Scarlet as the roses that would be placed on his grave.
Scarlet as the cheeks of everyone who'd realize they were wrong about him.
Scarlet as...
Scarlet.
Poor little Scarlet.
Shining...
There was no one here.
With a shake of his head he sat back to examine the damage. A rustle sounded from the foliage nearby though he ignored it, already aware of who was coming. A small, ashen face emerged from the underbrush, cheeks smeared with mud and round emerald green eyes wide with worry.
The girl fought her way through the snagging thicket and raced across the beach to him, twigs and leaves making themselves at home in her bird's nest of auburn. Her pudgy arms bled from thin scratches along her bicep, her bare feet blistered and caked with filth, though she paid none of it any mind as she dropped to her knees and practically slid across the sand to his side. She grabbed his wrist, pulling his hand away from his leg as demandingly she hissed "let me see!"
"It's fine, it's not that bad."
"I'm not bleeding anymore," he murmured, thumbing at the stained shirt.
She adjusted her grip on him as she began to half drag him back towards the trees. "You'll be okay. I promise."
His dark-eyed gaze stayed fixed on the ground as he simply let her drag him. Her words were almost meaningless. Of course he'd be okay. He always was. She wasn't aware of that, was she? Did any of them know? Did they even remember?
It felt like it'd been years since it happened. Maybe even centuries for all he knew. Time passed in this place and it never seemed to go anywhere. The days became more and more blurred, his heart heavier and heavier until it dragged with his feet in the sand. He didn't understand why she was here. Did he call for her in his haze? He didn't remember. Perhaps he did. Some part of him still needed her.
He became heavier in her arms as he felt his consciousness begin to slip away from him again, leg starting to burn with a searing pain that only now crept into his body. She stumbled and strained to keep him upright, holding his wrist tighter.
The light was blinding in his eyes.
The crackles of radios and chatter of workmen exchanged excited exclamations.
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