The clearing near Lucas' house had changed since his training began.
What was once just a quiet patch of forest now bore the subtle marks of use: flattened grass, the faint stench of herbs , and a ring of stones that hadn't been there before.
Elizabeth stood in the center, a canvas bag slung over one shoulder. Without a word, she dropped it to the ground. Metal clinked softly inside.
Lucas raised a brow.
"Before you ask," Elizabeth said, crouching to unzip the bag, "Your dad sourced these. They're not custom-forged or enchanted, but they'll do the job. Enough to find what suits you."
She laid them out one by one: a shortbow, a pair of worn swords, a spear, and finally, from a side compartment, a pair of weighted daggers.
Lucas eyed the collection with quiet suspicion.
"Most demigods take to weapons quicker than you'd think," Elizabeth said, motioning for him to begin. "It's in the blood. Instinct. Doesn't mean you'll be a prodigy, but the muscle memory's there, written into your bones. It's what causes that ADHD thing most of you have." She gave him a sidelong look. "Though you seem oddly... exempt."
Lucas said nothing, choosing instead to focus on the weapons.
One by one, he began to test them.
The bow trembled in his grasp - awkward and unfamiliar. The tension in the string felt wrong, the posture too forced. After one clumsy shot that barely cleared the tree line, he handed it back with a grimace.
"Not your calling," Elizabeth said.
The sword came next. He held it in both hands, testing the weight, the balance. It was better, but every swing felt like a question, not an answer. His footwork faltered. The blade dragged. Too heavy, too long. Too loud.
The spear followed. He moved smoother with it, thrusts and sweeps that felt natural, even elegant. For a moment, he thought this might be it.
Then she handed him the daggers.
Smaller. Simpler. Lethal.
He didn't need instruction. His body knew.
They fit into his grip like puzzle pieces finally in place. A step, a pivot, a slash through empty air and the blades flowed with him. His balance shifted, his limbs moved like he'd done this before. Like the knives weren't just tools, they were extensions.
Elizabeth watched in silence.
He finished a spin, breath steady, arms still.
She gave a low whistle.
"Well. That's poetic."
Lucas glanced at her.
"You move like you're putting on a show" she added, smirking.
He smiled. Just a little.
"Seems we found your rhythm," she said. "You're not a brawler. You're a dancer."
Elizabeth didn't warn him.
She lunged.
He moved - barely. Her hand grazed his shoulder, fast and sharp like a whip crack. He stumbled, regained his footing, and spun.
He blinked. "Wait, why attack me?"
"You think monsters give you time to prepare?" she shot back, already circling him.
She attacked again.
His footwork, the balance from climbing. His breathing, steady from hours of endurance runs. The way his body bent and twisted, yoga, flexibility, motion.
It all came back in pieces.
And slowly, it started to come together.
She was holding back. Testing him.
But not coddling.
Lucas ducked a sweep and countered with a slash - missed. Sloppy. But closer.
"Better," she said, not pausing.
They circled. Again.
And again.
He was learning, fighting like an actor on stage, each movement part of a performance.
Controlled.
Measured.
But lived from within.
This was the first act.
And Elizabeth?
She was just the first audience.
...
The clearing had changed.
Not in its shape, nor its trees, nor the moss-soft floor beneath them, but in the tension it held.
Years had passed. The same space where Lucas once stumbled, where he wheezed through laps and winced at bruises… now crackled with something sharper.
Anticipation.
Elizabeth stood across from him, rolling her shoulders, daggers glinting in the low light.
Lucas mirrored her, no longer with the clumsy stance of a boy mimicking a fighter, but something more fluid. Controlled.
Balanced.
"Ready?" she asked.
Lucas tilted his head, a smile creeping at the corner of his mouth.
"Aren't I always?"
Elizabeth smirked. "Cute."
And then she moved.
No holding back this time.
She struck like a snake, an upward slash - a feint, spinning into a step to the outside of his guard slashing towards his waist.
But Lucas was moving before her second foot hit the ground. He ducked, rolled past her strike, slipping just out of reach.
A breath later, he was up countering with a flurry of dagger strikes. Quick. Precise. He wasn't aiming to kill. He was drawing patterns. Lines in the air. Making her dance to his rhythm.
A performance.
Elizabeth's grin widened. "Finally, a little fun"
He didn't answer.
She broke his pattern, aiming at his neck. Lucas abandoned the rhythm, leaning back, letting the momentum carry him into a handstand before vaulting over a fallen log, landing in a crouch, using the terrain like a stage set.
Elizabeth chased after him, once more attacking, Her strikes cut the air around him, but he bent between them like thread through a needle.
"You choreographing this?" she asked, blocking one of his strikes. "You look like you're doing gymnastics with a knife."
Lucas let his blade slip past her guard just enough to nick her sleeve.
"Does that make you my dance partner or my understudy?"
That got a laugh.
She leaped back - out of range
"Thats enough"
They stood in silence, the wind carrying the faint rustle of leaves above them.
His shirt clung to him, sweat lining his brow.
"You're adapting faster than I thought," she said, walking past him toward her bag. "You're not the strongest. Or the fastest. But you don't need to be."
She tossed him a towel, which he caught with reflexes that hadn't been there a month ago.
"You're slippery," she added. "And you use every piece of the environment. You don't command the fight. You… pull the strings from within it."
...
The fire crackled gently between them, casting long, lurching shadows across the clearing.
Lucas sat cross-legged on the ground, towel draped over his shoulders, daggers resting on the log beside him.
Elizabeth crouched across from him, poking at the flames with a stick. The sharpness in her eyes had dulled to something else now.
"You fight differently," she said finally. "Not like a warrior."
Lucas didn't reply at first. The flames danced in his gaze.
"That's because I'm not."
Elizabeth looked up.
"I've been watching," she went on. "You don't dominate. You don't overwhelm. You… nudge. Twist. Redirect. You step into the chaos and make it perform."
Lucas tilted his head. "Isn't that what you do?"
She chuckled. "No. I tear the stage down and set it on fire."
A breath passed.
He reached for his dagger, not to hold it like a weapon, but like a prop.
"I step into the unknown not to control it. Not to win." He rolled the hilt in his hand slowly. "But to learn its rhythm. To dance inside it."
He met her gaze.
"I don't want to be a sword."
Elizabeth nodded slowly, the firelight flickering across her face.
"And yet," she said, "you'll still have to kill, one day."
Lucas looked into the fire.
And smiled. Small, but sure.
"Every performance ends. The least I can do… is make it unforgettable."
...
It was late.
Steven was in the living room, a mug of tea half-forgotten beside him, papers fanned across the table like the aftermath of a storm. Elizabeth sat curled in the armchair, legs tucked beneath her, flipping lazily through a romance novel.
Lucas stood in the doorway, the weight of his choice anchoring his steps.
"I need to go," he said.
Both adults looked up
Steven set down his pen. Elizabeth closed the book slowly.
"I mean it," Lucas continued. "It's not fair. You keep fighting monsters to keep me safe," he said, glancing at Elizabeth.
Elizabeth didn't interrupt. Her stare held something unreadable. A complicated swirl of emotions.
Lucas turned to his father. "And Dad… you've already done more than most gods would. I won't risk harm coming to either of you."
"I've learned a lot here. But there are things I can't find in books. I have questions..."
Steven was quiet for a moment, then gave a tired but fond smile.
"There's a place you would have gone when you were older," he said. "It's called Camp Half-Blood. It's in Long Island."
Lucas nodded.
...
March 7th 1999
His 11th birthday arrived with no great fanfare.
Just the soft creak of morning light across his windowsill and the faint scent of cinnamon drifting up from the kitchen below.
Lucas padded into the kitchen, still rubbing sleep from his eyes - until he stopped.
Three small packages sat in a neat line across the counter.
Lucas blinked. "Three?"
Steven stood leaning in the doorway, coffee in hand. He didn't answer, just sipped quietly.
Different shapes. Different wrappings.
Each sealed with a symbol.
One bore a wax stamp shaped like a burning torch - Hecate.
Another was bound in red silk, a small fang-shaped charm tied around the ribbon - Elizabeth.
A third, the plainest of all, was wrapped in brown paper. But the handwriting on the tag was unmistakable - his father.
Lucas stepped forward, hand hovering. Then he reached for the first box, Hecate's.
Inside lay a pair of celestial bronze daggers, well-balanced and gleaming faintly even in the soft morning light. One pommel was inlaid with garnet, the other with obsidian. Sleek, midnight-black sheaths rested beneath them.
He picked them up, tested their weight. Tried to fasten the sheaths around his forearms and blinked in surprise as they flattened seamlessly against his skin, hidden but accessible.
"Neat," he muttered.
Next, he opened his father's gift.
Inside was a simple leather-bound journal, the kind that didn't demand to be read, but waited to be filled.
He turned to Steven, who simply offered a quiet smile over his coffee.
No words exchanged.
None needed.
Lucas moved on.
Elizabeth's package rustled under his fingers, a thick roll of parchment wrapped around what appeared to be a handmade map. A note was tucked underneath, scribbled in red ink.
"I've been wandering America for years. You'd be surprised what you find when you're not trying to die. This map will help. Some places to visit. Some places to avoid. Try not to flip the two." - E
Lucas unrolled it.
The parchment was dense with scribbled notations and symbols.
Green ink for helpful places: a circle marked "Friendly Nymphs".
Yellow for caution: "Territory claimed by minor deity"
Red for danger: "Monster hotspot."
He raised a brow. "She made a monster survival travelogue…"
A weapon.
A journal.
A map.
All tools for a journey.
His journey.
And soon… it would begin.