《HAVEN ✔》Eighteen
Advertisement
What started as dusting off a spot for my bedroll turns into a deep-cleanse of the little house. After finding a sponge and broom in a small closet, I decide I have nothing better to do. In a way, it gives me a semblance of control over being stuck in such an unfamiliar place. The table and counters now stand shining, where previously there had been a thick layer of dust. The little basin resembling a sink is now glistening, freshly scrubbed. The floors are no longer grimy after months of dirt resting undisturbed and I lose track of time that has passed since Luke left.
Whack!
I swear my soul is scared out of my body when the door slams open with ample force. Dusk arrives just as Luke makes his entrance. It's a good thing the walls are made of stone. Any other material, and there would be a fist-sized hole where the door knob is.
"Check the windows," Luke barks as he rushes to secure the door and locks it. He drags one of the wooden chairs from the kitchen and wedges it under the knob for good measure.
I stare at him, my brain slowly stitching his words together with his actions. "Wait, what? Why?"
Luke turns his eyes on me, and there's a fierce, impatient glimmer reflecting back into mine. "The windows. Make sure they're locked, and the bars are intact." His long legs carry him across the room to the table. Slinging his quiver over and off his shoulder, he adjusts his grip on the bow's riser before placing it down gently, muscles in his forearm rippling. I swallow. Something about the scene before me is wrong, his tone calm, but his movements mechanically swift.
"Are you deaf?" he snaps, wiping sweat off his tanned brow. "I did not spend three hours securing the perimeter for you to just let a Skinwalker crawl in through the window."
My neurons finally get the message, and I gasp, just the mention of Skinwalkers enough to raise goosebumps on my arms. I need to test the windows. Now.
I stumble over my own feet in my haste to the nearest window. It's barely visible outside, the darkness quickly covering the dense forest. Still, I can make out the trees and their leaves, bushes and undergrowth undisturbed. My heart pounds, searching for anyone that might be out there.
Calm down. It's just a precaution.
I check and double-check the locks on all four windows in the building. I even pull on the bars with all my weight to ensure their sturdiness. Only when I finish with the last pane of glass does my heartbeat slow.
Luke is leaning against the kitchen table, his arms assuming their usual crossed position. He nods at me, non-verbal approval that makes me feel like I did something good. Something important. I smile inwardly, more tension easing off of me by the minute.
Advertisement
"I'm sorry," Luke breathes softly. "I know this can't be easy for you. I didn't mean to shout. I'm just..." He combs a hand through his hair, leaving dirty blond clumps to stick up in every direction. "I'm just stressed out and I know it's not your fault. I apologize for taking it out on you."
I'm not really sure what spurred him to open up to me, but I'm not upset at this development.
"Thank you," I stutter. "For apologizing. I understand that this isn't a vacation for you, and you're not doing this of your own choice, but I'm thankful nonetheless." He bobs his head in acceptance, eyes roaming the cleaned floor. The only indicator of him noticing the shining floorboards are his sculpted eyebrows creeping toward his scalp.
Nervous, I sit at the table, taking the one remaining chair. Luke doesn't seem to mind, clearly content with lounging on the side adjacent to me. He pulls his dinner ration out of his satchel and begins to eat. Although I ate half of a loaf of bread and a few nuts while he was gone, my stomach is not satisfied.
Watching him is undoubtedly fascinating. His right shoulder is to me, so I get a perfect profile of his face as he rips off a piece of the flatbread loaf with his teeth. The way his jaw muscle contracts when he chews incites in me the strangest urge to rub my finger along the tendon, its undulating rhythm entrancing.
His throat bobs as he swallows, inciting me to do the same. He takes a small sip of water from his canteen before taking another bite. My blood is racing through my veins for an entirely different reason now.
Tall and toned, he exudes confidence and talent. Skilled. Deadly. A survivor. He exudes confidence, but that's only on the surface.
Though his company may be moody and quarrelsome, he's displayed profound acts of kindness. Thoughtfulness. Caring. He's not the fire-eating savage I've been cautious about this whole time. I am sure of these little things, yet the whole of him is still an enigma.
Casting my eyes to the fire steadily burning, I imagine this day behind his eyes. Being commanded to take a stranger across the perilous countryside, especially against my will, I can understand where some of his disagreeable nature stems from.
As embers dance upward and into the chimney, I feel as if the fear and uncertainty gripping my heart is unraveling, one thread at a time. Gently, a contented amity between us is sewn in its place.
Turning back to Luke, I am caught in his attentive gaze. He curiously assesses me, and for once, I don't back down. I don't look away. I offer the smallest of smiles, testing the flavor of this new atmosphere. I savor the way his lips quirk to the left, unable to hold back his own simper.
Advertisement
Out of the darkness sounds a low howl.
My head whips around to the door, and I take comfort in the locks securely in place. Still, the lamenting outcry strikes a chord of fear, sharp and resounding through my bones. I am in the Outlands, subject to wild animals and wild people.
But I'm safe. Luke will keep us safe.
The melancholy baying continues, and I picture a wolf singing a ballad to the rising moon. The image does well to take the edge off my fear.
"You can relax, they won't come within twenty meters of here," Luke pipes up, trying to ease my mind.
"How can you be so sure?" I ask. It's not like he built a wall in three hours.
He smirks. "I spread Aunt Sol's pepper mixture around. With the noses on those things, they'll stay away." He pushes off the table, striding over to the fireplace to stoke the fire. The warmth it emits drives away the house's damp draft. I draw closer, the flames beckoning me with promises of cozy comfort.
Crouched beside me, Luke and I listen to the firewood crackling. He feeds the fire another log, and it spits embers in a blazing flurry. The only sound in the room is the whistle of the moisture being burned from the new addition, and my own heartbeat in my ears. This is the most peaceful moment I've had in days. When he plops down, lying back on my bedroll I set out earlier, I get the feeling he feels the same way.
"Where am I supposed to sleep now?" I joke. He gazes up at me from the floor. Seeing him in such a vulnerable position sends nervous tingles down my spine.
"Outside, I guess," he shrugs. I kick him in the foot and he chuckles. "There's room for two." Why does everything he says feel like a challenge? My pulse quickens at the thought of sleeping next to him.
"I think I'll just take yours, thanks for offering," I reply sweetly-sour. After rolling out his bedroll on the opposite side of the fireplace, I stretch out and close my eyes, the warmth lulling me to sleep.
◊ ◊ ◊
I sit up, alarmed. My eyes whip around the room in search of the noise that jolted me awake.
My eyes settle on Luke, crouched on one knee. His form is silhouetted, backlit by the fireplace.
He turns to me, placing a finger to his lips, signaling me to refrain from asking all the questions currently racing through my head. We listen for it to happen again, but it doesn't.
A loud noise woke me from my slumber, but I can't place where I've heard it before. Luke clutches his bow and stalks toward the window. I realize he must have slept with it by his side. I've never seen him unarmed.
Peering out, Luke slowly reaches behind him and slides an arrow out of his quiver. His long arms are seeping tension as he nocks the arrow, but doesn't pull the string back. I curl up, wrapping the blanket around my shoulders, apprehension rolling off of me in waves. I'm one step short of trembling as I watch Luke check each window.
After a few tense moments, he replaces his arrow and returns to the pallet beside me.
"It's gone now," Luke states. His voice is deep and rough as gravel from slumber. I picture waves crashing on a rocky cliff bottom.
I nod, but there's something in the back of my mind preventing me from relaxing.
The Outlands never cease to amaze and terrify me alternatively. One moment, my heart is racing in fear, and the next, I'm rapt in the people and culture of my surroundings. The emotional whiplash is exhausting. Add that to the hours of walking in the heat, and here I am, wide awake and miserable. I hug my knees close and peer at my companion.
The fire is low in the hearth, casting a bronze glow on his features. He has a far-away look on his face, one that I've witnessed countless times in the past few hours. We both could use a distraction.
"Tell me about your favorite place," I offer. I want to smooth the crease that seems to permanently reside between his eyebrows. I hope taking him on a mental journey to a place he enjoys can do just that.
He turns to me, blinking, then his gaze seems to go through me as he sifts through memory.
"The forest," he breathes. "In Autumn, when the air gets cooler and the leaves change. It's like the trees are shedding their old selves." Luke focuses once more, and his eyes meet mine. "The aspen leaves, they turn the color of your hair in the firelight."
I can't stop my breath from hitching, and I'm sure he hears it. My eyes are drawn to his throat as his adam's apple dips.
"Aspen trees?" I cover quickly.
He nods. "It's where our family name comes from. My ancestors settled among the aspen forests near Keir." Luke shifts his attention from me to the dying fire. "And you? Your favorite place?"
I open my mouth, sure of my answer, but I pause. My favorite place is at home, in Herald. In Miles' backyard with he, Rhett, and Markee. Anywhere but here. So why can't I admit that?
Why does it feel like a lie?
Advertisement
- In Serial385 Chapters
Modern Awakening - A cultivation, LitRPG, apocalyptic novel
Feng Shen was born with great talent for cultivation but crippled meridians. His father spent a great deal of resources trying to find a cure, but it was for naught. He was destined to die young. As a last act of hope, he was frozen in time to wait for the day the prophesied Great Cosmic Blueness would heal him. Thousands of years later, the Multiverse Alliance arrives on modern day Earth, and with it, blue boxes and global healing. Shen wakes up to an unknown world, but before even meeting it, he has a challenge to overcome: The tutorial. Finally able to train his body, he will make the most of his new life and crush all resistance in his path to power. Cover art by Hongyu Wang.
8.18 548 - In Serial27 Chapters
Sunflower Phoenix
Maribelle will seek to topple the heavens and obtain omnipotence, an ambition that begins with her wishing for the freedom of the banished god she calls her friend. Ferris will seek to protect Maribelle’s humanity, yet he is destined to lose his own, his spirit slowly subsumed by that of a being from the beginning of time. A great war is coming, orchestrated by the calamity that slumbers, as it has been a thousand times before. Gods will walk the earth with their chosen ones, the dragons will slaughter indiscriminately, and the krakens will emerge from the deep with their undead creations. When this cosmic game begins, Ferris will play to win, and Maribelle will flip the board. Right now, though, things are simple. Maribelle is just a lively little girl living with her mother in the village of sunflowers. Ferris is her adopted brother, hiding his troubled past. Ferris trains his magic to an unnecessary level of power, greatly overestimating the required qualifications to join the adventurers guild. Meanwhile, Maribelle picks fights with thugs. There is fresh curry on the stove, and a wounded mother is reading her book. The crackling fireplace reminds her that her beloved son is about to leave home.
8 116 - In Serial14 Chapters
War of Auras
In a medieval world full of kingdoms and conflicts, everyone is born with so-called auras, powers derived from the monsters that once inhabited the land. In this world, a boy named Akin was born with a minimal and weak amount of aura, making him much weaker than everyone else. Even with these delimitations, Akin is determined to become the strongest person. He will meet many people with different goals, stories, and powers in his adventure. He will also have to face villains along the way. How will Akin make it? He's definitely going to need a lot of help.
8 72 - In Serial26 Chapters
The Moon's Avatar
Lyn lives with her mother at the town's local temple. After her mother becomes deathly ill, she decides to seek a cure and embark on a journey across her ancestral homeland, Paraules, a land of magic, to find Guild City to join the Alchemist's Academy. This novel is currently in the alpha stage and will have inconsistent updates for the time being. Art by the wonderfully talented SukizukiIzuna Make sure to check her out, and consider a commission yourself!
8 109 - In Serial6 Chapters
Eternion Rhapsody
I have re-written the story to my liking and am republishing it here in RR and also in ScribbleHub Empires fall and memories fade as darkness crawls. In a world full of renowned heroes—where people who held classes stood above those who did not—Klay just wanted to lead a better life as a noble's tenant, raise his own pigs, and perhaps settle down with a girl from the village. But a night of calamity and a friend's legacy threw him into a path worthy of legends and mythical stories. Expect a slower pace in some parts approaching slice of life but high intensity volume climaxes - All artworks used in this novel were created by me and belong to me.
8 184 - In Serial15 Chapters
Mythologia
When the most popular VRMMO """"Mythologia"""" turned into a death game, the thousands of players trapped inside the Virtual World united to defeat the """"Last Boss"""" and end the game once and for all. Alter, the boy who led the players and NPC of Mythologia, stayed for an hour to pay respect to the dead. Everything went awry when the Last Boss revived. Unable to escape, he managed to seal it, albeit for a heavy price. Now he must survive a fantasy world that became a reality.... his reality. Could he deal with the numerous gods that plagued the world?_____________________________________________________________________This is my first try in writing a web novel as a pass time activity. As a military academy student, chapter releases might take a while (as I must first engage and evade against the lashings of the boss, a lv.65 Master Sergeant.)
8 275

