[Third Person Pov]
As Luke wasn’t contacted by Kronos he was in no urgent rush to leave and get off Calypso island. In fact he felt like it was a nice breather to not have Kronos presence breathing down his neck every second of every day.
He treated his ti on that island like an impromptu vacation, a break from all of his responsibilities.
Luke’s recovery was slow, but steady.
The wounds Thalia had left on him were not sothing that faded overnight. Even with Calypso’s care, his body needed ti to nd properly. For the first few days, he remained mostly within the cave, resting whether he liked it or not. Calypso made sure of that, keeping a close eye on him and stepping in whenever he tried to push himself too far too soon.
During that ti, he found himself watching her more often than he expected.
She moved around the cave with quiet purpose, preparing als with careful attention. Every step of the process was deliberate, from the way she handled the ingredients to how she cooked them. She made sure the food was never too heavy or irritating for him, always balanced and easy to eat without sacrificing taste. It wasn’t rushed or careless, and Luke couldn’t help but notice the effort she put into it.
When the food was ready, she would sit with him, and the two of them would eat together. It didn’t matter if it was morning, midday, or night, she made it a point to stay instead of leaving him on his own. Most of the ti, their conversations were simple, sotis quiet, sotis a bit more engaging, but never forced.
Luke never said anything about it.
He didn’t thank her, didn’t acknowledge it out loud, didn’t even hint at it directly. But sowhere beneath his usual guarded deanor, he appreciated it. Being taken care of like that, in such a consistent and thoughtful way, was not sothing he was used to. He wasn’t sure what to do with it, so he simply accepted it in silence.
As the days passed and his strength returned, he started moving around more freely. Once he felt stable enough, he stepped outside the cave again, gradually easing himself back into training.
At first, it was light movent, testing his balance, adjusting to how his body felt after the injuries. Then it beca more structured. He picked up his sword and began practicing again, moving through familiar katas with controlled, deliberate motions. Each swing cut through the air in wide, powerful arcs, his form sharpening with repetition.
More often than not, Calypso was nearby.
She stayed within view, usually seated on a rock or crouched by the ground, sorting through herbs she had gathered. If asked, she would say she was there to make sure he didn’t overexert himself or reopen his wounds.
Luke didn’t believe that for a second.
He could feel her eyes on him, focused and slightly feverish.
"Making sure I don’t injure myself, my ass," he muttered under his breath at one point, not even bothering to look in her direction.
Out of the corner of his eye, he could see her sitting on a nearby boulder, absentmindedly picking at the herbs in her hands. Her attention, however, clearly wasn’t on them.
He ignored it or at least, he acted like he did.
His swings didn’t falter, his stance remained solid, and he continued his routine as if nothing had changed.
Ti passed differently on the island.
Minutes blended into hours, hours into days, and before he realized it, days had stretched into weeks. The longer he stayed, the more familiar everything beca. The cave, the shoreline, the routine they had built, and most of all, Calypso’s presence.
He found himself growing used to her.
More than that, he found himself opening up, little by little, in ways he hadn’t intended to.
There were nights where they would sit together on the beach, a small fire crackling between them as the waves rolled in the distance. The air would be cool, the sky clear, and the quiet between them felt different from before.
On those nights, Luke talked.
Not about everything, not all at once, but enough.
He spoke about his younger days, about the ti before things had beco complicated. He talked about surviving on his own, about the choices he had made, and eventually, about Camp Half-Blood. The words ca easier than he expected, though there was always a weight behind them.
Calypso listened.
She watched him closely, noticing the shift in his expression as he spoke. The firelight reflected in his eyes, casting a warm glow against his features, but it didn’t hide the lancholy that lingered there. His gaze would drift to the flas, unfocused, like he was seeing sothing else entirely.
She didn’t interrupt him.
Instead, when he finished, she would start telling stories of her own. Tales from long ago, pieces of history and myth woven together in a way that felt lighter, almost playful at tis. She adjusted her tone carefully, choosing monts ant to lift his mood, slipping in humor where she could.
Luke noticed.
He knew exactly what she was doing.
But he didn’t call her out on it.
Instead, he let it happen. Around her, he allowed himself to relax more than he usually would. The tension in his shoulders eased, his responses beca less sharp, and there were monts where he even smiled
.
One night, sothing she said caught him off guard enough that he looked away, bringing a hand up to cover his mouth as a quiet chuckle slipped out.
Even so, he wasn’t blind.
He could see the traces of loneliness that clung to her, the kind that didn’t just disappear because she was smiling in the mont. There were tis he caught her staring out at the sea when she thought he wasn’t paying attention, her expression distant, filled with a quiet longing that she never voiced.
It reminded him of sothing... Of her words the first ti he awoke properly in her cave.
And slowly, without him fully realizing it, his thoughts began to shift again. The resentnt he had once carried, the anger he had directed elsewhere, started to find its way back to where it had originally belonged.
The gods.
The frustration, the bitterness, the sense of disdain he had buried beneath everything else began to resurface, steady and familiar.
One late afternoon, Calypso sat just outside the cave, sorting through a basket of herbs she had gathered earlier. The quiet rustle of leaves filled the air as she worked.
Luke approached from the direction of the beach, a long spear resting over his shoulder. Several fish were skewered along it, fresh from the water. His shirt was nowhere to be seen, his upper body still partially wrapped in bandages, though much less than before. The remaining ones did little to hide the defined lines of muscle beneath them. His hair was damp, strands clinging slightly from where he had been in the water.
Calypso looked up and for a mont, she forgot what she was doing.
A noticeable flush spread across her face as she watched him walk closer, her attention lingering longer than she intended.
Luke slowed slightly, noticing her expression.
"What?" he asked, raising an eyebrow.
Calypso shook her head quickly. "Nothing."
She cleared her throat and set the herbs aside, standing up as if she had just rembered sothing important.
"We should take those bandages off," she said, shifting the focus entirely. "You’ve healed enough. There’s no need to keep them on anymore."
Luke considered it for a second, then gave a small nod. "Yeah... probably."
They stepped back into the cave together.
Luke sat down on the bed while Calypso moved closer, her hands steady as she began unwrapping the bandages. Layer by layer, they ca off, revealing skin that had healed over, though not without leaving its mark.
A long scar stretched across his body, jagged and unmistakable, shaped like a bolt of lightning that ran from his torso up toward his shoulder and neck.
Calypso’s movents slowed.
Once the last of the bandages were removed, she hesitated for a mont before reaching out. Her fingers brushed lightly against the scar, tracing along its path with careful attention.
She looked up at him and softly asked, "Does it hurt?"
Luke’s voice softened slightly, matching her tone without him aning to. "I can’t feel much pain, rember?"
Calypso humd quietly. "That’s right."
Her fingers continued to move in a slow and sensual manner, following the line of the scar across his stomach, then upward along his chest, where her touch lingered for a second too long.
Luke didn’t stop her. He simply watched, curious, letting her continue as if he was trying to understand her intentions rather than question them.
Her touch moved higher, over his shoulder, then paused briefly.
She glanced at him, searching for any sign that she should stop.
When she didn’t find one, she continued.
Her fingers traced up along his neck, then finally reached his jaw, where the scar ca to an end. Her hand lingered there, resting lightly against his skin.
Neither of them spoke.
The air between them shifted, growing heavier, filled with sothing unspoken. The only sound was their breathing, steady but closer than before.
Calypso leaned in slightly almost as if to get a better look at his scars but her eyes were set elsewhere, then stopped herself.
The mory of what had happened before held her back. She didn’t want to ruin what they had built, didn’t want to cross a line that couldn’t be undone.
She started to pull her hand away.
Luke unexpectedly caught it.
His fingers closed around hers, guiding her hand back up, pressing it gently against his cheek. His gaze t hers, steady this ti, without the sa hesitation as before.
They stayed like that for a mont, neither saying anything.
Then Calypso moved closer again, slowly, her eyes on him then flickering down slightly, giving him ti to stop her if he wanted to.
He didn’t.
Their foreheads nearly touched, their breaths mingling in the small space between them. She paused one last ti.
Luke t her halfway, closing the distance.
The kiss was brief, tentative, gone almost as soon as it happened. They pulled back slightly, both processing it in the sa quiet mont.
Then Calypso leaned in again, this ti with more certainty.
The second kiss lingered longer, deeper than the first, and this ti neither of them pulled away so quickly.
Luck allowed her to push him down onto the makeshift bed, losing himself to the sensation of her lips on his.
The late afternoon sun started to set, the shadows stretched out unevenly as they danced. Shadows of hands joined together and soon Calypso’s silhouettes started to, slowly but sensually, rising and falling.
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