Emotional Enigma
Empathetic Empress
Calliope eyeballed Dave now, sarcasm and humor no longer a luxury. In the face of discomfort it was always her go to; using humor as an emotional shield for any stresses. Before her mind had finished processing what her moves were like a game of chess, she heard a familiar sheepish voice coming from behind the disgruntled man.
"Please, don't shoot my sister," Daniel stood shaken behind him, his round face and dark eyes locked worriedly on the gun. The duffel bag was on the ground next to his ratty, red converse feet and he wheezed for air. Calliope could tell he had run the moment the man checked his watch, but Daniel was not too athletically inclined. Her heart fluttered and ached at the embodiment of fear on him. His whole body shook like a weak fig tree in a gust of wind. Not only did he manage to muster the courage to come down here, but he also mustered the energy he didn't have.
Daniel, with great force, yanked the bag forward, "We have food and medicine. We can give you any--"
"Danny, go" Calliope urged, trying to swallow her own anxiety for the situation.
"--thing, just please don't shoot us. We're just trying to stay alive, we have no one." Daniel was normally well spoken and was like a walking thesaurus, but the stress of the situation must've made him so nervous he had retreated to a simpler mindset, "We're alone..." He no longer looked like the smart, genius little brother she had been traveling with but instead a scared, lost animal in a cage. Calliope had to remind herself that that's what Daniel mostly was; he was still just a scared a kid just like the day they had first run from home. He never got to go to eleventh grade or go to prom or have a senior night. Daniel never got to even date a girl. Calliope wasn't even sure if Daniel knew if he was even into girls. Daniel knew about books and school and everything people weren't supposed to pay attention to, but he didn't get the chance to know about dumb things like sexuality or whether blue or red looked better on him. She kicked herself for allowing everything to happen so quickly and fall so far without letting him be a kid for once. And now he was standing there trying to be brave as if he wasn't just 14, and begging for his life and hers. There was her heart, her hope hanging in the balance; the only person she cared more about than herself. But she swallowed down the pessimistic thoughts and possibility of a bad outcome; she hid her feelings under a shroud of calm respite.
With a hand still clutched to the strap of the duffel bag, Daniel pointed with a shaking finger, "I-I-I like your gun" .
Peacemaker .45
"Please, don't shoot my sister," Daniel stood shaken behind him, his round face and dark eyes locked worriedly on the gun. The duffel bag was on the ground next to his ratty, red converse feet and he wheezed for air. Calliope could tell he had run the moment the man checked his watch, but Daniel was not too athletically inclined. Her heart fluttered and ached at the embodiment of fear on him. His whole body shook like a weak fig tree in a gust of wind. Not only did he manage to muster the courage to come down here, but he also mustered the energy he didn't have.
Daniel, with great force, yanked the bag forward, "We have food and medicine. We can give you any--"
"Danny, go" Calliope urged, trying to swallow her own anxiety for the situation.
"--thing, just please don't shoot us. We're just trying to stay alive, we have no one." Daniel was normally well spoken and was like a walking thesaurus, but the stress of the situation must've made him so nervous he had retreated to a simpler mindset, "We're alone..." He no longer looked like the smart, genius little brother she had been traveling with but instead a scared, lost animal in a cage. Calliope had to remind herself that that's what Daniel mostly was; he was still just a scared a kid just like the day they had first run from home. He never got to go to eleventh grade or go to prom or have a senior night. Daniel never got to even date a girl. Calliope wasn't even sure if Daniel knew if he was even into girls. Daniel knew about books and school and everything people weren't supposed to pay attention to, but he didn't get the chance to know about dumb things like sexuality or whether blue or red looked better on him. She kicked herself for allowing everything to happen so quickly and fall so far without letting him be a kid for once. And now he was standing there trying to be brave as if he wasn't just 14, and begging for his life and hers. There was her heart, her hope hanging in the balance; the only person she cared more about than herself. But she swallowed down the pessimistic thoughts and possibility of a bad outcome; she hid her feelings under a shroud of calm respite.
With a hand still clutched to the strap of the duffel bag, Daniel pointed with a shaking finger, "I-I-I like your gun" .
Peacemaker .45