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Neutral
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Feo stared at him, his fingers tightening into the blanket beneath his hands. His breath came slow, controlled, but there was something behind his golden eyes now—something stormy, something unreadable. It was one thing to know Lucius was fragile, to see the way he moved sometimes, how he winced just a little too sharply at things that shouldn’t hurt that much. But hearing it, hearing how deep it went, how much it had shaped him? How it had broken him? That was different. That was personal. That was something Feo didn’t know if he could sit with without it eating him alive. And then there was the other part—the words Lucius had said before. We kill them. Feo had wanted to hear those words. Had dreamed of hearing those words. Because he had been waiting for Lucius to finally break, to finally let go of the naive hope that things could be fixed, that the gods could be reasoned with, that any of them were worth a damn. He should’ve felt relief. Should’ve felt something good. But all he felt was rage. Rage that it had taken this long. Rage that it had taken this much. Rage that Lucius had been forced to reach this point at all. His jaw tightened as he exhaled slowly, trying to keep his voice steady. “You didn’t screw up last night, Lucius.” He reached up, rubbing at the tension in his temple before dropping his hand. “You’re right, though. I should’ve known something was off, should’ve—” His throat closed up for a second before he forced the words out. “I should’ve asked. And I didn’t. I just acted.” He wasn’t even sure if he was angry at himself or at Lucius anymore. Maybe both. Maybe neither. Maybe at the fact that this was the kind of world they lived in, where a kid with wings had to break his bones just to keep up, where a god’s child had to decide if he wanted to drown in a cursed river just to be safe. The River Styx. Feo clenched his fists. “You don’t need to be like Achilles, Lucius.” His voice was quiet but firm. “You’re not him. You’re not some tragic hero, not some story written by the gods for their entertainment. You’re you. And you don’t have to turn yourself into something unkillable just to prove a point.” Feo meant two different things by saying you're not him. Sure, he was speaking of Achilles on the surface. But underneath, he meant Iven. Lucius wasn't Iven. He would never be. And while Iven had been the love of Feo's life, well.. there had been a reason Iven had died. A reason, something Lucius didn't have. Something that made him perfect. Something that made him better than Iven. Feo didn't want to replace Iven. He wanted to use him as a stepping stone. As an example to never let Lucius end up like that. He hadn't been protective enough then. He was too protective now. Balance. He was learning. Because the point wasn’t just about survival. The point wasn’t about strength. It was about fear. It was about making sure no one could hurt him again. And Feo understood that better than anyone. He took a slow breath, watching as Lucius kept his gaze away, kept his good hand fumbling with the fabric of his shirt instead of looking at him. He hated that. Hated the distance. Hated that they were still struggling with the same damn thing—too stubborn, too broken, too tangled up in their own heads to just talk. Feo shifted forward slightly, his voice quieter now. “Look at me, Lucius.” He waited, giving him the space to move at his own pace. To lift his gaze, to listen. “You’re not alone in this. You never were. And you never will be.” His fingers twitched at his side, resisting the urge to reach out. “So don’t start thinking like that. Not now. Not when we’re this close to taking everything back.” They weren’t running anymore. They were fighting. And they were going to win. Even if it meant burning everything to the ground, Feo would do it in a heartbeat. For him.
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Lightbringer
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Lucius shook his head. He had hidden it. That was what he was good at, hiding things. Presenting a truth that wasn't the right truth, a half-truth, a lie so believable it seemed that he himself believed it. "I wouldn't have been honest even if you did ask," Lucius relayed the words openly, seeing no reason to lie at this point. "It's... not exactly the best thing. Not my favorite one..." His favorite thing about himself. Or realistically, the thing he tried to avoid but always came back to no matter how hard he tried. He noticed the way Feo's hands curled into balled fists when he mentioned the river. But this time it wasn't in a panic. He didn't want to be a tragic hero, he just wanted to be ... like everyone else. That was the closest option he knew of. Him. Lucius's sapphire eyes flicked to Feo briefly. He could feel the weight of that and the words coming after it. A tragic hero... he knew. Somehow, Lucius had a feeling that was connected with his irritation in the murky waters of the memories of the night before. Feo knew he wasn't him. But even if he did, that didn't stop the memories. He knew that. He knew it. Feo moved, speaking to him. His words reached for his gaze but... but he... he couldn't make himself look up. He knew the moment that his sapphire eyes met with Feo's... he'd... lose composure. It wasn't that he didn't want to look at Feo. But he really didn't want to irritate his elbow anymore than he already had. He... he had been. But now he wasn't alone and Lucius wasn't sure how to go about things now. His throat felt tighter, thick with emotion. Finally, achingly slow, he lifted his chin. And then his eyes. There were thousands of words that passed over his tongue but none of them felt as heavy as the ones he had now. The ones he had poised carried more weight, more meaning--more... everything behind them. It would be everything he had held back in the words he had refused to say in almost a decade. It wasn't that he had refused to say these exact words, but he had refused to let them carry the meaning, the weight behind them. They were taking everything back. But Lucius... he was only... he could only do so much. He hadn't trusted someone like had with Feo. Which was why he let the weight and the pressure slip into the air. "Help me." The words were whispered, his voice broke on the last syllable, choking it out.
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Neutral
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Feo’s entire body locked up. He barely even breathed. Lucius never said that. Not like this. Not with his voice cracking, not with his walls down. Not with the weight of something real, something raw, something that made Feo’s stomach twist up into something tight and unbearable. Lucius didn’t ask for help. He grinned through the pain, shouldered burdens meant to be shared, carried his suffering in silence and never let anyone see when it got too heavy. He’d let himself break before he let himself ask. How did Feo know? Because Feo did the exact. Same. Fucking. Thing. But now— Feo shot up so fast his vision blackened at the edges, his balance wavering, the room tilting around him. His ears rang, and his head swam, but none of it mattered. His body moved before his mind could catch up, driven by instinct alone. By the time the dizziness subsided, he was already standing over Lucius, breath tight in his chest. Slow. He had to go slow. Feo sank onto the bed, barely making a sound. The mattress dipped under his weight, the space between them disappearing in an instant, and for just a second, he hesitated. Not out of doubt, not out of uncertainty—but out of the desperate, gnawing need to be gentle. To not break something that had already been through too much. Carefully—so carefully—he reached forward, resting a hand against Lucius’s side, fingers twitching at the warmth beneath his palm. Slowly, slowly, he eased him backward, guiding him until his back was pressed to Feo’s chest. He could feel everything. The rise and fall of Lucius’s breathing. The faint tremor beneath his skin. The exhaustion weighing down every inch of him, like he was barely keeping himself together. Feo curled an arm around his waist, grounding him. His other hand hovered, hesitant, fingers trembling as they ghosted over Lucius’s skin. He wasn’t sure if he should touch. If it would hurt. If it would be too much. The scars—he had never seen seen them before. Glimpses, obviously. He knew Lucius had them. Knew he carried wounds that no one had bothered to heal. His hands were evidence enough. But seeing them, feeling them beneath his fingers—there was something about it that twisted something deep in his chest. His fingers shook as they traced the edges of the raised skin, barely applying pressure, moving with the care of someone handling something delicate. Something fragile. Something that had already been broken once and couldn’t take another hit. Lucius wasn’t fragile. Not in the way that mattered. But Feo had known pain. He had known what it felt like to be shaped and shattered by gods who never bothered to ask if you wanted to be their weapon. He had known what it felt like to be wrong in your own skin. And that knowledge made his throat burn. “I’ll help you,” he whispered, the words barely a breath, barely audible. But the weight behind them was undeniable. His hand stopped shaking. He meant it. Every syllable, every promise wrapped in those three words. “I’ll do whatever you want. Whatever you need.” His grip around Lucius’s waist tightened, just slightly. Just enough to let him know he wasn’t alone. That he wasn’t going anywhere. The warmth of Lucius’s body pressed against him, solid and real, and Feo swallowed down the sharp ache in his chest. “Whatever it takes.”
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Lightbringer
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Lucius closed his blue eyes, lowering his chin again. It had taken so much to just say it. He had said perhaps millions of words, some he meant, some he didn't, some he merely wished to believe. But those two... carried more on them than anything he had said in ages. It carried the weight he had been shouldering the entire time, it carried the exhaustion he couldn't shake, the burning desire to fix things... it showed the tattered and frayed ends that unraveled at the edges. It held the tears he hadn't let fall, dripping through the cracks he had. The rush of movement caught his ears and drew his eyes open, looking up toward Feo. His eyes slid closed again, silent and hardly with the energy to move, let alone do anything. With a gentle touch, Lucius leaned back against Feo's chest, his head falling back against his shoulder. His eyes were closed, trying to just focus on breathing. While his left arm was... immobile over his chest, his right arm fell to rest on the arm that Feo had curled around his waist. The scars were there, some had twinges but the vast majority of them were just there. Just tiny hints of imperfections that together wove a tapestry of something far bigger. But the edges were tattered, fraying, some were singed, others torn. But the scars told the story of getting back up. No matter what, he had stood up against Feo's chest, he had gotten up, he had kept going there was nothing stopping him, he wasn't being kept down. But it was harder now. It was harder to get up against Feo's chest, it was hard to struggle to his feet, to keep going. The whisper was soft in the silence of his mind. Whatever he needed. Lucius curled his fingers around Feo's arm, a silent acknowledgement that he had heard his words. Whatever it takes. Lucius took in a slower and deeper breath, slowly drawing his eyes open again. How did he figure out where to start? No. That was simple. It was simple and easy solution, it was right there. "Help me get back up again," he whispered, "to keep going." The enormous task ahead was far more than he had anticipated. But he wanted to see it through. He wanted to see it through all the way, not just part of the way through. The young man hardly had the energy to speak. But he knew... he knew that just beyond the door was some sort of goddess. As if on cue with his thoughts, the faint knock echoed at the door.
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Neutral
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Feo barely breathed. The moment Lucius’s fingers curled around his arm, something inside him clenched so tight it almost hurt. His whole chest ached with the weight of it—the quiet, unspoken thing that had been sitting in him for longer than he could name. Lucius trusted him. Not just with words, not just in the fleeting way people said I trust you and didn’t mean it—not in the way gods and fate played their cruel, conditional games. This was real. This was tangible. It was in the way Lucius had finally let himself lean into him, in the way he had whispered those words like they were made of glass, like he was afraid they would break before they reached Feo’s ears. "Help me get back up again, to keep going." Feo felt the words sink into his skin, deeper than he thought anything ever could. He had spent so long chasing something he didn’t have a name for, so long trying to protect and fight and fix, but this? This was something different. This wasn’t a battle he could win with a knife or a gun or sheer, reckless willpower. This was Lucius—his Lucius, his Dove, his Lulu—handing him something fragile and impossible and trusting him not to shatter it. And Feo would try until he died. His arm curled a little tighter around Lucius’s waist, firm but careful, steady but not caging. His other hand, the one that had ghosted over old scars and new wounds alike, settled over Lucius’s ribs, fingers splayed as if grounding them both. I hear you. I see you. I’m here. He didn’t say it out loud, but it was there, in every touch, every breath. And then—the knock. Sharp. Invasive. An unwanted presence cutting through the quiet like a blade. Feo’s entire body went rigid, golden eyes flashing toward the door. He knew who it was. He knew it before the sound had even fully registered. "No." The snarl tore out of his throat before he could think, low and venomous, a guttural rejection of everything waiting beyond that door. No. Not now. Not here. Not when Lucius was finally here, finally letting himself be held, finally asking for something that wasn’t laced with sharp edges and defiance. Feo clenched his jaw, fury sparking hot in his chest. The gods had already taken too much. They had stolen time, stolen choices, stolen lives. They had dictated and manipulated and twisted fate to fit their own selfish whims. But this? This wasn’t theirs to take. This was his moment. This was Lucius’s moment. And he refused to let them take it. His hold on Lucius tightened just slightly—not trapping, not restraining, just there. Just anchoring. His breath was uneven, his heart pounding in his ears, but he forced himself to stay. To let the rage simmer instead of explode, to keep himself here instead of storming to that door and throwing it open with a knife in hand. Instead, he did the only thing that made sense. Feo exhaled slowly, his fingers pressing just a little firmer against Lucius’s side, and buried his face into the curve of Lucius’s neck. He breathed him in. Not as a possession, not as something to keep locked away from the world—but as something real. As something his, but not to claim—simply to have, in the only way that mattered. Lucius was his to hold, his to protect, his to help—not because Feo demanded it, not because fate had written it in blood, but because Lucius had asked. And for him? Feo would run himself to the ends of the Earth and still jump off that edge. He did bad shit. Shit that pissed people—shit that pissed Lucius off. He refused to repeat his mistakes. Or so help him.
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Lightbringer
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Feo's arm curled around him, just enough to tell him that he had heard him. He had accepted it, not only accepted it, but he wasn't telling him that it was alright. The Norse's featherlight fingers drifted over his scars and settled over his chest. His touch was warm and firm, grounding. It reminded him that he was there. He wasn't alone--there were no words said, not a single one, but it was there. It was always there. The growl that escaped from Feo rattled in his own chest as well. It was a singular word, the rejection of the ... everything that was beyond the door. Quietly, muffled, the response was hesitant. "Okay. I'll come back," her voice was a touch on the softer side, quiet and accepting of the word. Lucius seemed surprised at first, his eyebrow raised. But gratitude. The woman beyond the door slipped away--accepting it. She let them have this. Feo was giving him time to relax. He was letting him recharge, supporting his exhausted limbs and keep him somewhat upright. Lucius knew his shoulders were tight and tense, they hadn't relaxed. He couldn't make himself drop his shoulders. It was almost like it was stuck in place, held up by a tension he didn't know he had. But even still, his eyes slid closed again, his limbs felt like lead, sinking into Feo's hold. He was firm, he was steady, he was there, he wasn't letting anyone in. Lucius wanted to do the same. Eventually. When Feo needed it, he would absolutely help him. No matter what he needed, he would help. He couldn't hold himself back. But right now... he was exhausted. Lucius couldn't hardly think, couldn't hardly move, couldn't do... a thing. It was like he had run out of gas and nothing was moving. His fingers, his toes, not his eyes, nothing. The only thing he could do was take in each exhausted and tired breath, taking in the warm scent of Feo. There was something about the demigod that felt slightly intoxicating. It made his head spin in a grounded sort of way--as if it was reeling him to the ground instead of sending it soaring. He wanted to lift his limbs, to reach up and hold onto his hand. But nothing was listening, there was lead in his bones and every fiber of his being. Feo hadn't... questioned the scars. He hadn't laughed, hadn't studied him like a sort of science project. He just went for him, taking him in. There was a sort of possessive air mingled with relief. As if Feo was relieved that he was letting him in. "Thank you," he whispered.
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