Atlas Pan Booker | Male | Hunter | Heterosexual | M: Rowan Caddel, Calvin Borelson
“Naw, I mean both of y’all.” Atlas answered Rowan with a slight lie. He had invited both of them, after all, but now that Rowan was here he was a bit uncomfortable. Especially from what took place just a while a go, but he stuck to being polite and, hopefully, up-lifting.
Atlas watched as Calvin gingerly touched Wyn’s fuzzy neck and slowly gain more confidence. He wasn’t surprised that the ginger giant was recluse towards the horse. Already he felt himself more attached towards the blond one as he seemed more outgoing and able to put himself out there. Rowan seemed to be mistrustful and kinda scary, but he determined to become friends with him no matter how much his fight/flight instincts told him to avoid him. Fear is never a good motive. Rowan would, after all, not be a bad ally. When Atlas mentioned archery, he could’ve sworn that he heard a huff of mirth from him. For a moment he thought that maybe he was warming up to him. These thoughts were dishearten when it turned out that the giant was simply coughing.
“Allergies?” Atlas asked. “I get those too sometimes. Mainly during mid spring.” He was disappointed when Rowan declined his invite to shoot. “C’mon, it’ll be fun. Maybe I’m not as good as you think.” He decided that Rowan wasn’t the type of guy who appreciated someone taking an easy on him during a competition. It was interesting that the guy had a sister. “Siblings are nice, I have a little brother. Huh, he’s going to be thirteen this summer.”
He had a thin but heavy layer of sadness fall upon him and it splintered his heart and chest. He wouldn’t see Timothy as he had promised him. He had promised him a horseback ride for this particular birthday because that’s when he was supposed to man up and finally learn how to ride. Thirteen is a man’s number, he remembered his mother saying that, but he vaguely remembered her soft, silky voice. Calvin’s voice broke his train of thought.
He forced himself to perked up when Calvin decided to take lessons. “Great,” he faked a smile, “we can get started tomorrow morning if you’d like….Maybe about 6 to 6:30.”
This whole conversation caught him in the blues, so he desperately searched for another conversation starter and noticed the jerky. So he started asking about food.
“Venison,” Atlas nodded his head, “that’s what all my stuff is made up of.” He accepted the piece and chewed it some, absorbing all the flavors. It was mainly salty, but not an overdose. It could actually use more salt, but that was just his preference. “Nice, I like that it isn’t too overcooked. I always burn mine. ‘Scared of catching some disease, I reckon.” He looked over at Calvin, “you like to cook, that’s excellent. I guess you could make more use of this, then,” he offered him the cumin. “I’d probably burn the taste out of the meat. I get to try some of the sport that you make with this though, okay?”
Atlas knew that gifts were rare during these times. Especially around strangers, but he could cut that out of his inventory because it probably would not help in a life-or-death situation. It would be useful in creating a friendship, however. He heard that Rowan hunted some. He can’t be too bad of a shot if he could take down a deer, he thought. “Cool, after getting some seniority, maybe Grayson will let you join the hunting team.”
———
Atlas reentered the house with Rowan in front of him. He had restrung his bow outside and kept it in his hand. He climbed up a rickety staircase and turned right to find a supply closet. Inside was nothing of any use. Just old, dusty, grimy boardgames and several ugly beetles and bugs. At the top of one of the shelves he thought he could recognize an abandoned squirrel nest.
Turning the opposite direction, he found himself in a bedroom that seemed to have belonged to a young boy. There were cheap, plastic participation trophies, torn kids books, crayons and markers were found in a desk drawer. But interestingly enough, there was a pair of kitchen knives tucked under the pillow. Poor child, he thought as he collected the tools. He didn’t want to finish that thought because he didn’t know how to. He entered the boy’s bathroom to find a small emergency kit. Most of the band-aids were gone, none of the gauze was left and the alcohol was spent. There was plenty of cotton balls, tongue depressors and first aid tape, however. He took the bandaids, first aid tape and some of the cotton balls. He couldn’t see tongue depressors being useful anymore. Because he didn’t want the medical supplies to be everywhere in his bag, he searched the bathroom for some type of little box. He finally found a little plastic soap container. Passing from there, he entered the master suite.
It was large and roomie with a nice king-sized bed. He always wanted to have a king-sized bed all to himself, but never had a chance and he knew that now wasn’t the right time. So he ignored it and searched the desks by the bed. One side held piles of socks in the bottom drawer and nothing on the top. The second side was completely empty. He checked out a desk facing away from the bed. It only contained blueprints of houses and different folders that kept track of taxes and sells. That was when he heard scuffling coming from the bathroom. Heavy breathing followed the noise. Atlas’ eyes grew wide and his breathing shortened some as he realized that he was about to encounter another nightmare. He tried his hardest not to and to get used to them being around, but his fear wouldn’t deplete no matter how much he was desensitized. Get ready! His mind shouted. Ready your bow! He didn’t hesitate in listening and quickly notched an arrow. He prepared himself to shoot whatever popped out from the bathroom.
It emerged as ugly and hideous beyond imaginable. The flesh seemed to be rotting off in a grey, dull mush. Dried blood was caked to the lacking clothes of the once-human beast. Part of the skull was showing and the undead thing’s teeth were orange. The eyes were what got Atlas. They were blotchy, one was stained with a weird murky yellow. It could’ve been from eye boogers, but it has yet to be confirmed possible.
Atlas took a deep breath and automatically stepped into a good archer’s stance. He aimed the arrow tip straight between the creature’s hideous mix-matched eyes. It was less than ten meters away which was way too close for comfort. He fired the shot and the creature dropped dead. He didn’t retrieve the arrow, it would be too risky. If even the tiniest bit of monster blood still remained on the tip, every creature he shot would carry the disease to its consumer. If he cut himself while cleaning it, he would turn. A single carbon arrow was not worth his life.
“I bid you farewell, old friend.” He said sadly to it as he climbed on top of the bed to avoid getting close to the creature. “We shot well together. May the Time-Weavers receive you well.” He wasn’t sure if his beloved and treasured arrows were accepted into the ranks of a Time-Weaver like a human soul would. He wanted to believe that, however, because if a lowly arrow could get in, surely he could.
He searched the bathroom only for a med kit, he was scared to touch much of anything, but he opened a few cabinets to find not what he was looking for, but some things that could help. One was a small bottle of rubbing alcohol and another was a little tankard of iodine. They seemed safe enough, but he didn’t take the washcloths. For some reason he was paranoid of it. He stored them away and left the master suite. Only thirty arrows left. He thought gloomily, Calvin better not loose any.