a second i swear he looks more afraid than i am.
after that, he keeps his distance on purpose.
not enough for anyone else to notice. just enough that i do.
but the quiet starts to itch.
i try to drown it out. i throw myself into training the next day, let the clatter of weapons and shouted instructions fill the space where my thoughts keep circling back to him. percy’s there, of course—always somewhere in my peripheral vision—but he feels slightly out of reach, like we’re standing on opposite sides of a thin pane of glass.
we exchange easy words. familiar ones. nothing heavy enough to justify the weight sitting in my chest.
by evening, i’m exhausted in that hollow way that doesn’t actually fix anything. camp settles into its usual rhythms—firelight, laughter, the smell of smoke drifting between cabins—but none of it quite lands.
when clarisse snaps at me during dinner, it shouldn’t matter. i’ve heard worse. i know how to let things slide.
still, i find myself down by the shoreline alone, arms wrapped around my middle, staring out at the dark water.
i don’t hear percy approach. i just feel him—like the air changes when he’s near.
“hey,” he says softly. “you disappeared.”
i shrug, eyes still on the lake. “needed air.”
the water ripples. not violently, but uneasily. like it’s restless.
percy freezes.
i see it out of the corner of my eye—the way his shoulders lock, the way his breath stutters. he looks at the water, then at me, then back again, panic flashing across his face before he can hide it.
“what?” i ask. “what’s wrong?”
“nothing,” he says too quickly. “i just—are you mad?”
i shake my head. “no. just… annoyed.”
the water surges closer, colder now, licking at the sand with more force.
percy swears under his breath.
i turn fully toward him. “percy. you’re freaking me out.”
he opens his mouth. closes it. runs a hand through his hair, blonde curls sticking up messily afterward. “i think we should head back,” he says. “it’s getting late.”
“since when do you care about curfew?”
his jaw tightens. “since now.”
i don’t argue, but the walk back is tense. the air feels charged, heavy, like a storm that doesn’t know whether it wants to break.
that night, i wake with salt on my lips.
i sit up in bed, heart racing, pressing my fingers to my mouth like i’ll find seawater there. the cabin is quiet, moonlight spilling through the window.
i haven’t been swimming.
the ocean shouldn’t be anywhere near me.
and yet.
the next day, percy avoids me.
not completely. just enough to hurt.
when i finally corner him outside the dining pavilion, i don’t bother easing into it.
“did i do something wrong?”
he looks stricken. “what? no. no, you didn’t do anything.”
“then why are you acting like i’m radioactive?”
he laughs weakly. “i’m not.”
“you are,” i insist. “you won’t look at me. you won’t sit next to me. you barely talk to me anymore.”
his eyes flick around us, like he’s checking for witnesses. then he exhales, long and shaky.
“come with me,” he says.
we walk down to the shoreline again, though i can tell he hates it. every step closer to the water makes him more tense, like he’s bracing for impact.
we stop where the sand meets the lake.
the water is calm. waiting.
percy turns to me, hands shaking just slightly.
“i didn’t want you to find out like this,” he says.
“find out what?”
he swallows. “the ocean… it’s not reacting to me.”
my heart stutters. “what do you mean?”
he gestures helplessly between us. “it’s reacting to you. or—through me. i don’t know. but it only does this when you’re around. when you’re calm. when you’re not.”
my chest feels tight. “that doesn’t make any sense.”
“i know,” he says, voice cracking. “i know it doesn’t.”
he looks at the water, then back at me, eyes bright with something dangerously close to tears.
“poseidon noticed,” he admits quietly. “not me. you.”
my stomach drops.
“he sent a sign,” percy continues. “nothing dramatic. just… acknowledgment. like he was saying, ‘i see this.’”
“see what?” i whisper.
percy’s gaze softens, unbearably so. “how much you matter to me.”
the water stills completely. the world feels like it’s holding its breath.
i step closer to him without thinking. “percy—”
“that’s what scares me,” he says quickly. “not the gods hurting you. but them knowing. knowing where my heart is. knowing exactly how to get to me.”
his voice drops. “i didn’t want to make you a target.”
the realization settles over me slowly, heavy and warm and terrifying.
the ocean isn’t listening because i’m powerful.
it’s listening because i’m loved.
i reach for his hand. he flinches instinctively, then lets me take it.
the water laps gently at the shore, softer now.
“you don’t get to decide this alone,” i say. “you don’t get to decide what’s worth the risk for me.”
his fingers curl around mine. “i just wanted to keep you safe.”
i squeeze his hand. “from what? loving you?”
he laughs weakly, a tear slipping free despite his best effort to blink it away. “you make it sound so simple.”
“it is,” i say. “hard and scary but simple.”
we stand there together, the lake calm and quiet at our feet.
percy leans his forehead against mine, breathing me in like he needs the reminder that i’m real.
“i don’t want to stop,” he murmurs. “even if the gods know.”
Could I request a Johnny Sinclair x reader where she grew up spending summers at Beechwood (like the summer i turned pretty vibes, maybe reader’s parents are friends with johnny’s mom), and they’ve seen each other grow up. maybe they finally get together the summer the fire happens— kinda angsty but let’s say one of them is stuck inside and the other goes in to try and save them and they both end up dying, or the fire could also just never happen lol
summary after a lifetime of summers on beechwood island, falling in love with johnny sinclair is the easiest thing she’s ever done but surviving it is not.
warnings mentions of death, descriptions of fire — request
i learned the shape of summers by the way beechwood smelled.
salt first. always salt. sharp and clean and bright enough to sting the back of my throat when the ferry cut through the water and the island came into view. then sun-warmed pine. old money wood. sunscreen and citrus and the faint metallic tang of the docks baking all afternoon. it didn’t matter how old i was—five, ten, sixteen—the moment my feet hit the planks, my body understood: this was where time bent differently.
johnny was always already there.
sometimes he’d be at the end of the dock, feet dangling over the edge, skin too tan for late may, hair still damp like he’d jumped in before anyone else had finished unloading bags. sometimes he’d come tearing down the path from the houses barefoot, shirt half-buttoned, calling my name like it was a challenge instead of a greeting. our moms would be behind us, carrie and mine, sunglasses on, laughing like girls themselves, talking about wine and tennis and who looked thinner this year.
“you’re taller,” johnny would say every summer, squinting at me like he was measuring.
“you say that every year,” i’d tell him.
“yeah,” he’d grin, unapologetic. “and every year it’s true.”
when we were kids, we were inseparable in the easy, unexamined way children are. dock races where he always pretended not to care that i beat him once. scraped knees he insisted on inspecting like a doctor, brows furrowed, finger poking too close to the blood. long afternoons sprawled on towels, counting clouds and daring each other to jump from higher rocks, always higher, always just a little more dangerous.
johnny was loud back then. fearless. the kind of boy adults laughed at and warned about in the same breath. carrie would shout his full name—johnny sinclair dennis—and he’d blow her a kiss and keep running.
i followed him everywhere.
when we grew older, summers stacked on top of each other like pages stuck together. memories blurred. johnny with broader shoulders. johnny with a crooked grin and knuckles always scraped raw. johnny learning how to charm adults while resenting them, all at once. i learned how to watch him without being obvious about it, how to sit close without touching, how to pretend my heart didn’t trip every time he said my name softer than usual.
it was unspoken, that shift. no single moment where childhood cracked cleanly into something else. just a slow accumulation of awareness.
i noticed the way his voice dropped when he talked to me late at night. the way his hand would linger at my lower back when we walked together, guiding me through crowded rooms even though there was nowhere to get lost on the island. the way he looked at me sometimes like he was remembering something and realizing it meant more now.
summer sixteen arrived like a held breath.
everything felt sharper. hotter. the island seemed smaller, the days heavier, stretched thin with expectation. cadence was restless. mirren quieter than usual. gat thoughtful, eyes always searching the horizon. and johnny—johnny felt like a storm circling itself, restless energy coiled under his skin.
we spent more time alone this summer, though neither of us ever said we meant to.
we’d sit at the edge of the dock after midnight, legs brushing, the water black and endless beneath us. he’d talk about the house like it offended him personally, like clairmont was a living thing that had wronged him.
“it’s all fake,” he’d muttered once, skimming a stone across the surface. “all of it. the house, the rules, the pretending.”
i didn’t argue. i just listened, watching the tension in his jaw, the way his shoulders stayed tight even when he was trying to relax.
it happened one afternoon when the sun was too bright and the house was empty, the others scattered across the island. we were in the hallway near the guest rooms, light slanting in through tall windows, dust motes drifting like they were suspended on purpose.
johnny leaned against the wall, arms crossed, watching me with that unreadable expression he’d been wearing more often lately.
“what?” i asked, suddenly self-conscious.
he shook his head, lips twitching. “nothing. just… you ever feel like we’ve been doing this wrong?”
“doing what?”
“us,” he said quietly.
the word settled between us. heavy. undeniable.
i don’t remember who moved first. i only remember the way the air shifted when his hand brushed mine, tentative for the first time in his life. the way my breath caught when he leaned in, slow enough to give me time to pull away.
i didn’t.
the kiss wasn’t explosive. it was careful. reverent. like we were both afraid that if we rushed, it would disappear. his hand came up to cup my jaw, thumb brushing my cheek like he was grounding himself. when we pulled back, his forehead rested against mine, his breath uneven.
“took you long enough,” he murmured, a ghost of his usual bravado sneaking in.
i laughed, shaky. “you’re one to talk.”
after that, everything felt altered. not louder—deeper. stolen moments became charged. touches meant something. johnny grew gentler with me in ways he wasn’t with anyone else, like he was protecting something fragile even as the rest of him burned.
it was just after the fourth, when the island still smelled faintly of smoke and salt and spent fireworks, when he finally said it out loud.
we were stretched out on a blanket near the water, the sky rinsed clean of color, the last echoes of celebration fading into the dark. johnny lay on his back beside me, one arm tucked behind his head, the other warm where it rested against my waist. he was quiet for a long time, longer than usual, and i could feel the moment building in the way his fingers traced absent lines into my skin. “so,” he said finally, casual like he wasn’t asking for something that mattered, “you wanna make this… real?” he had said.
i turned onto my side, propping myself up on my elbow, searching his face for the joke that never came. the seriousness there stole my breath. “you’re already mine,” i said, softer than i meant to.
his smile was slow and crooked and a little relieved. “good,” he murmured, pulling me closer until my head fit beneath his chin like it always had. “then be my girlfriend.” the words settled warm and solid in my chest, like something i could build a future on, and i nodded into him, certain—impossibly, foolishly certain—that we’d have time.
but at night, when the island went quiet, he couldn’t sleep. the first time i found him awake, he was sitting on the edge of the bed, elbows on his knees, staring at nothing.
“johnny?” i whispered.
he looked at me like he’d been caught somewhere far away. he pulled me close, burying his face in my hair.
“does this place ever feel wrong to you?” he asked into my shoulder.
i didn’t know how to answer. so i just held him. he kissed my forehead before lying back down, arm draped over me like a promise. like an apology.
i fell asleep thinking loving him felt like finally belonging.
i didn’t know yet how much fire that kind of love could hold.
that was last night. before cadence and johnny snuck off, confronting mirren, gat, and i an hour later with a beyond-absurd plan; before harris, the moms, and the littles crowded on a boat to martha's vineyard; before everything i knew and loved crumpled at the sandals on my feet.
tonight, the boat rocks gently beneath me.
the engine is off. the water laps softly against the hull, deceptively calm. gat is standing near the bow, arms crossed, his face lit intermittently by the faint glow from the island. clairmont rises above us, dark and quiet, windows like empty eyes.
“they should be back by now,” i say, checking my watch for the third time.
gat nods, jaw tight. “they will be.”
cadence. johnny. mirren. the names feel like prayers on my tongue.
then i smell it. it's not strong at first—just a hint. sharp. wrong. nothing like salty sunscreen or sweet citrus. my stomach drops before my mind can catch up. “do you smell that?” i ask.
gat turns to me, nostrils flaring. his eyes snap to the house just as a dull orange glow flickers in one of the lower windows.
no.
the glow spreads.
“shit,” gat mutters, already moving.
my heart slams against my ribs. “johnny’s still inside.”
the fire climbs faster than thought, licking up the walls, devouring shadows. heat rolls down the hill toward us, the air thickening with smoke.
“we have to wait,” gat says, grabbing my arm as i take a step forward. “that was the plan.”
“he’s not coming out,” i cry, tears blurring my vision. “he’s still in there, i know he is.”
another window bursts, flames roaring to life. the house groans, a sound so deep it felt like it came from the earth itself.
“gat,” i sob, clutching his shirt. “please. please. i love him.”
that does it.
gat swears under his breath, eyes darting between the house and the trees. “i’ll go,” he says finally. “i’ll find cadence. i'll check the basement first. i promise. then mirren.”
“and johnny,” i choke. "please— find johnny.”
he nods once, sharp and decisive, and then he's gone, sprinting up the hill toward the fire.
i wait impatiently for all of twenty seconds before i choose not to stay behind.
the heat hits me like a wall as i run, smoke clawing at my lungs, ash stinging my eyes. the world narrows to one thought, one name, pounding through my head with every step.
johnny. johnny. johnny.
loving him had always meant following him. so i run straight into the flames.
the house sounds different from the inside.
outside, the fire roars. in here, it breathes.
every step i take sinks into heat and smoke, the air thick enough to taste, bitter and burning at the back of my tongue. the grand staircase groans beneath my feet as i climb, wood popping and cracking like it’s alive and furious with me for being here. my lungs scream with every breath, but i don’t stop. i don’t slow.
“johnny!” i shout, my voice tearing itself apart in the smoke. “johnny!”
no answer.
the walls are already blistering, wallpaper curling away like peeling skin. embers float past me, glowing and weightless, settling in my hair, my clothes. i swipe at them blindly, eyes stinging, heart beating so hard it feels like it might shatter my ribs from the inside.
i take the stairs two at a time, hand skidding along the warm banister, splinters biting into my palm. the heat intensifies with every floor. it presses against me, forces tears from my eyes that have nothing to do with fear.
i reach the third floor coughing, chest burning, vision swimming.
and then i see him.
johnny stands at the far end of the hallway, silhouetted by firelight, his back to me. the flames haven’t reached this part yet, not fully. the smoke is heavier here than the fire, rolling low along the ceiling like a living thing. a painting hangs crooked on the wall in front of him, gilt frame glowing faintly in the heat.
he’s staring at it as if the world isn’t ending.
“johnny,” i gasp.
he turns at the sound of my voice, eyes widening in disbelief before relief crashes over his face so fast it nearly brings him to his knees.
“what are you doing here?” he demands, rushing toward me. “are you insane?”
i don’t answer. i don’t need to. i run the rest of the distance between us and crash into him, arms wrapping around his torso, face pressed into his chest. he smells like smoke and sweat and something unmistakably him, something achingly familiar.
he holds me just as tightly, hands gripping my back like if he lets go i’ll disappear.
“you weren’t coming back,” i choke. “you weren’t coming back and i—”
“hey,” he says, breathless, voice rough. “hey. i’m here.”
i pull back just enough to look at him, soot streaking his face, curls damp with sweat, eyes too bright. “you stayed,” i accuse, tears cutting clean paths through the grime on my cheeks. “you stayed too long.”
his jaw tightens. he glances over his shoulder at the painting, then back at me.
“i know,” he says quietly.
“johnny,” i plead. “we have to go. now.”
the house answers for him—a violent crack from somewhere below us, the whole structure shuddering like it’s drawing a final breath.
he doesn’t hesitate anymore. he cups my face in his hands, thumbs brushing under my eyes, painfully gentle for someone standing in the middle of an inferno.
“i’m so sorry,” he says.
the words hit me harder than the heat. “for what?”
his smile is small, broken. “for loving you like this.”
i shake my head frantically. “don’t—don’t say that like it’s over.”
his forehead presses to mine, smoke curling around us, firelight dancing across his features. “i should’ve been faster,” he murmurs. “i should’ve listened.”
“we can still get out,” i insist. “we can still—”
another explosion interrupts me, closer this time. the floor trembles beneath us, plaster raining down from the ceiling. johnny swears, pulling me tighter against him, turning his body so he’s between me and the falling debris without thinking about it.
the hallway behind him ignites in a rush of heat and sound, flames tearing through the space with terrifying speed.
there’s no way out.
i realize it all at once, with terrible clarity.
“johnny,” i whisper, my voice breaking. “we’re not—”
he nods, already knowing. his hands slide down my arms until our fingers lace together, tight and desperate.
“hey,” he says softly, like he’s trying to keep me calm during a storm. “look at me.”
i do.
the fire reflects in his eyes, but there’s no panic there. just love. fierce and unguarded and devastatingly real.
“being yours,” he says, “was the best thing i ever did.”
i sob, pressing my face into his shoulder. “i’m scared.”
he kisses the top of my head, lingering. “me too.”
the ceiling gives way with a sound like the world splitting open.
heat crashes over us, unbearable, blinding. johnny wraps his arms around me, crushing me to his chest, shielding me instinctively even though there’s nothing left to shield me from.
i clutch his shirt, fists tightening, the fabric burning beneath my fingers.
the last thing i feel is his heart pounding against mine.
the last thing i hear is him saying my name.
the last thing i see is johnny's face, his frown and faint smile all at once, as the crimson red flames swallow us whole.
the couches are warm from the sun, the outdoor ones near the water, cushions faded and frayed from years of salt and summers and bodies collapsing into them without asking permission. i’m half draped over johnny, my legs tangled with his, his back against the armrest, my cheek pressed to his shoulder. the mornings are easy here. quiet in a way that doesn’t feel threatening anymore.
he kisses me like there’s nowhere else to be.
slow, lazy, familiar. his mouth curves into a smile against mine when i laugh softly, pushing at his chest half-heartedly.
“johnny,” i murmur, breathless. “mirren can see you.”
“she’s trying not to,” he says, grinning, fingers sliding along my waist like he knows exactly what he’s doing. “right, mir?”
mirren groans from the low table a few feet away, legs tucked beneath her as she rearranges wooden tiles. “i swear to god, if you two start dry-humping again, i’m flipping the board.”
gat snorts, leaning back in his chair, arms crossed. “you’re just mad because you’re losing.”
“i am not losing,” mirren snaps. “i am recalibrating.”
johnny laughs beneath me, the sound vibrating through his chest. i lean down to kiss him again, softer this time, slower, like we’ve got all the time in the world. the island hums around us; water lapping gently, cicadas buzzing, the house—new clairmont—behind us sad and quiet and no longer watching.
out of the corner of my eye mirren freezes. not dramatically. just suddenly.
i lift my head to study her. her fingers still around a tile, her posture stiff, and her gaze lifts, unfocused at first, then sharp.
“cadence?” she finally says.
the name cuts clean through the air.
johnny and i pull apart at the same time, his arm tightening around my waist as we both turn toward the path leading up from the dock.
cadence.
she stands there like she’s not sure she’s allowed to.
her hair is dark now—not sun-bleached blonde, but black, hanging limp around her face. she’s too pale. her clothes don’t belong here: oversized, wrong for summer, wrong for beechwood. she looks smaller somehow. hollowed out.
but it’s her.
“hey,” she says.
just that. like she hasn’t been gone. like she hasn’t shattered the world.
for a heartbeat, none of us move.
then gat is on his feet, chair scraping loudly across the deck. mirren’s hand flies to her mouth, eyes filling instantly. johnny goes rigid beneath my hand, breath knocked from his chest like he’s been punched.
“you can see us,” johnny whispers.
cadence frowns slightly, like she doesn’t understand the question. “yeah,” she says. “of course i can.”
something breaks.
we’re moving before thought catches up—all of us at once. mirren reaches her first, arms wrapping tight around cadence’s shoulders. gat is there too, pulling her in, laughing and crying at the same time. johnny stumbles forward, dragging me with him, his grip on my hand desperate.
cadence laughs, startled. “what’s wrong with you guys?” she asks. “it’s like i’ve been gone forever.”
johnny hovers just behind everyone, hands shoved into his pockets, watching her like he’s afraid she’ll vanish if he gets too close.
i step forward then, unable not to. “you kind of have been,” i say gently.
cadence turns to me, eyes narrowing slightly, like she’s trying to place something. “i emailed you,” she says. “i swear i did.”
my chest tightens.
“i know,” i say, and it’s true in its own way. “i have been so busy with school, i never got around to responding."
no one says anything else.
no one tells her she went home while the rest of us stayed. no one tells her we waited. that we watched the seasons change without her. that we called her name into empty rooms and never heard it returned.
cadence smiles at us like everything is normal. like this is just another summer day. another scrabble game interrupted. another moment we’ll all remember later.
johnny comes back to me, his hand finding mine without looking. his thumb brushes my knuckles, slow and grounding.
i lean into him, fitting where i always have.
the island feels whole again with cadence standing there, laughing, alive. and for now, that’s enough.
because as long as johnny’s hand is warm in mine and his shoulder is solid beneath my cheek, i can pretend this moment will stretch on forever.
and if it doesn’t, at least we loved each other here. and loving johnny sinclair dennis was the only thing i ever did completely right.
i loved your haymitch work! maybe haymitch x tribute! reader who hate each other but have unspoken tension. they both survive (like a peeta and katniss situtation) and then confront they're feelings at a capital party ??
this request was truly my baby. read it here
i hope it's exactly what you were thinking and hopefully more. it has major sunrise on the reaping spoilers however a lot of the plot is also removed or tweaked as well for length purposes!
summary when the eldest donner volunteers for the fiftieth hunger games in place of her sister, survival is the last thing she expects. trapped in an arena designed to punish rebellion, she is forced to confront loss, violence, and the boy she always hated: haymitch abernathy. as the games twist toward an unprecedented ending, she learns that some special things endure even when the capitol tries to erase them
warnings 22k+ word count, little use of y/n, angst, mentions of death + violence, heavy spoilers for sunrise on the reaping w/ a somewhat altered plot — request
the tributes
i don’t feel the cold until the door slams shut behind me.
the justice building always felt too big from the outside, but from in here—from the backseat of the black car that smells like leather and polished brass—it feels even bigger. like the walls are swallowing the sound of everything i didn’t get to say.
my hands are still trembling. not the dramatic kind of trembling—no shaking shoulders, no sobbing, no broken breaths. just this quiet, constant vibration under my skin, like my body hasn’t realized the reaping is over yet.
like it hasn’t realized that i volunteered as tribute.
the window beside me fogs with my breath. i stare at the blurred shape of the justice building as we pull away, the faint gold lettering smearing into nothingness.
maysilee’s voice still rings in my ears—you shouldn’t have done that—she said it twice. once angry, once muffled by sobs. the first time, she sounded like a sister. the second, she sounded like someone losing one.
merilee said nothing at all. she just held my hands so tightly her knuckles went white, her forehead resting against mine like she was trying to memorize the shape of me. my mother’s sobs felt muffled, like i was underwater watching someone else’s life play out. my father had to pull her away when the peacekeepers stepped in.
i didn’t cry. i think something in me wanted to, but the shock was thicker. like grief was settling into my bones before i even left district twelve.
across from me, wyatt callow sits with his elbows on his knees, staring at the floor like the numbers are running behind his eyes. louella mccoy is beside him, tiny and pale, wringing the hem of her dress in her fists. she looks thirteen in the worst way—too young to understand everything, but just old enough to understand enough.
haymitch abernathy sits in the farthest corner of the carriage, wedged against the window, arms crossed so tightly it looks painful. he hasn’t bothered wiping the soot off his face from the mines. it streaks across his cheekbone, sharp like war paint. he glares out the window like he wants to punch it until the glass shatters.
my heart tugs at the thought of him and the undoubtedly horrible thoughts that swim through his head. haymitch wasn't reaped, not really. i watched with a slack jaw as woodbine chance, who had just had his name announced, was shot seven times after his attempted escape. it was all a blur after that; haymitch's friend, lenore, trying to comfort woodbine's mother, the peacekeepers trying to hurt lenore, haymitch trying to protect lenore.
he was then designated the second male tribute; a punishment for his kind but rebellious regards.
i don’t look at him. i can’t. not with how brittle i feel. not with the way his eyes cut through everything.
drusilla sickle and her flaming orange bob sit nearest the front, legs crossed neatly, her makeup cakey, a smile painted on like she’s hosting a garden party and not escorting four children to their televised execution. “such bravery today,” she chirps, as if bravery is what happened in the square. as if volunteering to die is noble.
no one answers her. not even haymitch, who never misses an opportunity to snarl at the capitol.
previous victors, mags flanagan from district four and wiress from district three, are on the bench with the driver, murmuring softly, preparing rooms, food, schedules. they are kind—too kind. the worst kind. the kind that makes you realize how doomed you are.
my fingers curl into the fabric of my skirt. the carriage bumps over uneven stone as we cross out of the merchant district. the roads change texture when we hit the seam—rougher, colder, biting at the wheels.
i feel it before i look: haymitch’s eyes shifting away from the window. the weight of his attention lands on me like a stone. i keep staring straight ahead, jaw tight, breath steady, pretending i don’t notice him watching me. pretending i don’t feel his resentment curdling the air like smoke.
he’s hated me for years. "spoiled princess" he had called me that night. i’d thrown it right back at him, calling him a charity case myself, unknowingly two days after his father passsd in a mine explosion. i regret that now, i’ve regretted it for years. but neither of us ever apologized.
the distance between us in the carriage feels like a punishment.
louella sniffles quietly. wyatt rests a hand on her shoulder, awkward but earnest. i should reach out too—i want to—but my body feels like someone else’s. like it’s stuck between wanting to crumble and refusing to be the weak one in front of haymitch abernathy.
the carriage slows as we near the station. steam billows from the massive engine waiting on the tracks. the tribute train gleams silver under the fading light—too clean, too beautiful, too bright for district twelve.
the peacekeeper outside calls, “doors!”
drusilla beams. “off we go, my dears.” her voice is sugar but this situation is acid.
the door swings open. cold air rushes in, sharp and metallic. i shiver.
haymitch doesn’t move at first. he watches me stand, watches me wipe my palms on my skirt, watches my shoulders stiffen as i prepare to step out of the life i knew and into whatever waits for me on the other side of that platform. his jaw clenches—one sharp line. i don’t know what it means.
i take the first step out of the carriage. the station lights flare white-hot, almost blinding. the platform smells like coal and oil and something sweet drifting from the train’s open doors—death dressed in velvet.
i hear maysilee—my sweet younger sister, my best friend—in my head again, voice cracking: “please come back. promise me you’ll try.” i didn’t promise her anything. i couldn’t.
my throat locks. i stare at the train, at the polished steps leading into the car, at the curtain of warm air brushing my face like an invitation i never asked for. i am not ready. i am not the brave volunteer they think i am. but i walk toward the train anyway. because maysilee is safe. merilee is safe. and i will bear the consequences of loving them more than myself.
haymitch passes me on the steps and mutters, low enough only i can hear: “figures you volunteered." the words sting sharper than they should. i don’t answer. i don’t trust what cruel words that i don't truly mean might come out of my mouth.
the seven of us step inside one-by-one, the door sealing shut behind us with a soft click. and just like that—district twelve is gone. the warmth of the car hits me first, wrapping around me the second i let myself deeper into the tribute train. it smells faintly of lavender steam and something sweet simmering in copper pots far ahead.
i blink hard, letting my eyes adjust. everything inside gleams. gold fixtures polished within an inch of their life. soft carpets that swallow my footsteps. walls paneled in dark wood that looks expensive enough to feed my family of five for a year.
louella hesitates at the doorway like she’s afraid to step on anything. wyatt gently nudges her in. haymitch stomps past all of us down the aisle, boots still covered in seam dust, tracking it onto marble tile in a carelessness that makes me wince.
drusilla gestures down the corridor. “dining car first! refreshments, introductions, announcements—oh, it’s all so exciting, isn’t it?” no one answers. again.
the corridor smells too clean, too warm, too alive. it makes my stomach churn. district twelve fades behind us through the narrow train windows, shrinking to a blur of gray and smoke. i swallow hard at the sight.
the dining car opens before me like something out of a dream—velvet seats, crystal bowls full of vibrant fruit, a shining chandelier overhead. the table is already set. wiress sits at the far end, fingers tapping lightly against a silver fork, eyes drifting between details no one else notices. mags is beside her, small and steady, hands folded over one another.
drusilla flutters in behind us. “take a seat, darlings! anywhere you’d like!”
haymitch doesn’t sit. he leans against the wall, arms crossed, jaw clenched. daring someone to tell him what to do.
scoffing, i move toward an empty seat across from mags, trying not to stare at the plates in front of us: pastries glazed with honey, sliced pears, shimmering cubes of pink meat. food meant to tempt tributes into forgetting they’re sacrificial lambs.
louella climbs into the chair beside me, her legs barely reaching the edge. she looks up at me like she’s asking permission. something in my chest twists; she reminds me of my sisters.
“go ahead,” i murmur. “sit. you’re okay.”
her shoulders relax by a fraction.
haymitch scoffs quietly from behind, like the idea of me comforting anyone is laughable. i ignore it.
wyatt sits next to louella, already analyzing the table like he’s tallying odds on which dish is poisoned. when mags gestures for us to eat, he waits a full ten seconds before picking anything up.
i’m not hungry. i don’t think i’ll ever be hungry again.
drusilla, however, is starving. “children!” she claps her hands. “introductions! enthusiasm! let’s get to know one another, shall we?”
haymitch mutters something under his breath. it sounds like, “go choke.” drusilla ignores him.
“we’ll start with our dear, sweet lou-anne—”
“louella." wyatt corrects gently.
the correction makes louella perk up just a little, like the gesture was made of gold.
“louella,” drusilla repeats with strained delight. “isn’t she precious? protected by our own, personal calculator, wyatt callow. now—” her attention snaps to me. “and you, miss donner. our bold volunteer. our heroine.”
my stomach drops. heroine. what a grotesque word.
i feel haymitch’s stare before i see it—sharp, slicing, waiting for me to bask in the praise like some merchant princess who loves attention. i keep my expression empty. “there’s nothing heroic about it,” i say quietly. “i did what i had to.”
louella looks at me. wyatt looks at his hands. wiress looks through me, into something deeper. and haymitch—his expression shifts. not softening, not sympathetic—just something like surprise flickering behind the resentment. like he expected me to smile. or boast. instead, i’m just hollow.
drusilla moves on quickly, eager to regain her performance energy. “and last, but certainly not least: haymitch abernathy!”
haymitch lifts one hand in the laziest parody of a greeting i’ve ever seen. “thrilled—" he deadpans, “to be here.”
drusilla stiffens.
mags speaks up gently, “you all must be exhausted.”
louella nods hard enough to wobble. wyatt’s jaw tightens. haymitch scoffs. i inhale, the smell of honey pastries sickeningly sweet in my throat.
“your rooms are ready,” mags continues. “after you rest, we’ll begin discussing strategy.”
haymitch pushes off the wall. “i don’t need a strategy,” he says. “i won’t last long enough for it to matter.”
louella’s eyes widen, terrified. wyatt shoots haymitch a look like he wants to punch him. i feel something hot rise in me—anger, sharp and sudden. “don’t say things like that in front of her,” i snap before i can stop myself.
haymitch’s head whips toward me. oh no. “don’t tell me what to say, princess.”
the old insult lands between us like a blade. my heartbeat stutters. merchants don’t fight. donners don’t cause scenes. tributes are supposed to save their energy. but i don’t care. not now. not today.
“she’s thirteen, haymitch,” i say quietly. “she doesn’t need to hear about your death wish.”
his nostrils flare. “she needs to hear the truth.”
“she needs hope.”
“hope?” he laughs, bitter and sharp. “you think hope saves anyone in the arena?”
“maybe not,” i whisper, leaning forward. “but cruelty won’t either.”
his jaw tightens. for a moment—for one breath—his eyes flicker. not anger, not hate, but hurt. he looks away first.
drusilla clears her throat quickly, desperate to patch the cracks forming in her perfect tributes. “well!” she says too brightly. “rest up! tomorrow is all too busy with your makeovers, parade, and the beginning of training!"
i stand too quickly, almost dizzy. haymitch steps aside for me, but the space between us is razor-thin—close enough to feel the heat off his skin. close enough that i catch the faint scent of coal smoke and sweat clinging to him.
i don’t sleep much that night. the bed on the train is too soft, the sheets too clean, the pillow too quiet. every time i close my eyes, i see maysilee’s face in the crowd, wet with tears she tried too hard to blink away. merilee’s hands clutching her necklace. my mother’s knees buckling. my father’s jaw set in that way that means he’s about to break but refuses to do it where anyone can see.
when i do drift off, it’s in pieces—thirty seconds here, a minute there. flashes of louella’s wide eyes, of wyatt’s hollow stare, of haymitch’s voice saying i won’t last long enough for it to matter.
i wake to sunlight i don’t recognize. it pours in through the narrow window of my compartment, pale gold and too clean, nothing like the sickly gray that seeps over district twelve in the mornings. the train hums underneath me, smoother now, like the tracks themselves are made of polished glass.
someone knocks once on my door, brisk. “up, up, up!” drusilla’s voice trills from the hallway. “we’re nearly there, little doves!” little doves. like we’re pretty things in a cage, meant to sing until our throats give out.
i sit up slowly. my body feels heavy, like grief settled in overnight and crystallized behind my ribs. i swing my legs over the side of the bed, toes curling into the plush carpet. it feels wrong. all of this does.
there’s a uniform laid out on the chair by the door: simple, soft, too white. capitol-issued. i change into it, my fingers clumsy with sleep deprivation, and tie my hair back out of habit, like i’m getting ready for a normal day—there will never be a normal day again. i know that.
when i step into the corridor, louella is already there, swallowed in fabric that doesn’t quite fit her, hair mussed from sleep and eyes red-rimmed. she gives me a small nod, like she’s not sure she’s allowed to say good morning.
“hey,” i say quietly. “are you okay?” it’s a stupid question. of course she’s not.
she shrugs one shoulder, lip wobbling just a little. “i dreamed about my mom.”
“me too,” wyatt mutters behind her, running a hand through his hair. he looks like he didn’t sleep at all, dark circles bruised under his eyes. he catches my gaze. there’s something like truce there.
haymitch appears from the opposite direction, stepping out of his compartment like he’s already halfway through a fight. his curls are a bit flatter from the pillow, shirt twisted at the collar, eyes bloodshot but hard.
he looks at me once. just once. there’s no snide comment this time. no princess. no sneer. for some reason, that makes my stomach twist worse.
“gather, gather!” drusilla flaps her hands, her wig slightly askew like she slept in it. “we’re pulling into the station. first impressions are everything in the capitol. shoulders back, heads high, don’t throw up.”
mags and wiress are waiting in the small lounge at the end of the car. mags gives us a soft smile that almost undoes me completely. wiress is watching the window, eyes tracking something outside only she can see.
“we are almost there,” mags says gently. “remember to breathe.”
i move to the window. the world outside is nothing i recognize: towering buildings of glass and metal claw at the sky, throwing back the morning sun in shards of color. streets crisscross below like a living map, teeming with people in clothes that look more like plumage than fabric—bright, shimmering, impossible. fountains spray water that glitters pink and blue. even the sky looks different here. too blue. too open. like it’s laughing.
the train begins to slow. my heart picks up.
haymitch comes to stand beside me. so close that our shoulders almost touch, but not quite. his jaw works, like he’s grinding his teeth. “look at them,” he mutters under his breath, so quiet i almost miss it. “like this is a show they paid for.”
my eyes flick to the crowds lining the tracks. they’re already pressing forward, waving, cheering, some holding up holographic signs that read sayings you'd see at a sporting event. my stomach lurches at the sight. we’re entertainment. that’s all we’ll ever be to them.
“remember,” drusilla says, voice suddenly sharp, “smile when the doors open. the capitol adores bravery. and tragedy. and teeth.” she bares hers in demonstration.
wiress finally speaks, still staring at the world outside, “they built all of this on bones,” she says, voice distant. “layer after layer. they forget what’s underneath if it shines enough.” mags touches her arm softly, like she’s heard this before.
the train shudders to a full stop. for a heartbeat, no one moves. then the platform erupts in sound. cheers. shrieks. music blasting from unseen speakers. flashes of cameras. the train doors hiss as they unlock, and drusilla clasps her hands together like it’s wintermas morning.
“time to meet your adoring public.”
the doors slide open and air floods in—warmer than twelve, scented with something floral and sharp, like crushed petals and electricity. the noise slams into me a second later.
i take a breath that doesn’t quite make it all the way down. my legs feel wooden as we move forward in a small cluster: wyatt, louella, haymitch, me. mags and wiress behind. drusilla leading the way, beaming.
the platform is a sea of color. capitol citizens press against barriers, reaching out, straining for a touch. some hold those ridiculous, large signs. others have styled their hair in bright yellow plumes “in honor of the quarter quell.” a few have already painted 12 on their cheeks.
louella’s hand brushes mine. i don’t realize she’s reaching for me until her fingers hook tentatively around two of mine. i squeeze back.
haymitch notices. his eyes flick down at our joined hands, then up to my face, his expression unreadable. for a second, i think he’s going to say something cutting. he doesn’t.
a man with gold tattoos etched into his cheeks and a hovering camera at his shoulder shouts, “look this way! yes, perfect—district twelve, give us a smile!” i don’t but he takes the shot anyway.
“keep moving,” drusilla sings. “we’re off to the remake center! your teams are just dying to get their hands on you.”
we’re fun new dolls for them to dress. for a handful of days, we’ll be the city’s latest obsession. and then we’ll all die, and they’ll find someone else.
the station floors are slick and spotless beneath my flats as we’re shepherded toward a set of glass doors. the sunlight catches my reflection briefly—pale, wide-eyed, jaw tight. i hardly recognize myself.
behind me, haymitch mutters, “don’t let them see you scared.”
i almost laugh. “i’m not scared of them,” i say under my breath.
he cuts me a sideways look, skeptical. “so what are you scared of then, princess?”
i ignore his snarky comment and think about the answer of his in-genuine question. turning into someone i hate.
“nothing that concerns you,” i decide.
“good,” he replies. “keep it that way.”
we step through the glass doors into a gleaming white lobby so bright it makes my eyes water. capitol staff are already lined up—attendants in bizarre outfits, stylists with insane cosmetic surgery done, all smiling too wide.
a woman with teal hair and gemstones glued along her eyelids clasps her hands when she sees us. “oh, they’re perfect,” she sighs. “so tragic. so fixable.”
drusilla claps once, delighted. “welcome to the capitol, my darlings. next stop: the remake center. after that—” she spreads her arms like she’s unveiling a new product. “your grand entrance in the tribute parade.”
my stomach flips. the parade. the training. the private sessions. the interviews. and then the arena. an entire week ahead of me, pretending i’m not already dead.
i glance sideways at haymitch. he’s staring straight ahead, jaw clenched, eyes burning—not with awe, not with fear. with fury. with something feral and stubborn and alive.
for the first time, it hits me: if anyone is going to claw their way through this, it will be him.
if i want to live even just a little longer than expected, i’m going to have to survive beside someone i’ve spent years despising and he’s going to have to survive beside me. the thought should terrify me. instead, it just makes everything feel sharper. louder.
“keep up, miss donner,” drusilla trills from ahead. “can’t have our volunteer falling behind.” i take another breath of strange, perfumed air and force my feet to move.
the training
the remake center smells like chemicals and rubbing alcohol. it hits me the second the glass doors slide shut behind us—sharp and sweet and sterile all at once, like something that’s been scrubbed so clean it forgot what it was before. the lobby is cavernous and white, floors gleaming, ceilings impossibly high. everything echoes. footsteps. laughter. the soft hum of machines somewhere deeper inside the building.
i feel small. not physically, but emotionally. like if i stood still long enough, this place would sand me down until i fit whatever mold they wanted.
capitol stylists descend on us immediately. they move fast, circling, murmuring to each other, fingers hovering just shy of touching like we’re art pieces in a gallery they’ve been dying to curate. one woman with metallic green lipstick tilts my chin up without asking, studying my face like she’s calculating how much of me she can change before i stop looking like myself.
“bone structure’s excellent,” she says to no one in particular. “strong jaw. eyes will photograph beautifully when angry.”
i don’t know how to feel about angry being my defining trait.
louella is whisked away first. two stylists crouched in front of her, voices syrupy and soft, promising no pain, no mistakes, no cuts. she looks back at me once, eyes wide, and i force myself to nod. to smile. to act like this is fine.
wyatt follows, already resigned, shoulders squared like he’s bracing for impact.
haymitch resists longer. “don’t touch me,” he snaps when someone with a zebra skin reaches for his arm.
there’s a pause—thick, dangerous. capitol people don’t like being told no. drusilla laughs too loudly. “oh, darling, they have to. it’s tradition.”
haymitch’s jaw tightens. for a moment, i think he might actually swing at someone. then mags steps forward, resting a hand on his arm affectionately. “just let them,” she tells him quietly. “we’ll still see you underneath.” something in haymitch flickers. not obedience. not acceptance. just exhaustion. he lets them take him.
when they come for me, i don’t fight. i let them guide me down a bright hallway into a private styling room that looks more like an operating room. mirrors line the walls. too many angles. too many versions of me staring back.
i strip out of my clothes and sit in the chair they point to, spine straight, hands folded in my lap like my mother taught me. i feel humiliated, exposed, sitting completely naked in a room full of three strangers. my heart is beating too fast, but my face stays still. if they want a volunteer who looks composed, i can give them that much.
“we’re going to clean you up first,” the green-lipped woman says cheerfully. “then we’ll talk concept.”
warm water runs over my hair in a basin that cradles my neck. fingers comb through the strands, careful and practiced. i close my eyes. this should feel nice. it doesn’t. it feels like erasure.
i think of my family's sweet shop—flour dust in the air, sugar under my nails, my sisters’ laughter echoing down the stairs. i think of maysilee’s braid, always just a little messy, and merilee’s quiet hum when she concentrates. i hold onto those images like anchors.
“you have such a striking intensity,” someone says behind me. “we’ll keep that. maybe sharpen it.”
my hair is dried and styled, smoother and glossier than i’ve ever seen it. my skin is scrubbed, treated, brushed with something that smells faintly of citrus. they remove the faint scar on my wrist without asking. i watch it disappear in the mirror. a part of me aches.
then comes the clothes. they dress me in something simple but sharp—tailored lines, deep charcoal coated fabric that hugs my shoulders and cinches at my waist. i'm handed a coal-mining hat and a faux pickaxe. for just a sliver of a second, i think of haymitch's dad. more specifically, his fate. i cross the room to meet my own reflection and barely recognize her. she almost looks like someone who might survive, if you ignore the accessories.
“perfect,” the stylist murmurs. “very quarter quell.”
they leave me alone for a moment, and the silence rushes in. my hands shake when i unclench them. i press my palms flat against my thighs, grounding myself in the feel of fabric, the weight of my body in the chair. i breathe slowly. deliberately. i will not cry here.
when i step back into the main hall, the others are already waiting. louella looks like a porcelain doll—hair brushed and braided until it shines, her cheeks softly flushed. she’s gripping wyatt’s sleeve like it’s the only real thing left in the room. wyatt himself looks sharper, cleaner, his merchant-side polish turned up to something almost regal.
haymitch looks furious. they didn’t soften him at all. if anything, they sharpened him too. his curls are tamed just enough to look intentional, his face scrubbed clean of soot but not his defiance. they dressed him in dark fabrics that emphasize his shoulders, his height, the coiled tension in his frame. we’ve both been carved into something for them.
drusilla claps her hands, delighted. “look at you all! absolutely radiant. the capitol is going to adore you.”
i don’t care what the capitol adores. i care that louella is trembling. i care that wyatt’s jaw is set too tight. i care that haymitch’s hands are clenched like he’s holding himself together with sheer will.
i move without thinking, stepping closer to louella, placing myself just a little in front of her. it’s a small thing. maybe meaningless. but it’s mine. haymitch notices—he almost always does. his eyes flick to where i stand, then back to louella. his expression shifts—not soft, not kind—but less sharp around the edges.
the parade is explained next. chariots, costumes, presentation, crowds. the list makes my stomach twist.
“district twelve’s look will emphasize resilience,” a designer says brightly. “coal tones, flame accents, something symbolic.”
symbolic of what? our inevitable deaths? i don’t ask. instead i listen, i memorize. this is survival now—not just in the arena, but here. learning when to speak, when to stay silent, when to bend without breaking.
drusilla calls us forward again. we’re ushered deeper into the building, toward fittings and rehearsals and cameras. every step feels heavier than the last. somewhere in the distance, i can hear music starting up—rehearsal for the parade, no doubt. bright and triumphant and cruel.
i straighten my shoulders. i volunteered for this. for maysilee. for merilee. for the girl trembling behind me and the boy calculating before me and the other boy snarling beside me and the life i refuse to lose without a fight.
the capitol can dress me up, sure, but it doesn’t get to decide who i become.
the parade staging area feels like standing inside the mouth of a beast. everything vibrates—music pounding from unseen speakers, the clatter of hooves against polished stone, the hiss of fire cannons being tested overhead. the air smells like oil and artificial smoke, sharp enough to sting the back of my throat. stylists dart in and out, making last-minute adjustments, brushing invisible dust from shoulders, tugging fabric into place.
wyatt and i stand beside our chariot, dressed in coal-dark fabric threaded with veins of glowing ember. heat coils beneath the material, not enough to burn, just enough to remind us what the capitol thinks district twelve is made of: fire and fuel.
across the wide staging floor, i spot the other chariot in which haymitch and louella will ride. louella looks impossibly small standing beside the horses, swallowed by her costume—coal-black silk with flickers of flame stitched along the hem. her hands are clenched so tightly at her sides her knuckles are white. haymitch stands just behind her, one hand hovering near her back, not touching but close enough to catch her if she tips.
my chest tightens at the view. i catch haymitch’s eye for half a second across the chaos. he looks wired, restless, jaw locked tight like he’s bracing for impact. when louella flinches at a sudden crack of sound overhead, his hand finally lands on her shoulder. she leans into him without hesitation. that sight hits me even harder.
“district twelve!” someone shouts. our part of the parade is starting.
wyatt and i climb onto our chariot first. the metal is warm beneath my palms as i steady myself, the horses snorting softly, muscles rippling beneath glossy hides. the crowd noise swells as we’re guided forward.
when we roll out into the avenue, the sound is immediate and overwhelming—cheering, screaming, laughter. thousands upon thousands of capitol citizens line the streets, waving, throwing glittering confetti into the air. camera drones buzz past my face, red lights blinking as they capture every angle, every expression. i school my features into something sharp and steady. not smiling, not scowling, but something in between.
wyatt lifts his chin, regal, composed. he looks like someone who belongs in this spectacle. i feel like prey dressed as a queen.
i bask in the unfortunate fame as people shout absurd praises at me. telling me i'm beautiful, brave. asking me to survive the games purely for them. i scoff at that comment.
that's when i hear it: a sharp, concussive crack—too loud, too close. a firework detonates overhead, showering sparks dangerously low. the horses behind us scream. i twist around just in time to see haymitch’s chariot. the horses rear violently, eyes rolling white, hooves striking sparks against the stone. handlers shout, scrambling. louella’s face goes slack with terror.
“louella!” haymitch shouts.
the chariot lurches. the wheels clip another chariot’s side. metal shrieks. the harness snaps. and then they’re airborne. haymitch’s body collides with louella’s as they’re thrown forward, his arm wrapping around her instinctively, like he can shield her from the ground itself.
they hit the pavement hard. haymitch rolls, slamming shoulder-first, breath knocked clean from his lungs. louella doesn’t move. her head strikes the stone with a sound i will hear for the rest of my life—a wet, hollow crack.
the crowd gasps—then cheers, confused, thinking it’s part of the spectacle. i scream. the sound rips out of me before i can stop it, raw and sharp and entirely unfit for capitol television. wyatt grabs my arm, hard. “don’t,” he hisses. “don’t—”
peacekeepers swarm the scene instantly, blocking the cameras, shouting orders. fireworks explode again overhead—too loud, too bright, deliberately distracting.
haymitch pulls at my heart, crawling to where louella landed. i see his hands, shaking and frantic, as he cradles her head. there’s blood. he looks up, face twisted with something feral and broken, and for one horrible second, his eyes meet mine across the avenue.
the parade continues. our chariot, and the twenty-two others in front of us, are ushered forward faster, the crowd roaring louder, the music swelling to drown out what just happened. wyatt doesn’t let go of my arm until my nails dig into his sleeve, undoubtedly leaving indents in his olive skin.
my vision blurs. the avenue stretches endlessly ahead. i don’t remember the rest of it. not the cheers. not the end. i only remember the sound. that crack.
the training center a half hour later is silent by comparison. too silent. we’re escorted through gleaming halls, ushered into elevators that whisper as they rise. the doors open onto the twelfth floor and everything is glass and light and wrong.
“your quarters,” drusilla announces brightly, like she didn’t just watch a child nearly die. “settle in. dinner in one hour.”
i turn to her, swallowing hard. "where’s louella?” she doesn’t look at me.
“where’s haymitch?” wyatt adds.
we receive no answer. mags’ mouth is pressed into a thin line. wiress is staring at the floor, fingers tapping erratically against her leg.
“go get ready,” drusilla says sharply. “you’ll be late otherwise.”
the rooms are obscene. my bedroom looks like something out of a dream—walls that shift color when i touch them, a bed that hums softly beneath my weight, a bathroom with mirrors that light up at my approach. i stand there, frozen, hands limp at my sides.
louella should be here already. she should be crying on the other side of the wall, asking if dinner is poison, asking if we can hold hands again.
i sit on the edge of the mattress and stare at the door. when the knock comes, i nearly jump out of my skin. dinner.
they arrive late. haymitch walks in first and something is visibly wrong. he looks empty. hollowed out. like whatever was holding him upright has been scooped clean from his chest. his eyes don’t focus right away, his hands hang useless at his sides. beside of him is louella. the relief that hits me is so sharp it almost hurts—like my body had been holding its breath since the crash and only now remembered how to inhale.
louella's smile is wide, her posture stiff. her eyes are glassy, unfocused, like she’s looking through us instead of at us. i tell myself it’s shock. i tell myself she’s been drugged for pain. i tell myself a hundred reasonable possibilities for her uncharacteristic behavior. my breath catches painfully in my throat.
haymitch doesn’t take a seat at the table. he remains standing behind louella's chair, fingers digging into the backrest so hard his knuckles blanch.
we eat in silence. i watch louella—i can’t stop. every movement feels slightly wrong, like the accident has stripped her of her heart and soul. the way she holds her fork, the way she doesn’t fidget, the way she doesn’t glance at me once. louella always looks at me.
my hands start to shake. i press them under the table and force my fingers still. force my face still. force my mind to stop reaching for the worst conclusion like it’s a bruise i can’t stop poking.
after dinner, when wyatt and louella are distracted by drusilla, i step closer to haymitch who is still pressed against louella's empty dining chair. "what happened?” i whisper, "after the crash."
he doesn’t answer at first. his jaw flexes like he’s chewing through iron. then, very quietly, like each word costs him something: “they killed her.”
my stomach drops so hard it feels like my insides shift. “what do you mean—” my voice cracks. i clear my throat and try again. “haymitch, she’s right there.”
his eyes flick to the girl across the room. there’s nothing in his expression. not confusion. not doubt. just this dead, furious certainty. “she died,” he says, voice flat. “on the pavement. and they—" his throat works like he’s swallowing glass. “they covered it up. wiped the footage. swapped her out for a girl from district eleven.”
i stare at him. my brain refuses to take the words in all at once, like if i fully understand them i’ll collapse. i look back at louella—really look now—and suddenly all the things i was trying not to notice slam into place. the stiffness. the too-bright smile. the emptiness behind her eyes. my chest caves in. that’s why it felt wrong. because it is. because it isn’t her.
haymitch’s voice goes lower. “they told me to forget.” his fingers tighten on the chair so tight i worry he might snap it in half. “so i didn’t.”
my throat closes around a sound. i can’t tell if it’s a sob or a laugh or something feral. i glance at the girl again—at the way she mirrors louella’s posture like she learned it from a script—and something cold crawls up my spine.
maysilee has a canary. its name is lou lou. the thought comes out of nowhere, bright and stupid and painfully tender. but suddenly i need to say it. i need to make a small thing true in a room full of lies. “we’ll call her lou lou,” i suggest without thinking, my voice shaking. “my sister has a songbird. that was its name.”
haymitch stares at me, like that is the stupidest idea he's ever had, but then something in his expression breaks. just a little. not enough to fix him—just enough to prove he’s still human under all that hurt. “lou lou,” he repeats. a small, almost-smile appearing on his pale face.
i quickly discover that the training center doesn’t sleep.
i do—barely—but it’s the kind of sleep that feels like drowning slowly. every time i close my eyes, i’m back on the avenue. the crack of louella’s skull against stone echoes through my head like a fault line splitting open. i wake with my heart already racing, breath caught somewhere between my chest and my throat.
the room hums softly around me. the walls glow faintly blue, reacting to my movement like they’re alive. i sit up, drag my hands over my face, and press my palms to my eyes until the pressure turns the darkness red.
this is real. i am here. tomorrow we train. that thought doesn’t scare me the way it should. what scares me is how quickly my mind slides into preparation; exits, angles, advantages, how many bodies could fill a room this size, how long it would take to cross the floor if someone charged me from the doorway. i hate that it comes so easily.
muffled movement drifts through the hall. footsteps. a voice too low to make out. someone pacing. i swing my legs over the side of the bed and pad quietly to the door, pressing my ear to the cool surface. i know without checking that it’s him.
haymitch must not be able to sleep either. some part of me wants to open the door. some part of me wants to pretend i don’t hear him falling apart just a wall away. i do neither. i stand there, forehead resting against the door, breathing slowly until the pacing stops.
when i finally crawl back into bed, lou lou’s too-bright smile flashes behind my eyelids and i have to bite my lip to keep from making a sound.
morning comes too fast. the alarm blares at dawn, loud and merciless. i’m already awake.
breakfast is quick and quiet. lou lou sits between wyatt and mags, smiling when prompted, nodding when spoken to. if i didn’t know better, i’d almost believe she’s okay. i don’t let myself linger on it. i don’t trust my hands not to shake if i do.
the only words that were truly said during the entire meal were wiress'. she had briefly asked us our combative skills, if we had any at all. she then urged us not to go to that station in training, to save that skill for the private showcase to the gamemakers. with the way she said it, this plan seemed like the most important thing she'd ever tell us.
the training center opens up like a cathedral built for violence. weapons gleam under harsh white lights. stations stretch in every direction—knives, spears, swords, axes, archery, snares, climbing, camouflage. tributes flood in from every district, voices overlapping, bodies jostling, alliances already forming in the way people cluster without meaning to.
careers move like they own the place: district one laughs too loudly, district two sizes everyone up like livestock, and district four pretends not to watch while watching everything.
wyatt drifts toward a numbers-based station with tributes from six and nine almost immediately, drawn like a magnet to people who think in patterns. lou lou is gently guided away by a trainer with pastel hair and a smile too wide, ushered toward basic survival drills.
that leaves just me and haymitch. we stand shoulder to shoulder near the edge of the knot tying station, not touching, not speaking. the air between us feels tight, stretched thin as wire.
“don’t follow me,” he mutters without looking.
“wasn’t planning on it,” i reply.
a trainer slams a basket of worn ropes down in front of us anyway. “pair up,” she says briskly.
haymitch exhales through his nose like the universe is personally mocking him.
i step forward first. the frayed rope feel familiar in my hands. my late grandfather taught where to place my fingers, how to fold the material perfectly and quickly, how precision saves effort.
i knot it when prompted, making it tight and enduring. i tie another—a bowline—and then another. both clean and efficient. no flourish. the trainer hums approvingly. “merchant kid,” she notes. “steady hands.”
haymitch watches despite himself. i feel it—his attention pressing against my back like heat. he steps up next, grabbing a slack rope with an unwavering clench. his knot is quick and perfect too, not budging as the trainer tugs on it.
“effective,” she comments carefully, haymitch's creation still in her hands.
we rotate the non-combative stations together, not because we want to, but because the room keeps folding us back into each other; climbing, camouflage, traps. it’s the last station that changes something. they give us wire, weights, and hooks.
“build something,” the trainer instructs. “something that stops someone bigger than you.”
my pulse picks up. i kneel, hands already moving, mind mapping space; tension points, leverage. haymitch hovers behind me, arms crossed, skeptical.
“you’re overthinking,” he says.
“you’re underestimating,” i shoot back.
i finish in silence. when the trainer triggers the snare, it snaps tight around a weighted dummy’s leg and slams it flat. haymitch goes still.
“again,” the trainer says.
i rebuild it faster. something shifts then—not trust. not forgiveness. just respect grinding its way into the space where hatred used to sit comfortably.
by the end of the day, my arms ache and my head pounds, but my mind is sharper than it’s ever been. as we file out, haymitch falls into step beside me. “you’re better than i thought,” he mutters, like it pains him to say it.
i don’t smile. “so are you,” i reply. it isn’t kindness. it isn’t peace. but it’s the first crack in something that’s been locked shut for years.
the next two days of training are the same. haymitch and i are grouped in pairs before we have a chance to protest, we move through the calmest stations together all whilst observing the other tributes. we spend our evenings with wiress and mags, learning our combative skills in private. i'm beyond handy with a knife, thanks to my father, and it turns out haymitch is too. we learn how to use a multitude of weapons in many different fashions. lou lou and wyatt pick up enough information and skill during these evenings that it almost gives me a small hope for their survival. but fact is still fact, and it's evident that if anyone from district twelve survives these games, it will be haymitch.
as the third day of training comes to a close, we are ushered to lunch where one by one each tribute is taken out of the cafeteria and to the showcase room. we each have five minutes to prove that we are worthy of a twelve, that we are worthy of sponsors, that we are worthy of living.
after over three hours, louella is finally called. then wyatt. then me. i leave the cafeteria without sparing haymitch a second glance.
the gamemakers sit high above the floor, beyond bored already. drinks in hand. laughter drifting down like static. i step into the circle and feel something cold settle in my spine. i don’t bow. i don’t smile. i just make a beeline for my knives and fist them in my shaky left hand.
i move fast—faster than in the gym. not flashy, not theatrical. controlled throws. tight arcs. blades embedding where i want them, when i want them. i adjust mid-motion, compensating for distance, for wind i can’t feel but know is there. it's one knife after another. no wasted movement.
when i’m done, the room is quiet. then someone claps. slowly and deliberately. i don’t look up to see who. i set the knives down, take a slow bow, and walk out without waiting for dismissal.
haymitch goes in after me. i instantly hear the snap of his voice, muffled but furious. i think he calls the gamemakers murderers. there's never a whip of a crossbow or the slash of a knife, haymitch only ever showcases his anger. when he comes back out mere minutes later, his eyes are bright with something dangerous and alive.
“they’ll hate that,” i say.
he grins, sharp and humorless. “good.”
by the time the day ends, exhaustion sits on my shoulders like a weight i can’t shrug off. my hands ache. my head throbs.
when haymitch falls into step beside me again, there’s still no insult waiting on his tongue. just that same quiet understanding. we’re not friends, we’re still not allies, but we’re no longer pretending the other is the enemy.
that night, the seven of us sit crowded around the sitting room, watching the hologram of the tribute's training scores play before us. there's not many perfect ten's. in fact, there's not many scores above a six.
haymitch included, whose rebellion in the showcase, earned him a one. wyatt received a six exactly and louella only received a three. i swallow my inhumane pride as the number ten displays itself underneath my name and picture.
it doesn't take long for me to realize that the interviews are worse than the training. training hurts your body but the interviews aim for something softer and more dangerous.
we’re woken before dawn again, ushered through showers and clothes and stylists who chatter like birds pecking at carrion. the preparation room smells like hairspray and heated metal and sugar—everything sweet layered over panic. my dress waits on a mannequin when i step inside, deep coal-gray silk that shifts silver under the lights, cut sharp at the shoulders and clean down my spine.
“strong,” one stylist murmurs. “defiant. very you.” i don’t remember ever telling the capitol who i am but they sit me in the chair anyway. brushes skim my cheeks. powder dulls the dark circles under my eyes. my hair is styled back from my face.
“remember,” drusilla says from behind me, crouching to meet my eyes in the mirror. “they don’t want fear. they want a story. give them something to fall in love with.” i swallow hard.
lou lou is dressed beside me in pale gold, all innocent and light. she smiles at her reflection. it twists something in my chest until i have to look away.
haymitch is across the room, half-turned from the mirror, fingers flexing like he wants to break something. they’ve dressed him in black with faint copper threading at the cuffs. he looks unrepentant.
the stage is blinding. lights crash over me the second i step out, heat pressing against my skin like a second sun. the crowd roars—thousands of voices crashing together into something monstrous and thrilled. my heartbeat stutters, then steadies. i lift my chin and walk like i belong here.
caesar flickerman beams from his chair, all bright suit and eager eyes. he looks younger than i expected. “district twelve’s volunteer!” he announces, voice booming. “give it up for y/n donner!”
applause slams into me. i sit, folding my hands in my lap, my posture impossibly straight.
“now,” caesar says, leaning forward, “you surprised everyone when you volunteered. tell us—why?”
the question lands like a trap—i could lie, i could perform, i could cry. i think of maysilee’s braid slipping loose in the wind; merilee’s hands clutching mine. “because my sister’s name was called,” i say simply.
the crowd quiets around me.
“just like that?” caesar prompts gently.
“just like that,” i repeat. “some things don’t need more explanation.”
there’s a beat—then applause again, louder this time. i don’t smile. i let them clap for the truth.
“you impressed the gamemakers with your outstanding eleven,” caesar continues. “knives, they say?”
i nod. “i grew up learning to be careful with my hands.”
“careful,” he echoes, amused. “yet here you are.”
i meet his gaze. “careful doesn’t mean afraid.” the crowd loves that. i can feel it—feel the shift, the interest sharpening. i tuck the sensation away, uncomfortable with how easily it happens.
“last question,” caesar says. “did you know your fellow tributes before the reaping?”
“up on the stage was the first time i met lou l—louella,” i catch myself, forcing a smile brighter than i feel. "they're both two years younger than me but i know wyatt and haymitch from school."
"were you close?" cesar pushes instantly, before the syllables have truly left my breath.
i raise an eyebrow softly at his question, seeing through his intent. "we were not, no. i knew of them, rather than knowing them!"
"what a shame, you won't be able to get to know them now," he jokes, with a tight, toothy smile. the joke never lands though, it feels bitter and upsets me instantly. i don't let it show.
when i stand to leave, the lights dim slightly—my cue. i walk offstage without looking back.
haymitch goes out two interviews later, after lou lou and wyatt. he's the final interview of the forty-eight. the crowd is already buzzing when he steps into the light, tension crackling like electricity. he doesn’t wave, doesn’t bow, he just sits, one ankle crossed over his knee, daring them to try him.
“haymitch abernathy,” caesar grins, appearing a little nervous now. “you’ve been memorable this week.”
haymitch smirks. “i have that effect.”
laughter ripples through the audience at his comment. he sounds briefly like the haymitch i knew of from the seam—like the haymitch that cat-called me princess in the most venomous ways possible for three long years.
“tell us,” caesar says, leaning in close, “what’s your strategy?”
haymitch tilts his head, eyes glinting. “to survive longer than they expect.”
“and who do you expect to help you do that?” caesar presses.
haymitch’s gaze flicks, just once, toward the wing of the stage—toward me. “i don’t trust easy,” he says slowly. “but i trust people who don’t lie when it matters.”
the crowd erupts. my stomach drops.
caesar’s eyes light up. “ah,” he says delightedly. “sounds like an alliance forming.”
haymitch shrugs. “maybe.”
the cameras eat it up. i can almost hear the capitol spinning it already—fire and steel, merchant and seam, enemies forced together.
by the time the interviews end, my head is pounding. backstage, drusilla is radiant. “did you hear them?” she gushes. “they adored you. all four of you!”
mags squeezes my hand. wiress murmurs something about patterns aligning. haymitch catches my arm as we move toward the exit, his grip brief but grounding.
“you did good,” he says quietly.
i meet his eyes. “yea, you too.”
the capitol never really lets you rest. after the interviews, they herd us back to the twelfth floor like glass figurines that have survived a fall and need to be locked away before we chip. the hallways feel narrower than they did this morning, the lights a little harsher, the quiet louder. adrenaline drains out of me all at once, leaving something heavy and shaky behind.
lou lou is the first to break. the moment the door slides shut behind us, she sags—just a fraction—and mags is there immediately, guiding her to the couch with a hand at her back. wyatt hovers, unsure what to do with his hands, eyes darting between all of us like he’s waiting for the odds to rearrange themselves into something kinder.
“you did beautifully,” mags tells lou lou, voice low and steady. “you were very brave.” lou lou nods on cue, smile snapping into place a half-second too late. it makes my chest ache.
wiress paces the room, muttering to herself. “images are set. narratives are locked. sponsors respond to contrast, fire and restraint; opposites draw attention.” she glances at me, then at haymitch. “you two are loud without being loud.”
haymitch scoffs lowly. “is that supposed to be a compliment?”
wiress considers. “yes.”
drusilla claps her hands together. “all right! now that the public adores you—” she grins widest at haymitch, who does not look adored “—we need to talk practicalities. arena gear, supplies, what you can reasonably carry without tripping over your own feet.”
we gather around the table as a projection flickers to life above it, displaying rotating images of standard arena packs: water purifiers, rope, dried rations, knives, flint. the basics. the lies they tell you so you’ll believe preparation makes this fair.
“you won’t know the environment until launch,” mags says gently. “so you plan for flexibility. layers. nothing that slows you down.”
“weapons?” wyatt asks.
“whatever you can reach first,” haymitch replies before anyone more experienced else can. his voice is flat, tired. “don’t get attached to anything.”
my gaze flicks to him. there’s something brittle in the way he says it, like he learned that lesson early.
for the next few hours, time blurs. we talk through scenarios—what to grab, what to leave, how to read the opening seconds of the bloodbath. wiress sketches strange little diagrams on a pad, lines and angles and symbols that make my head spin but seem to calm her. mags listens more than she speaks, but when she does, everyone quiets.
lou lou drifts in and out, answering when asked, nodding when prompted. i keep an eye on her without meaning to, tracking the slight delays in her reactions, the way she mirrors wyatt’s posture when she’s unsure what to do with her own body.
mags and wiress have private conversations with each of us, just a minute or two long a piece. they tell us our strengths and how we can and should use that when we're out there.
they expect a lot from me. they think i am braver than i have ever considered myself even dreaming of being. i'm told to brave the cornucopia, to risk grabbing a knife and anything else i can safely manage.
when drusilla finally dismisses us, it’s late. too late. back in district twelve, the shop will have already been closed for hours now. i assume maysilee and merilee still lie awake though.
my room greets me with a soft yellow light and silence that feels almost kind after the noise of the day. i peel off the training uniform and change into the plain sleepwear laid out for me, my movements slow and automated. my reflection looks calmer than i feel. my eyes give me away.
i sit on the edge of the bed for a long time, hands resting uselessly in my lap. this is the last night before the arena. the thought lands without drama. no spike of fear. just a dull, heavy certainty. tomorrow is movement and noise and blood. tomorrow, something in me will have to harden whether i want it to or not.
i lie down and stare at the ceiling, listening. the training center hums. vents whisper. somewhere down the hall, a door opens and closes. there's a pad of footsteps. then silence.
i’m almost asleep when the knock comes. it’s quiet and hesitant. like the person on the other side isn’t sure they’re allowed to be here. my heart kicks hard against my ribs.
i slip out of bed and cross the room, opening the door just enough to see haymitch standing there in the dim hallway light. he looks wrecked, worn down to something raw. his shoulders are slumped, frizzy curls falling into his eyes, hands shoved deep into his pockets like he doesn’t know what to do with them.
“sorry,” he murmurs immediately. “i—i shouldn’t have—”
“it’s fine,” i cut in softly, stepping back to let him in. he hesitates, then crosses the threshold quickly. i close the door behind him. the room feels smaller with him in it. warmer, heavier.
we stand there for a moment, neither of us moving.
“are you okay?” i finally ask.
he huffs out a quiet laugh that holds no humor. “no.” he's honest, startlingly so. he rubs a hand over his face, dragging it down until his fingers catch at his jaw. “i can’t sleep. every time i close my eyes, i hear it again.”
i don’t ask what, i don’t need to.
“i almost knocked two nights ago,” he adds, eyes fixed on the floor. “i stood outside your door like an idiot for— i don’t know how long.”
my breath catches, remembering the shuffling in the hallway. "why didn’t you?” i ask.
he shrugs, a sharp, defensive motion. “i didn’t think you’d want me here.”
something tightens in my chest. “you could’ve,” i say. “you still can.”
the silence that follows is thick and fragile. slowly, he steps closer, like he’s afraid of breaking something if he moves too fast. he doesn’t touch me at all at first. he just stops in front of me, close enough that i can feel the warmth of him, the uneven rhythm of his breathing.
“i don’t know how to do this,” he says quietly. “whatever this is.”
“me neither,” i quietly admit, my voice cracking on my last syllable.
haymitch leans forward, his hand resting lightly against my shoulder, sliding down my chest just a sliver. the contact is gentle, almost tentative, like he’s checking that i won’t pull away—i don’t.
after an excruciatingly long moment, his arms come around me—not tight, not possessive. just there. i slide mine around his back almost immediately, pressing my cheek against his chest, breathing him in. he smells like soap and metal and something unmistakably human. his body trembles once. it's barely noticeable, like a shiver he didn’t mean to show.
we stay like that in the dark, holding each other silently in a painfully unfamiliar fashion.
eventually, he straightens and steps back before i can say anything, hands dropping to his sides like he’s putting his armor back on. “thanks,” he says, voice rough. “for not asking for more.”
i shake my head. “you don’t owe me anything.”
his mouth twitches, almost a smile. almost. then he turns and leaves without another word. the door clicks shut softly behind him. i stand there long after he’s gone, arms still wrapped around empty air, heart aching in a way that feels strangely steady.
the day of the games arrives without ceremony. no countdown. no dramatic knock. just a soft shift in the lights, a low hum in the walls, and the sudden understanding that there are no more rehearsals left.
i wake an hour before the alarm. my body feels strangely calm, like it has finally accepted what my mind has been circling for days. i shower quickly, mechanically, the water warm and scentless. when i dry off, the clothes are already laid out on the bed: my arena uniform.
i recognize it instantly—rough, practical, deceptively simple. fitted pants the color of pale stone, a black undershirt, a sleeveless vest with too many pockets and not enough padding. there's nothing ornamental about it; nothing kind. this is the kind of outfit that tells you survival is your own responsibility.
i pull it on piece by piece. the fabric is heavier than it looks. when i fasten the vest, it sits snug against my ribs, grounding me. i flex my fingers, steadying myself in the weight of my new clothes.
i stand in front of the mirror and let my hair fall loose down my back. it feels wrong to leave it untouched—too wild, too vulnerable—so i reach up and braid a thin strand on the left side, quick and practiced. maysilee’s braid. my throat tightens, but i finish it anyway, fingers moving with muscle memory. i tuck the end behind my ear and look at myself again.
this is who goes into the arena. not the older sister above the sweet shop. not the witty girl who argued in classrooms. not the volunteer everyone keeps calling brave. it's just me.
i was given the option to bring a keepsake with me into the arena. a necklace, a pin, a bracelet—anything small and important to me. i chose against it, maysilee's braid is enough of a reminder for me.
when i step into the common area, the others are already there. wyatt stands near the window, adjusting the straps on his vest. his face is pale but set, jaw tight in that familiar way—like he’s calculating something that refuses to give him good odds. lou lou sits on the couch beside mags, hands folded neatly in her lap. she looks composed, almost serene, like she’s been told exactly how to be and is determined not to mess it up. something in my chest aches when she smiles at me.
haymitch leans against the counter, arms crossed, eyes shadowed. his outfit, though identical to mine, looks like it was made for him. his curls are damp, pushed back from his face, and for a moment i have the irrational thought that he looks younger like this. more like sixteen than the hardened version the capitol wants.
his gaze flicks to my hair, to the braid. he doesn’t say anything but his jaw tightens, and then loosens again, like he swallowed a thought.
it appears that out of the four of us, haymitch is the only one to adorn something special to him: a c-shaped metal charm, with a snake and a bird on either side, that sits on a chain around his neck. i quickly wonder the story behind it.
drusilla claps her hands together, peeling me from my thoughts, the sound too bright for the moment. “all right, my darlings. this is it. final checks.”
wiress circles us slowly, eyes darting, fingers twitching like she’s listening to something only she can hear. “remember patterns,” she murmurs. “the arena lies. trust movement, not beauty.”
we all nod. i notice tears welling at the edges of lou lou's eyes.
wiress lands in front of me, putting her left hand firmly on my shoulder, "do not be afraid of the cornucopia, get your knife and go—that is important. food if you can, but hunger is easier than fear."
my breath catches in my swelling throat at her words. i don't respond, i just nod again.
mags steps forward next. she takes each of our hands in turn, squeezing gently, firmly. when she reaches me, her grip lingers just a second longer. “be clever,” she says softly. “and be kind when you can. even if it costs you.”
then we’re moving again, ushered through corridors i’ve never seen before, down into the heart of the building. the air grows cooler, heavier. doors open and close behind us with final-sounding clicks.
the courtyard waits below. the transport ship squats in the center of it like some mechanical animal, sleek and black and humming with restrained power. one by one, we’re called forward.
lou lou is guided in first. she goes without hesitation, hands folded, posture perfect, like she’s been taught exactly how to walk toward her own fear. wyatt follows, his jaw tight, eyes scanning the floor like he’s memorizing every bolt and seam.
then it’s my turn. i pause at the edge of the ship, the wind tugging at my hair, the smell of fuel sharp in my nose. i look back once—at mags, at wiress, at drusilla’s fixed smile—and then, without letting myself hesitate, i step aboard.
the interior is cold and metallic. a medic waits inside, her face blank, her slender hands gloved. “left arm,” she says emotionless.
i don’t flinch as the tracker is injected just beneath my skin. the needle slides in clean and fast, sharp enough to bite. it burns briefly, then settles into a dull ache, like a reminder etched into my flesh.
haymitch boards last and the doors immediately seal behind him. for a sliver of a second, our eyes meet across the narrow space. he nods once, the outer corner of his eyes crinkle softly. i nod back and tear my eyes away from the sight.
the games
the ship lifts, smooth and silent, the ground dropping away beneath us. no one speaks. there’s nothing left to say.
when the transport finally slows, it’s not the arena that greets us, it’s a grand building. low, angular, made of smooth gray stone that blends too well with the surrounding landscape. it sits just outside the arena’s perimeter like a control node—close enough to feel, far enough to keep us from seeing anything that matters.
the four of us disembark with no goodbyes, no last looks. peacekeepers separate us immediately, guiding each tribute down identical white corridors that branch away from one another like veins. i don’t see haymitch again. i don’t hear wyatt’s voice. lou lou disappears behind a closing door without a sound.
my launch room is smaller than i would have thought, circular and bare with its smooth walls and bright lights. there's a single opening in the floor where the metal launch tube waits, sealed and silent. the platform sits at the center, perfectly still, ringed with faint markings that tell me exactly where to stand.
i step onto it. the floor beneath my boots vibrates faintly as it activates, recognizing my weight, my tracker, my pulse. cool air rises from below, carrying the scent of grass and something sweet that makes my stomach tighten.
a voice crackles overhead, emotionless. “tribute, stand still.” i listen.
the tube seals around me, walls sliding up until the world narrows to polished metal and artificial light. i can’t see anyone else, can’t hear anything but my own breathing.
i shut my eyes so tight they start to hurt.
this is it.
the platform hums louder beneath me.
day one
when i open my eyes again, the ceiling begins to slide away and a bright white light floods in and fades out—revealing a blue sky, a green meadow, flowers that are too bright to trust.
the cornucopia gleams at the center of it all, surrounded by a ring of other pedestals—forty-seven other tributes, forty-seven other lives about to shatter.
i lower my chin and breathe once, deep and steady. my platform locks into place and the countdown begins—ten. nine. eight—i spot haymitch across the circle. he’s already crouched slightly, coiled like a spring, eyes fixed on the metal pile at the center—seven. six. five—my fingers flex—four. three. two—i think of maysilee’s braid. of sugar-dusted mornings. of a boy pacing outside my door who didn’t know how to ask for comfort.
one.
the horn sounds like the world cracking open. for a split second, everything freezes—forty-eight bodies held in the same breath, the meadow so beautiful it almost convinces you this isn’t a slaughter. the flowers gleam like spilled paint. the air smells sweet, clean, wrong.
then the sound finishes echoing and the spell snaps. i run. not a careful run, not a smart one. i launch myself straight off the pedestal, boots tearing into grass slick with dew, lungs burning as the distance between me and the cornucopia collapses in a blur of color and screaming. i don’t look left. i don’t look right. i don’t look for haymitch.
if i stop, i die.
the cornucopia looms larger with every stride—metal teeth flaring upward, its shadow pooling dark and cold beneath it. bodies slam into each other around me. someone trips. someone else goes down. a career laughs, bright and thrilled, like this is exactly what they’ve been waiting for.
i hit the metal pile and don’t slow, wiress' instructions echoing through my brain. my hand closes around a set of knives—light, balanced, wrapped tight in leather. my other arm scoops a small satchel without even glancing inside. my instinct screams go, and i obey.
i barely get two steps in before a boy i recognize from district five stumbles into my path, eyes wide, mouth already opening—maybe to warn me, maybe to beg. i skid to a stop so hard my knees scream.
then a knife punches through his chest from behind. the blade erupts out the front of him, red and wet. his body jerks once—hard, puppet-sharp—before sagging. his weight collapses forward, almost into me.
i scream and shove him away at the same time, hands slipping on blood. i don’t wait to see who took his life, i don’t want to. i turn and sprint.
the first cannon booms. it's sound is enormous, concussive, shaking the air itself. it echoes off the meadow and slams straight into my bones. my stomach flips, bile clawing up my throat.
that's one.
i don’t stop running until the grass gives way to shadow and the forest swallows me whole. my lungs burn like they’re tearing themselves apart, but i keep going until the screams fade into something distant and unreal. only then do i skid to a stop at the tree line, chest heaving, hands shaking so badly i have to brace them against a trunk.
the meadow is still chaos when i turn back. the careers move like predators, cutting down anything slower than them, anything stupid enough to freeze in awe of the arena’s beauty. panache barker is unmistakable even from here, tall and brutal, leading the pack like he was born for this.
cannons keep sounding. two. three. four.
i scan frantically for familiar faces. for curls. for a stance i recognize. but i see no haymitch. panic spikes sharp and fast in my body.
then i see wyatt. he’s near the edge of the cornucopia now, already bleeding, already outmatched. lou lou is just behind him, frozen in place like her feet have grown roots. panache’s blade flashes toward her—wyatt steps in front of her without hesitation. the final strike lands. hard.
wyatt crumples, shielding her even as he falls, his body collapsing between lou lou and the blade meant for her. the cannon fires almost immediately. that's five. the sound tears a hole straight through me.
lou lou screams. a raw, broken sound that doesn’t belong in her throat. a pair of hands drag her away by the arm and she disappears into the chaos, still alive, still screaming. i don’t stay to see more. i know that if i do, i won’t leave.
i turn and run deeper into the forest, branches tearing at my uniform, tears blinding me as i sprint blindly until my legs give out and i slam to my knees behind a fallen log.
the meadow is gone now. the screams are muffled. but the cannons keep coming. six. seven. eight. i curl forward, pressing my forehead into the dirt, knife clutched so tight my fingers ache. i don’t cry—not really. it’s more like something inside me is screaming with no sound.
eighteen cannons ring out before the sun even shifts. eighteen lives erased in minutes.
when night finally falls, it does so all at once. the forest goes still, like it’s holding its breath. the anthem of panem rises. it pours out of the sky and the holograms flicker to life above the trees. faces bloom one by one, ghostly and bright.
wyatt callow, district twelve.
my chest caves in. i press my hand over my mouth to keep from making a sound as louella mccoy’s name does not appear. as haymitch abernathy’s does not either. they're both alive. i'm alive. for now.
the anthem ends. the faces fade. the forest exhales. i sit there in the dark, shaking, knives heavy in my lap, the satchel still unopened at my side; tears streaming down my face.
the forest doesn’t feel like shelter. it feels like a mouth that closed around me. i don’t stop crying, until the screams and cannons are nothing but echoes stitched into my ribs. i have wedged myself beneath a fallen tree tangled with vines and moss, the earth damp and cold beneath my palms. only then do i let myself breathe. only then do i open the satchel.
my hands still shake so badly i almost spill everything into the dirt. there's three bottles of water—two full, one empty. i press my forehead briefly against the plastic of one, grounding myself in its coolness. two mre packets, sealed tight. antiseptic, small but intact. there's nothing else. no flint. no rope. no luxuries. it's enough to keep me alive but not enough for me to get comfortable.
i slide the knife set inside the satchel and cinch it closed, tucking the strap across my chest like an anchor. then i crawl deeper beneath the log, curling onto my side, back pressed to bark, knees drawn in tight.
i don’t light a fire. i don’t eat. i don’t drink. i just sit there in the dark, eyes wide, listening. every snap of a branch sounds like footsteps. every rustle feels like breath on my neck. my body stays coiled, knife already in my hand, even as exhaustion drags at my bones.
the thought of wyatt keeps me upright through the night. i don’t sleep. i just survive the dark.
day two
morning arrives quietly. there's no alarms, no peachy announcements from drusilla, just light filtering through leaves, turning dew into glass. the forest looks almost kind in the daylight—green and soft and deceptively peaceful.
i ration immediately. taking a long sip of my water, half a bottle. nothing else. my stomach knots in protest, but i ignore it. hunger is easier than fear, wiress had said.
i move slow today. careful. every step deliberate. i mark my path with small, subtle signs only i would notice—a bent fern, a scuffed stone. i don’t stray far from cover. i don’t touch the berries, even when they look perfect and ripe and sweet. especially not then.
i hear things. footsteps, once—too heavy to be prey. laughter, distant and wrong. something screaming far enough away that i can pretend it isn’t real. i never do see anyone.
by midday, i find a better hiding spot: a shallow hollow formed by intertwined roots, partially hidden by low brush. it’s defensible, sheltered. invisible unless you know where to look. i tuck myself inside and let my muscles loosen for the first time since the horn.
that’s when the shaking starts. it comes out of nowhere—violent, bone-deep. adrenaline leaving my system like it was pulled out by force. i press my teeth into my sleeve to keep from crying out, breathing through it until it passes.
i eat half an mre. it tastes like cardboard and salt.
when night falls again, the anthem comes softer this time. the sky lights up; a boy from district six, a boy and both girls from district ten.
then louella mccoy. district twelve.
the world around me goes quiet. i don’t scream. i don’t cry. i just stare until the light fades, until her pale face and long raven braids dissolve into stars and nothing.
my heart aches for lou lou. for the real louella. for the both of their clueless families.
i stay curled in the roots long after the anthem ends, knife pressed flat to my chest, wondering how many names are left before mine appears.
day three
the morning is calm again.
my body feels heavy when i move, limbs sluggish from hunger and stress. i sip water sparingly and force myself upright. i can’t stay hidden forever. sponsors won’t bet on a ghost.
i follow the forest edge, careful not to break into open meadow, watching the ground as much as the trees. that’s when i see them: holly berries. bright red. perfect. glossy as candy.
i stop instantly. something about them feels wrong—not poisonous-wrong, not obvious-danger, but staged. deliberate. my skin prickles.
the berries move in half a second. they split apart with a wet, clicking sound. ladybugs crawl free from its shell. dozens. then hundreds.
they surge toward me in a living wave. i scream. it rips out of me before i can stop it—raw, panicked, animal. they swarm my legs, my arms, my neck. pain explodes everywhere at once—sharp, burning. i claw at the bugs, sobbing, slapping, my vision blurring as weakness floods my limbs.
“help—” my voice breaks into nothing. i keep slapping at my body, digging my nails into my skin carelessly in rushed attempts to rid of the muttations. i yelp as one crawls into a loose flap on skin. that's when a pair of calloused hands slam over my mouth. hard.
“quiet,” snarls in my ear. haymitch. he’s there suddenly—solid, real—hauling me backward, crushing my face against his chest as he runs. i feel him swatting at the mutts with brutal efficiency, i feel his breath hot and fast against my hair. “do you want them to hear you?” he hisses. “stay quiet.”
i can’t fight him. i can barely stay conscious.
he doesn’t stop running until the forest thickens again, until the air feels safer. he lowers me to the ground, immediately stealing my satchel and dumping the contents out, his hands moving fast, practiced.
“you’re bleeding,” he mutters. i look up at him. there's three red marks scattered on the left side of his pale face. they're shiny, blistering. i try to raise a finger up, to warn him of his small ladybug-berry injuries but my arm is limp.
i feel completely and utterly useless as he pours my water over my skin, scrubbing the bugs away, pressing antiseptic into the bites while i gasp and shake, pain and relief tangling together.
i look up at him through hot tears. this is the first time i’ve seen him since the horn. he's alive. his hands don’t stop shaking even after the last of the insects are gone.
the antiseptic stings like fire, but the pain is sharp and clean now, not the hollow draining ache from before. my skin burns, throbbing in angry patches, but i can feel my fingers again. my legs respond when i flex them, weak but obedient. it's just temporary. i cling to that fact like a lifeline.
haymitch presses a wad of cloth against the worst of it, jaw clenched so tight i can see the muscle jump. he doesn’t look at my face. he doesn’t say anything comforting. he just works—efficient, focused—like if he stops moving, something inside him will crack open.
then there's voices. close. too close. haymitch freezes beside me. his hand comes up instantly, firm against my shoulder, guiding me backward into the shadow of a fallen tree. he pulls me in tight, positioning my body flush against his chest, one arm wrapped across my shoulders, the other braced against the ground like a barrier. i don’t resist. i don’t even breathe.
boots crunch through leaves not even ten feet away. “thought i heard something,” a boy says—lazy, amused. a career. district two, maybe.
“probably mutts,” another replies. “this place is crawling with them.” there's laughter. low. confident.
i feel haymitch’s breath warm against the crown of my head. i feel the slow, deliberate rise and fall of his chest as he forces himself calm. his chin dips, almost resting in my hair, like we’re just another tangle of roots and bark and shadow. his grip tightens—not painful, but grounding. stay still, his body tells me. my heart slams so hard i’m terrified they’ll hear it.
“we’ll sweep the meadow later,” someone else adds. panache barker’s voice. i recognize it from the bloodbath—too smooth, too pleased.
footsteps move on. branches snap farther away. only when the forest swallows their voices completely does haymitch loosen his hold—not all at once, but slowly. like he’s making sure they’re really gone.
in one swift motion he completely pulls away. the space between us feels cold immediately. he doesn’t meet my eyes, doesn’t ask if i’m okay, just pushes the satchel back into my hands and nods toward it once.
“you’ll be sore,” he says quietly. “drink, only water from your bottles. eat something. don’t touch anything red again.”
i swallow. my throat burns. “thank you haymitch.” he stiffens before me. for a moment, i think he might say something—anything—but he just shakes his head once, sharp and final.
“stay hidden,” he adds. “they’ll come back.” and then he’s gone. no goodbye. no explanation. just the sound of him melting back into the trees like he was never here at all.
i sit there long after, fingers curled tight around the satchel strap, skin aching, heart still racing. somewhere deep in this forest, a boy i’ve spent years hating just saved my life and disappeared without claiming it.
that night, the anthem plays again. four more faces rise into the sky—ampert latier was unfortunately one of them—leaving twenty-one of us.
i stare at nothing in front of me, letting the involuntary tears fall from my swelling eyes, saying a silent prayer that haymitch comes back to me.
day four
pale light bleeds through the trees, thin and cautious the next morning, like the arena itself is holding its breath. i wake slowly, every muscle stiff, every bite from yesterday still tender but dulled. the antiseptic did its job. haymitch did his job.
i drink some—only from what's left of my water bottle like haymitch instructed. i eat some. i move quick.
i don’t know why i walk in the direction i do. instinct, maybe. or the fact that i haven’t stopped thinking about the way haymitch vanished into the trees without a word. about how close the careers were. about how his hands shook while he saved me.
i keep to the forest’s edge, circling the meadow without stepping into it. the open space feels wrong now—too watched. too exposed. i don’t want to go to the cornucopia again. i don’t want the ghosts still clinging to it.
the forest edge narrows where the trees press closer to the meadow, roots snarling beneath the soil like they’re trying to trip me on purpose. i move slow, eyes up, knife already loose in my grip.
i hear her before i see her. a breath. sharp. panicked. close. i stop instantly, lowering my center of gravity, every sense tightening. the sound comes again—someone clearly trying not to cry.
“please,” a voice whispers. female. young. “i don’t want to—” she stumbles into view from behind a cluster of ferns, nearly colliding with me. district eight. i recognize the fabric scraps woven into her sleeve, the thinness of her frame, the way her eyes dart everywhere but my face. we both freeze. she’s holding a short blade, but her grip is wrong—too tight, knuckles white, elbow locked. fear, not training. “don’t,” she says immediately, voice breaking. “don’t come closer.”
i don’t move. my heart is pounding so loud it feels like a betrayal. “i’m not,” i say quietly. “i won’t.”
she swallows hard, tears tracking down her cheeks. “i can’t do this,” she whispers. “i haven’t eaten since the cornucopia. i thought—i thought if i followed the trees…” her eyes flick to my satchel. then back to my face. shame floods her expression instantly. “i don’t want your things,” she rushes. “i just—i just don’t want to be alone when it happens.”
the words hit harder than any blade could. i take a careful step to the side, angling my body so i’m not blocking her path. “you don’t have to stay here,” i say. “you can keep going.”
she shakes her head, frantic. “they’re everywhere. i hear them laughing at night.” careers. she takes a step toward me without realizing it. too close.
something in her eyes shifts then—not aggression, not courage—just desperation tipping into panic. her blade lifts and my heart sinks.
my body moves before my mind catches up. i step in. fast. close enough to smell her sweat, her fear. my knife finds her ribs because there’s nowhere else to put it, because hesitation is how you die here.
the resistance is awful. she gasps, a sharp, startled sound, more surprise than pain. “i’m sorry,” i breathe, even as my hand keeps moving, even as i know apologizing doesn’t undo anything.
her blade clatters to the grass. her knees buckle. i catch her instinctively, lowering her so she doesn’t hit the earth too hard. her blood soaks into my sleeve, hot and slick.
her green eyes find mine. “thank you,” she whispers, so soft i almost miss it. then those eyes go empty.
i kneel there longer than i should, hands shaking, my knife still buried where i put it. the cannon sounds overhead—loud, final—and i flinch like it hit me instead of the sky.
i pull the blade free and stumble back, bile burning my throat. i wipe my hands on the grass, on my pants, on anything that isn’t her. this is real, i think numbly. this is what it costs.
i don’t take anything from her. not her blade. not her pack. i turn away instead, moving fast, breath coming too shallow, my chest aching like something inside it cracked open. the forest doesn’t care. it closes behind me like nothing happened.
my legs carry me forward on instinct alone. i walk a yard or two numb, not thinking, not strategizing, just moving my body one step at a time. i instinctively hike a leg over a fallen log, suppressing the pain that tugs at the still-blistering skin on my thighs.
that's when i see him. haymitch is crouched near a stand of trees i haven’t explored yet, back half-turned to me, backpack resting against his knee while he studies the ground intently. he looks different out here—leaner, sharper, carved down to survival and stubbornness. not bleeding, not frantic, just set. like someone who’s already lost everything and refuses to lose anything else.
i freeze. for one horrible second, i consider turning around. disappearing again. pretending yesterday never happened. pretending he didn’t save me, didn’t hold me still while death passed us by, didn’t walk away like it meant nothing.
then a branch snaps underneath my boot. his head comes up instantly. blue eyes lock on mine. no surprise, no relief. just recognition. “you’re alive,” he says flatly. it’s not a question. it’s not even warm. it’s just fact.
“so are you,” i answer.
he nods once, like that settles something, then pushes himself to his feet. he doesn’t tell me to leave. he doesn’t invite me closer. he just turns and starts walking, deeper into the forest, like he expects me to follow. after a beat, i do.
we move side by side, not touching, not looking at each other. the silence between us is thick but not hostile anymore. it’s the kind of quiet that comes after screaming, when there’s nothing left to say except the truth.
the walking almost distracts me from the girl from district eight—how she was ready to die but also ready to kill, how blood spilled from her chest, how i vomitted all over her and her belongings.
after a while, i say it, what's been on my mind for two days: “lou lou died.”
the words fall flat between us, a statement shaped like a wound. haymitch doesn’t stop walking when he opens his mouth. “i know.”
i swallow. my throat burns. “they showed her face.”
"yeah," he exhales slowly through his nose. “they do that.”
my steps falter just a little. “you were with her.” it’s not a question. i know the answer from his uncharacteristically witty comment. i just need him to say it.
“since the bloodbath,” he starts, “she found me after. wouldn’t stop following me. wouldn’t stop apologizing for breathing too loud.” my chest tightens. "she kept asking if she was doing it wrong,” he continues, voice rough but steady. “sleeping. walking. surviving. like there was a rulebook she missed.”
i look at the ground so i don’t have to look at his face and those red blisters on his face, his consequence for saving my life.
“she was tired,” he says. “they kept steering her. drugging her. every time she tried to sit down, she’d get confused. scared. said the flowers were singing.” my fingers curl into fists. “by the second night,” he adds, quieter now, “she couldn’t walk anymore.”
we stop near the stump of a tree. he sets his axe down on top of it, staring at it like it might answer for him.
“i stayed,” he says. “i didn’t let them take her right away.” my heart sinks for him. for lou lou. for louella. “i held her hand until she stopped shaking,” he finishes. “then i made it stop.”
the arena feels too big around us suddenly. too open. too cruel. “i’m so sorry,” i whisper.
he snorts, sharp and bitter. “don’t.”
“i mean it.”
“i know you do,” he says. “that’s the problem.”
we walk again. i almost tell him about the life i took but decide not to. i'm not sure i trust him not to do the same to me. that thought makes me want to vomit again.
after a while, the anger creeps in, quieter than before but heavier. “you hated me,” i say suddenly. “before all this.”
he lets out a short laugh. humorless. “yeah.”
“why?"
he doesn’t answer right away. when he does, it’s like pulling splinters from bone. “you had a roof that didn’t leak,” he says. “food that didn’t disappear. sisters that didn’t look at you like you were already dead.”
i flinch. “that’s not—”
“i know,” he cuts in. then softer, “i know. but i didn’t then.”
i swallow. “you called me a spoiled princess.”
“you called me a charity case,” he fires back.
the words hang between us, ugly and old.
“i didn’t know about your dad yet,” i say.
“i know,” he replies. “doesn’t make it hurt less.”
we stop again. this time, we face each other.
“i hated that you saw through me,” he admits. “that you weren’t afraid of me. that you looked at me like i was something.”
my heart stutters. “and i hated that you thought i was pretending,” i say. “that everything i had meant i hadn’t earned anything.”
he looks at me then. “stupid,” he mutters.
“yeah,” i agree. “really stupid.”
something settles after that, an understanding pressing its weight down on both of us.
“you’re not doing this alone anymore,” he says eventually.
"neither are you.”
he nods once. we turn and walk together, side by side, into an unfortunately beautiful part of the arena neither of us has seen yet.
he tells me about how he almost died of poisoned water thirty minutes into the games; about lou lou's flower bed; about his mutt portal mission with ampert, following my ladybug injuries; about ampert's death; about the three lives he's taken already.
i tell him i'm sorry again, despite how much he hates it.
day five
the forest smells different when i wake—sharp, metallic, like rain that hasn’t fallen yet. or maybe it's just the arena shifting its weight, reminding us it isn’t done.
haymitch is already awake. he’s crouched a few feet away, back to a tree, axe across his knees while he sharpens the blade with slow, methodical strokes. the sound is steady. controlled. too calm for how close danger feels now.
eight more tributes lost their lives last night. leaving haymitch and i versus thirteen others. thirteen fighters.
i sit up quietly, stretching stiff legs, rolling my shoulders to work out the soreness that never quite leaves. the bites from the mutts still ache if i move too fast, but they’re fading. temporary. everything here is temporary one way or another.
“you hear that?” he asks without looking up. i pause, listening harder. at first there’s nothing—just birdsong and the soft breath of the trees—but beneath it, something else. a distant rumble. low. constant.
“no,” i say. then, after a beat, “wait. yeah.”
he nods once. “mountain.”
my stomach tightens. we haven’t gone near it yet—not really. it’s been looming in the distance since the games began, white-capped and harmless-looking, like it belongs on a postcard instead of in an arena built to kill us.
“it wasn’t making noise yesterday,” i say.
“nope.” he finishes sharpening the axe and stands, testing the weight in his hand. his movements are efficient, practiced. like he’s already adjusted his expectations.
i sling my satchel over my shoulder, checking the strap automatically. “are we moving?”
“yeah,” he says. “but not toward that.” he jerks his chin away from the mountain, deeper into the forest, angling north. toward terrain we haven’t touched yet. something about the way he says it, decisive and final, sets my teeth on edge.
“why?” i ask.
“because whatever’s waking up over there,” he replies, “isn’t something i want at our backs.”
our. the word lands heavier than it should. we start walking, side by side again, boots crunching softly over leaves and brittle twigs. the forest feels tighter today. less forgiving. branches snag at my clothes like hands that don’t want to let go.
after a while, i notice the pattern. haymitch keeps drifting a half-step ahead of me. keeps taking the outside edge when the ground narrows. keeps positioning himself between me and every open sightline.
i let it go once. then twice. the third time, i stop. "hey.”
he takes another step before realizing i’m not with him. he quickly turns back, irritation already flashing across his face. “what?”
“stop doing that.”
“doing what?”
“that.” i gesture between us. “you’re not a shield.”
his jaw tightens. “i didn’t say i was.”
“you don’t have to.”
he scoffs quietly and turns away again. “we don’t have time for this.”
i follow, but my voice sharpens. “you keep moving us away from food. from water. from visibility. you volunteered to scout last night. you took point again this morning.”
“someone has to.”
“not like this.”
he stops abruptly, spinning on me. “like what?”
“like you’ve already decided how this ends,” i snap. my words hang there, raw and dangerous. for a moment, i think he’s going to explode. instead, something in him goes still.
“watch your step,” he says coldly.
“no,” i fire back. “you don’t get to shut me out now. not after—”
“after i saved your life?” he cuts in.
that hits. hard. i swallow, anger flaring bright enough to hurt. “after you chose to stay.”
silence stretches between us, thick and brittle. the forest seems to lean in, listening. haymitch drags a hand through his hair, pacing once like a caged animal. “this isn’t about feelings,” he mutters. “this is math.”
“don’t,” i warn. wyatt callow flashes in my brain at the word math.
“one of us makes it farther if the other draws attention,” he continues, voice roughening. “that’s just how it works.”
my chest tightens painfully. “so you’re planning to be the distraction.” he doesn’t answer and that’s answer enough. i step closer, lowering my voice, each word precise. “don’t turn me into someone who survives by letting you die.”
he finally looks at me then. i see something crack through the anger—fear, sharp and unguarded. “you think i don’t know that?” he snaps. “you think i don’t wake up every morning counting how many ways this ends with your name in the sky?” my breath stutters. “you still have a reason to live,” he adds. “don’t make me pretend i do.”
the words cut deep, because i know where they come from. “you’re wrong,” i say quietly. “and you don’t get to decide that for me. or for yourself.”
he shakes his head, bitter. “you don’t understand.”
“maybe not,” i admit. “but i understand this: if you disappear on me, i won’t forgive you. not in this arena. not ever.”
there's another long silence. the distant rumble rolls again, louder this time, vibrating faintly through the ground beneath our boots. ash drifts from somewhere unseen, dusting the leaves like gray snow.
haymitch exhales slowly, like he’s letting go of something he’s been gripping too tight. “we move together,” he says at last. “no heroics.”
he turns and starts walking again, slower this time. matching my pace. the mountain growls loud behind us. its sound rolls through the arena like something ancient stretching its spine, deep and resonant and wrong. the ground beneath our boots shivers again—not enough to knock us off balance, just enough to make the hairs on my arms rise.
haymitch stops mid-step. his head tilts, listening. “that’s not a warning,” he says quietly. ash drifts through the trees now, thin as dust at first, clinging to leaves and catching in my hair. it smells sharp and chemical, not like smoke from a fire, but something manufactured. something designed.
“the forest,” i say.
“already headed there,” he replies.
we don’t run yet. running draws eyes. running makes noise. instead we move fast and deliberate, angling deeper into the woods as the light shifts from green-gold to sickly gray.
we're barely in the denser portions of the wood before the mountain cracks open. the sound is deafening—a violent rupture that tears the sky in half. lava fountains upward in brilliant orange arcs, beautiful in a way that makes my stomach churn. heat washes over us even from this distance, the air growing heavy, oppressive.
“go,” haymitch snaps. we break into a sprint. branches whip at my face, roots snag my boots. the ash thickens, clinging to my skin, coating my tongue with bitterness. i hear screams—distant, panicked, cut short far too quickly. cannons start firing in uneven succession, each one a punch to the chest. one. two. three. “don’t breathe it in,” haymitch shouts over his shoulder. “it burns.”
i pull my dirtied sleeve over my mouth just as the ash changes texture—no longer powdery, but slick, gel-like. it splatters against my arm and i hiss as my skin flares hot, chemical pain blooming instantly.
“rain,” haymitch says, almost to himself. “they’ll send rain.” as if the arena heard him, the sky darkens. clouds roll in unnaturally fast, and then the downpour comes, heavy and sudden. the gel dissolves on contact, melting away like sugar, hissing softly as it breaks down.
we collapse beneath a dense stand of trees, gasping, soaked through. the rain cools my burns almost instantly, leaving behind angry red patches but nothing deeper. temporary. again. cannons echo on—seven by the time it slows. we don’t speak while it happens. we just listen, each boom another life erased somewhere beyond these trees.
when the rain eases, the forest looks pristine again. leaves washed clean. air crisp. the mountain quiet once more, like it never tried to kill anyone at all.
“liars,” i mutter.
haymitch lets out a breath that sounds like a laugh scraped raw. “welcome to panem.”
we move again once the ground steadies, circling wide around the mountain’s reach. it’s then we start noticing the pattern—the way the trees thin unnaturally near the northern edge. the way the ground slopes too cleanly, too evenly.
the hedge maze rises out of nowhere. dense, towering, clipped into sharp angles that don’t belong in nature. it forms a wide v-shape, hedges so thick i can’t see through them at all.
haymitch slows, eyes narrowing. “end of the world,” he mutters. i step closer, peering at the leaves. something glints faintly—a small brass plaque nailed low into the hedge.
we follow the hedge line instead of trying to breach it, boots crunching over dry earth that feels wrong underfoot. we walk until the land just stops. a cliff yawns open ahead of us, sheer and brutal, jagged rocks far below. my stomach drops at the sight. “that’s it,” i whisper. “the edge.”
haymitch crouches, scooping up a stone. he tosses it forward. the rock flies maybe ten feet before it slams into nothing—ricocheting violently back toward us. haymitch jerks me aside just in time as it whizzes past, skidding harmlessly into the dirt behind us. a force field.
we stare at each other. something dangerous lights in his eyes. “they bounce,” he says slowly. “everything bounces.”
i feel it then—the shift. the arena isn’t just killing randomly anymore. it’s showing us its teeth. its rules. daring someone smart enough to use them.
the anthem sounds that night while we’re still tucked near the hedge, hidden in a pocket of shadow. faces bloom across the sky—more than i want to count. none of them are us and that's all that matters.
we sit shoulder to shoulder, close enough that our arms brush. neither of us pulls away.
“we're still here,” he mutters eventually.
day six
haymitch is on his feet early the next morning. he’s standing at the edge of our cover, staring toward the mountain with his head tilted, listening again. it’s quieter today. no groaning. no warning tremors. just silence stretched thin as wire.
my throat feels raw when i swallow. my skin is tight where the gel touched it, faintly tender but healed enough to move.
“it’s done for now,” he says.
we’re careful packing up. slower than before. there are fewer sounds in the arena now—less movement, less panic. fewer people left to make noise. it makes everything feel closer. heavier.
six. that number sits between us like a third presence. “four others,” i say quietly, like if i don’t say it out loud it might ambush me later. “careers.”
“yeah,” he replies. “and they’re hunting.”
we move anyway. there’s no choice but forward now. no more circling the edges. no more pretending we can wait this out. the arena has started tightening its grip, and we can feel the pull of it everywhere—in the way paths funnel, in the way the forest thins, in the way open space dares us to cross it.
we keep to the hedge line again, moving north, then west, then back south in a slow arc. haymitch keeps glancing at the cliff like it’s a thought he doesn’t want to finish having.
eventually, i stop. “you’re thinking about it.”
he doesn’t ask what i mean. “yeah.”
“about throwing something.”
“about making them throw something,” he corrects.
my stomach flips. “that’s dangerous.”
he finally looks at me. “everything left is.” we walk in silence for a while after that, the kind that hums instead of rests. i keep replaying the ricochet in my head. the way the stone snapped back like the arena itself had teeth. “if it comes to it,” he says eventually, voice low, “you run.”
i stop short. “no.” my stomach sinks, it's like he either forgot our almost-argument yesterday or he simply does not care.
“i’m serious.”
“so am i.” i step into his space, close enough that i have to tilt my head up to look at him. “we already did this yesterday.”
his jaw tightens. “this is different.”
“it’s not,” i say. “it’s just closer.” the thought of haymitch dying protecting me is somehow worse than the thought of one of us having to kill the other if we are the final two.
for a second, i think he’s going to argue again. instead, he exhales hard, like the fight drains out of him all at once. “i hate that you make sense,” he mutters. i almost smile. almost.
the afternoon stretches long and tense. we hear the others before we see them—distant voices, laughter sharp with nerves, boots snapping twigs without care. panache's voice carries easily. he sounds confident. like he thinks the arena already belongs to him.
we drop lower, moving through undergrowth, careful not to leave signs. once, we flatten ourselves into a shallow ditch as footsteps pass close enough that i can smell sweat and metal. haymitch’s hand brushes mine in the dirt—brief, instinctive. when they’re gone, we don’t speak about it. we just breathe, heavy and needed. i lean back against the hedge, exhaustion finally sinking its claws into me. haymitch sits beside me, knees drawn up, axe resting across his thighs.
“if we make it to morning,” i start softly.
“we will,” he replies, too quick.
i glance at him, forgetting the end of my thought. “don’t lie to me.”
he’s quiet for a long moment. then, honest in a way that hurts, “i don’t know how this ends.” that’s the closest thing to fear i’ve heard from him.
“neither do i,” i say. “but i know how i don’t want it to.” he nods, once. agreement without words.
the fire did more damage than we realized at first. entire stretches of forest are gone—charred trunks, brittle ash underfoot, the air still faintly acrid. the nearest waterfall is visible now through the dead trees, white and tempting and completely useless with its poisoned contents.
we don’t go near the cornucopia. not with four others still breathing. not after the volcano stripped the forest raw and left the open meadow feeling like a stage with too many sightlines. the metal pile glints in the distance like it’s mocking us, daring us to be stupid. we aren’t.
haymitch watches the waterfall for a long time. then he looks away. “not worth it,” he says, clutching his stomach.
“no,” i agree. my voice comes out hoarse. “it’d kill us slower than the others would.”
we sit with the thirst instead. let it settle. let it gnaw. my burns itch under my sleeves—angry, healing, still tender. the ladybug bites have faded to bruised constellations along my skin, but they ache when the heat rises. haymitch hasn’t complained once about the blisters on his hands from the axe, or the burns on his forearms. he just keeps flexing his fingers like he’s reminding them they still belong to him.
the arena is quiet in that dangerous way—no screams, no cannons, no obvious threat. just the sense of being watched and weighed.
the sky hums. we both look up at the same time. two silver parachutes bloom overhead, drifting down slow and deliberate, like the capitol wants us to savor it. haymitch is already on his feet, scanning the perimeter, axe loose in his grip. i stay still, eyes tracking the descent.
the boxes land a few yards apart with soft thuds. we wait a full ten seconds. then another. finally, haymitch approaches the closer one, crouching, checking for wires, triggers, anything that might turn generosity into a joke. he flips the lid.
water. two full bottles. clear. real. for a moment, he just stares. there’s a folded slip of paper tucked beside them. he picks it up, hesitates, then opens it. his mouth twitches.
“what?” i ask.
he hands it to me without comment.
drink. think. don’t die doing something stupid —m & w
it’s barely a note. barely handwriting. but my chest tightens anyway. the other box is closer to me. i kneel and open it carefully. antibiotic cream. one thick tube. more than i would have expected. much more than i deserve. another folded note waits underneath.
you were right to survive —m & w
that’s it. no flourish. no advice. i blink hard and close the box before my eyes can do anything embarrassing.
haymitch hands me one of the water bottles without ceremony. our fingers brush briefly—calloused, warm, real. “take small sips,” he says.
the water tastes like nothing and everything. it burns going down. i want to cry with relief. i don’t.
we ration. we put the cream on one another's burns. we wait silently. the sun inches lower. and for the first time since the volcano, my skin stops screaming; for the first time since the ladybugs, my muscles unclench just a little.
the arena settles around us, pretending to sleep. somewhere out there, four tributes sharpen their weapons, thinking they’re the last fighters standing—they’re wrong. we’re still here.
haymitch doesn’t sleep. neither do i. we take turns keeping watch, backs to the hedge, eyes on the shadows. every sound feels intentional now; every pause too long.
day seven
the first cannon sounds sometime after midnight i presume. it cracks through the air sharp, rattling my ribs. i flinch before i can stop myself, fingers digging into the dirt. haymitch exhales slowly. “one,” he murmurs.
the forest settles again, deceptive in its quiet. minutes drag. maybe an hour. i’m starting to wonder if that was it—if the arena’s done thinning the herd for the night—then the second cannon fires.
my heart slams hard enough it hurts. i press my hand to my chest, breathing shallow, listening for movement that doesn’t come.
haymitch closes his eyes briefly. not in relief. not in mourning. just acknowledgment. “that leaves four,” he says. the number lands heavy. four of us are left. me, him, and two others.
i stare up through the branches at the empty sky, trying to picture faces that aren’t there yet. trying not to imagine weapons, trying not to imagine blood.
“careers,” i whisper.
“yeah,” he says. “has to be.”
i swallow. my mouth tastes like ash and adrenaline. “they’ll come at first light.”
“probably,” he agrees.
we don’t say anything else after that. there’s nothing left to plan tonight. no moves to make in the dark without tipping the balance the wrong way.
eventually, exhaustion wins in fragments. i drift in and out of shallow sleep, the ground cold beneath me, the hedge solid at my back. every time i wake, haymitch is still there—silent, coiled, watching the arena breathe.
morning comes thin and gray. the forest looks almost innocent again, washed clean by night dew. birds stir cautiously. light creeps through leaves like it’s unsure it’s welcome.
three names are left to fill the sky. my body shivers at the thought. i sit up slowly, muscles stiff, heart already racing. “we don’t know who they are,” i say.
haymitch shakes his head. “not until they show themselves.” somewhere out there, two tributes are waking up too, sharpening their blades, thinking they’re the last obstacle standing between themselves and victory.
i look at the hedge, at the cliff beyond it, at the invisible wall that bounced a stone back like a warning shot from the arena itself. whatever happens next won’t be subtle.
“stay close,” haymitch says. i nod.
we head south first. the forest thins that way, slopes gentler, less theatrical. i keep my eyes on the ground, my ears open, every sense stretched tight.
there's a disturbance in the air. it starts with heat. not the honest kind, not sun-on-skin warmth, but a sudden pressure change that makes my lungs feel too full. the air thickens. candy pink birds scatter all at once, exploding from the canopy like something spooked them from below.
haymitch stops dead in his tracks. “don’t,” he says, already turning. “don’t look back.” i don’t need to. the smell hits next—burning sap, chemical sharpness, smoke that doesn’t belong to any natural fire. there’s a roar behind us, fast and hungry, and when i risk a glance despite his warning, my stomach drops.
flames. not creeping, not cautious, but a wall of fire tearing through the forest like it’s being pulled by wires. trees ignite too cleanly, their leaves flashing bright before blackening, collapsing inward with sharp cracks.
“they want us north,” i gasp.
haymitch grabs my wrist, hard. “run.”
wind bites at my face, smoke burns my throat, heat licking at my back like teeth. the fire moves wrong—too fast, too purposeful, changing direction when we do. my lungs scream. my legs feel like lead.
don’t become someone you hate, my brain whispers uselessly as panic claws up my spine.
the trees thin abruptly and light floods in: the meadow. we burst out of the forest together, stumbling into open space just as the fire roars to the edge of the tree line and unnaturally stops. flames rear and curl, frustrated, before dying back fast, leaving only scorched trunks and smoking earth.
i drop to my knees, coughing, my chest on fire. haymitch stays standing, axe raised, eyes sweeping the open field. the cornucopia gleams ahead of us, obscene and familiar, metal catching the sun like it’s proud of itself. the grass is trampled now, stained darker in places i don’t let myself look at too closely.
voices carry across the meadow; laughter; slow clapping. “come on, abernathy,” a boy calls, voice smooth and sharp-edged. “don’t tell me you ran all this way just to hide again.”
another voice joins in. “we’re bored.”
haymitch’s jaw tightens. i feel it even without touching him, like tension radiating off his body.
“they’re close,” i murmur.
“yeah,” he says. “they want a show.”
a loud speaker crackles to life overhead, sound reverberating through the open space until it feels like it’s inside my skull.
“attention, tributes.” the voice is calm and practiced. my heart starts pounding hard and sputtered. “due to the exceptional circumstances of this year’s quarter quell, the capitol has authorized a final amendment.” i watch glossy-eyed as haymitch’s grip tightens around his axe, his knuckles turning white. “there may be two victors, provided they are from the same district.”
the words hit like a physical force. for a heartbeat, the arena tilts. i stare straight ahead, pulse roaring in my ears. i don’t look at haymitch. i can’t. the thought is too fragile, too dangerous to touch directly. hope is a blade here—sharp, tempting, ready to cut you open if you hold it wrong.
across the meadow, the laughter stops. “well, i’ll be damned,” the boy calls, delighted now. “hear that? looks like it’s personal, abernathy.”
the other voice—female, low and taunting. “guess we’ll have to break you and your little lover up.”
haymitch exhales slowly through his nose. when he finally looks at me, there’s something different in his eyes now. not anger, not fear, but calculation. “they want us desperate,” he says quietly. “they want us to turn on each other.”
i nod once. “we won’t.”
his mouth twitches—not a smile, not quite—but something steadier. “good.”
the grass ripples as a breeze cuts through the meadow, carrying the faint scent of smoke behind us and blood ahead of us. the arena feels smaller now. like it’s closing its fist.
we don’t get time to plan. they move first.
silka sharp comes out of the tall grass like a nightmare pulled upright—too tall, too solid, axe already swinging in a lazy, confident arc that whistles as it cuts the air in front of me. six feet of muscle and intent. she grins when she sees me, eyes flicking over my knives like she’s already decided i’m manageable.
i dart forward instead of back. the first knife leaves my hand before my brain finishes the thought, spinning low and fast. silka jerks aside just in time; the blade slices fabric and skin along her ribs. she snarls, surprise flashing hot across her face.
“feisty,” she laughs, adjusting her grip. “i like that.” i don’t answer. i don’t waste my breath. i circle, knees bent, weight light on my feet, knives flashing between my fingers like extensions of thought. the world narrows to distance and timing and the way her shoulders tense before she swings. she’s strong, but she’s slow.
i throw again. then again. one knife embeds in her thigh. another skims her forearm. blood beads bright against her skin, stark and shocking against all that confidence. she stumbles half a step, growl turning sharp and furious.
that’s when silka gets visibly angry. she roars and charges, axe coming down hard enough to split bone. i roll, barely clearing it, dirt exploding where i’d been a second before. the shock rattles my teeth. i come up low, slicing, driving another knife into her calf. she howls this time—real pain, real shock.
i feel something fierce bloom in my chest. i can do this. i can—there's pain. white-hot, blinding, catastrophic pain.
panache moves faster than i thought. his sword hacks backward in a brutal, careless motion, steel biting deep into my hip. the impact is like being struck by lightning and crushed at the same time. i scream—i can’t stop it—as my body folds, legs giving out beneath me.
the pain isn’t sharp anymore. it’s everything. it floods me, swallows me whole, radiating outward in sickening waves. my spine lights up, nerves screaming like they’ve been ripped open and set on fire. my spine goes numb instantly, dead weight dragging uselessly behind me. i taste blood. i can’t tell if i’m biting my tongue or just breaking apart.
i hit the ground hard, breath tearing out of me in a sound that doesn’t even feel human. i can’t move. i can’t feel half of myself. panic claws in next, cold and suffocating. i try to push up—nothing. my hands slip in the grass. my vision blurs, tears spilling hot and helpless.
haymitch roars my name. the sound cuts through the pain like a hook. i see him only in flashes—him slamming into panache, axe coming up hard, the flat of the blade cracking into panache’s waist with a sickening thud. panache goes down, sword slipping from his hand, breath knocked clean out of him.
i wait for the sound of the cannon but it never comes. he's not dead, just knocked unconscious.
i want to scream at haymitch to finish it. to run. to win. to leave me. instead all that comes out is a broken sound, wet and shaking. he turns back to me for half a second—just long enough for our eyes to meet. i see it there. terror. fury. devotion so sharp it hurts to look at.
then silka is on him. she’s bleeding badly now, limping, axe heavy in her hands—but she’s still standing. still dangerous. she swings with everything she has left, driving haymitch back step by step.
he has no choice but to fight defensively now. his axe is buried in panache’s lower torso and he doesn’t dare turn his back to retrieve it. he grabs my satchel instead, yanking it toward him with one hand while blocking silka’s strikes with the other, movements tight and desperate.
i watch through tears, chest heaving, pain pulsing in nauseating waves that make the world tilt. every heartbeat sends another bolt through my spine. i feel like i’m coming undone at the seams.
i don’t want to live like this. i don’t want him to die because of me. please, i think wildly, stupidly. please let it be him.
a cannon booms—panache—the sound punches through the air, final and merciless. silka screams, raw and feral, grief and rage tangled together as she rips her axe free and hurls it with everything she has left. i see it spin end over end, gleaming, beautiful and terrible.
haymitch dodges it swiftly. clean, instinctive—perfect. the axe sails past him and slams into the invisible wall behind. the force field, our discovery, hums as the weapon ricochets.
i see silka’s eyes widen just before the axe buries itself in her chest, right where her heart should be. the impact lifts her off her feet. she collapses without another sound. the cannon fires again. silence crashes down, heavy and unreal.
my vision tunnels. the edges go dark. the pain is unbearable now, overwhelming, like my body is trying to eject me from itself. i sob openly, broken, gasping, half-aware of the anthem swelling overhead, triumphant and cruel.
i don’t want to see my face in the sky. i want him to win.
haymitch is suddenly here—knees in the grass, hands on my face, on my shoulders, everywhere at once. he’s shaking harder than i am, breath coming in sharp, ragged bursts. “hey—hey—stay with me,” he begs, voice breaking. “don’t you dare—don’t you dare—”
i cling to him weakly, fingers fisting in his ruined shirt, pain and relief and terror blurring together until i can’t tell where one ends and the other begins.
above us, the voice returns, colder now. edged with something like resentment. "the capitol hereby announces the victors of the fiftieth hunger games, the second quarter quell.” my hearing fades in and out. “from district twelve—”
haymitch’s forehead presses to mine. his breath is warm. he's real. he's alive.
“—haymitch abernathy and y/n donner.” the anthem crescendos and the sky burns bright.
the last thing i feel is haymitch holding me like he’s afraid the world will take me if he lets go.
the victors
i wake up breathing. that’s the first thing i notice. not pain, not panic, but the steady rise and fall of my chest, smooth and uninterrupted, like nothing ever went wrong.
the ceiling above me is white. not the harsh arena-white. not the fluorescent glare of the capitol hospital. this is softer, warmer. familiar in a way that makes my stomach twist; the training center.
my fingers twitch. they respond immediately. there's no delay, no tremor. i sit up too fast, heart slamming, waiting for the agony to hit—for my hip to scream, for my body to remind me what it went through. nothing happens.
i look down at myself. i’m clean. spotless, really. my hands are manicured, nails painted a pale, shimmering color i’ve never chosen for myself. my skin is smooth, unmarked. no burns, no bites, no blood or dirt beneath my nails.
i slide off the bed and nearly trip on fabric pooling at my feet. a dress. long, blue, elegant, capitol-perfect. the kind of thing designed to distract the eye, to erase history with silk and sparkle.
i stagger toward the mirror. the girl staring back at me looks nothing like me, she looks like a victor. my hair falls over my shoulders in soft curls, styled within an inch of its life. my makeup is already done—dark lashes, shimmering lids, lips painted a deep rose.
i lift the hem of the dress with shaking fingers, breath caught painfully in my throat. my hip is flawless with no stitches, no bruising, no scar. there's not even a hint of discoloration where a sword should have ended me.
they cut me open while i slept; fixed me, perfected me, erased the proof that i bled for their entertainment.
the door opens quietly behind me. i spin, heart lurching. an avox dressed in crimson stands there, head bowed. it's a woman, much older than me. her eyes flick up briefly—gentle, sad—before she gestures for me to follow. she doesn’t speak. she can’t. i don’t either.
the hallway feels wrong under my feet. too quiet. too clean. like the building is holding its breath. every step echoes with memory—training, laughter, shouting, fear. a week ago, i was here pretending i wasn’t already dead.
the avox stops at the twelfth floor. the elevator door opens and she quickly steps aside.
haymitch is there.
for half a second, my brain refuses to process it. he’s clean. dressed in a tailored suit the same deep navy as my dress. his curls are clean and coiled. his face is unmarked, healed, whole. alive.
he crosses the room in three long strides and crashes into me, arms wrapping tight around my shoulders, my back, my waist—everywhere at once. i slam into his chest, fingers fisting in the fabric of his suit like i’m afraid he’ll disappear if i let go.
he’s shaking. so am i. we don’t cry, not really. we press our faces into each other’s shoulders and breathe, chests hitching, holding on like the world might tear us apart again if we loosen our grip even an inch. he smells like soap and something expensive and wrong, but underneath it all, it’s still him.
“you’re here,” he murmurs, voice rough. “you’re—”
“i know,” i whisper. “i know.”
the door opens again. drusilla sweeps in first, already dabbing at her eyes dramatically. mags follows, slower, steadier, her smile soft. wiress lingers near the door, watching us like she’s memorizing the moment.
haymitch loosens his hold, just slightly, swallowed by the cluster of women suddenly surrounding us. hands on shoulders. murmured reassurances. relief layered over grief.
i hug mags. then wiress. drusilla presses a kiss to my cheek that smells like powder and perfume.
“my darlings,” she says brightly, voice trembling despite herself. “you did it. you did it.” i open my mouth to ask—about the arena, about my family, about what happens now—but drusilla cuts me off with a gentle clap. “no time, love. we mustn’t be late. caesar is waiting.”
waiting. the word makes my stomach twist.
the stage is blinding. brighter than before. louder. everything amplified now that we’ve survived. caesar flickerman beams at us like we’re his favorite miracle. everything around me is a blur of lights and applause and voices that feel too loud in my skull.
“panem,” he announces, voice ringing, “please welcome your victors of the fiftieth hunger games!” the following applause is deafening. it rolls over us in waves. i sit beside haymitch, knees close enough that our legs brush.
“now,” caesar says, leaning forward eagerly, “you gave us something truly unprecedented. two victors.” he smiles wider. “tell me—did you believe it was possible?”
haymitch answers first. “no,” he says plainly. the crowd laughs, startled. “but i believed we weren’t done yet.”
caesar turns to me. “and you, y/n? when did you realize you might both make it out?”
i swallow. my voice comes steady anyway. “when i realized i trusted him more than the arena.” the applause swells again.
“brave,” caesar sighs. “romantic, even.” i don’t correct him.
i keep my eyes forward, focusing on a random woman in the large sea of people. she has neon pink skin. i stare at her so hard i worry holes might burn into her figure. i refuse to look at the screen behind us showing highlights of the games. i don’t need to.
cesar asks about the final fight; about silka and panache; about the force field; about loyalty. "how did it feel,” he asks lightly, “to watch your final opponent fall?”
my chest tightens. “it didn’t feel like winning,” i say. “it felt like surviving.” the room quiets.
next come the crowns. gold circlets, heavy and cold as they’re placed on our heads. haymitch stiffens at the contact. i barely feel it at all.
my mind keeps slipping sideways—back to the girl from eight, to louella’s face in the sky, to wyatt’s body on the grass. to haymitch’s hands shaking as he held me together.
to the life i took. to the lives i couldn’t save.
our hands are forced and raised together. cameras flash, lights explode. we smile because we’re told to, because everyone is watching.
we're pulled aside immediately after the crowning—hands adjusting our fancy clothes, angling our faces, directing us closer.
“closer,” a voice insists. “arm around the waist. yes. smile.” haymitch’s hand settles at my lower back. his fingers flex once, like a warning, like reassurance.
there's a flash. it stings my eyes.
“look at each other!”
i turn my head. our smiles don’t reach our eyes. flash.
when it’s over, when the lights and cameras finally dim, i feel hollowed out. like something essential was taken and replaced with glitter.
the victory tour passes in fragments as well. districts blur together—faces, names, speeches written for us and memorized like prayers. dinners where we sit at the head of tables we don’t belong at, talking about courage and sacrifice while parents stare at us with hollow eyes. i say the names of the dead. i bow my head. i keep my voice steady.
haymitch stands beside me every time. solid. silent. a presence i anchor myself to. we save twelve for last; the capitol comes first.
snow’s mansion glows like something unreal—white and perfect and full of laughter that doesn’t belong to us. the party is overwhelming. music, color, movement. hands grabbing, voices congratulating.
wine is pressed into my hand. i don’t drink it. haymitch, however, downs half of his immediately. people congratulate us left and right like we won a game, not a massacre.
then president snow appears at my side. his smile is thin and polite—deadly. “miss donner,” he says softly. “how extraordinary.”
“thank you, sir,” i reply automatically.
his eyes flick to haymitch. then back to me. “you and abernathy,” he continues, “were not the intended outcome.” my heart stutters. “silka sharp and panache barker. they were meant to be the story. but,” snow adds, leaning closer, “stories can change.” his smile sharpens. “just remember who edits the ending.”
he steps away like he’s said nothing at all.
at some point—i don’t remember how—haymitch and i slip away to a secluded bedroom. enormous and quiet. the door clicks shut behind us and the silence rushes in like water. we don’t speak at first. haymitch leans against the wall. i sit on the edge of the bed. the space between us hums with everything we haven’t said yet.
“i don’t know how to go home,” he says finally.
the words land softly. honestly. “me neither,” i admit, thinking of our new home back in twelve: the victor's village; nothing like the merchants area, nothing like the same.
"i don’t know how to be a victor.”
“you don’t have to be anything,” i reply. “not with me.”
his breath catches. “i was ready to die out there,” he admits. “i wasn’t ready to come back.” he looks at me then, his eyes darker than i’ve ever seen them. “they’re going to expect things from us. smiles. gratitude. mentorship.”
“we don’t owe them that,” i say.
his mouth twitches. “no. but they’ll take it anyway.”
something shifts in me then. a quiet, terrifying clarity. i realize i don’t just care if haymitch survives—i care if he’s alone. i care if he breaks. i care in a way that has nothing to do with the arena or an alliance, but everything to do with who he is when no one’s watching.
“haymitch—” i start.
he crosses the room in two steps. both of his hands come up to my face, warm and sure, thumbs brushing my jaw like he’s grounding himself. like he needs to feel something real. "please tell me to stop, princess,” he murmurs.
i don’t.
when he kisses me, it’s desperate. hungry. years of fear and anger and restraint collapsing into one moment. his mouth is firm against mine, breath uneven, hands cradling my face like i might shatter.
i kiss him back with the same urgency, fingers sliding into his curls, pulling him closer, closer, closer. the world narrows to heat and breath and the way he presses into me like he’s afraid i’ll disappear.
his hands slide down my back, anchoring me. my lips part. he groans softly, like it’s been locked in his chest for weeks.
for a few more minutes, nothing else exists, but then there’s a knock. we break apart, breathless.
“you’ll want to see this,” drusilla calls—softer than i've ever heard her—from the other side of the door.
the door swings open after a beat and a yell of assurance from haymitch; maysilee is there. merilee. my parents. willamae and sid abernathy.
they rush forward all at once, arms wrapping around me, around haymitch, around each other. it’s messy and overwhelming and perfect. i bury my face in my sister’s hair and breathe her in. i feel sid’s arms around haymitch’s waist. i feel my mother’s hands on my back, solid and warm.
haymitch’s hand finds mine in our crowd of loved ones. our fingers lace together without a twitch.
for the first time since the reaping, something like peace settles in my chest. not happiness but gratitude. and love. and the knowledge that even after everything—after fire and blood and loss—some things survived. so did we.