Bloodlust: An Arrow Fanfiction
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I'm a huge fan of the show Arrow. I watch the thing on a weekly basis and just can't get enough. So I decided to write a breif little fan fiction for fun. I hope you enjoy it and check out the show if you haven't done so already. It's soooooooooooooo good!
Enjoy,
Gabriel Janas
Bloodlust: An Arrow Fanfiction
I'm a huge fan of the show Arrow. I watch the thing on a weekly basis and just can't get enough. So I decided to write a breif little fan fiction for fun. I hope you enjoy it and check out the show if you haven't done so already. It's soooooooooooooo good!
Enjoy,
Gabriel Janas
Bloodlust: An Arrow Fanfiction
“What a night,” Oliver sighed heavily to himself as he
slowly made his way down the steel staircase towards the basement of his
nightclub Verdant.
What had
once been his father’s decrepit factory in The Glades of Starling City was now
home to the hottest nightclub in town.
Its sublevels also happened to be a convenient base of operations for
what had now become his ritualistic nightly outings as the city’s resident
‘vigilante.’ As reluctant as he was to
admit this to himself, this place felt more like home than the Queen mansion
had since his return to civilization. He
never really felt safer than he did in the basement beneath his club. It was a place entirely dedicated to the
pursuit of a single goal. It was a place
of focus. It was also the place he
always ran to for a moment of solitude after the club had closed and everyone
had gone home. Here he could just rest
for awhile and forget about being ‘The Vigilante’ and Oliver Queen, the
billionaire playboy with hearts to break and money to burn. Here he could just be Oliver.
After
tonight he really needed the time to be alone.
He had almost let Laurel in on his secret. In a moment of weakness he had almost told
her everything. Lying to her day in and
day out was eating him up inside. After
everything that he had done to her, after all the cheating, causing the death
of her sister Sarah, she still found the strength to somehow be his
friend. And all he ever did to repay
that kindness was to lie to her.
FLASHBACK TO EARLIER THAT EVENING
“More wine
monsieur?” asked the waiter politely.
“Yes…please,”
Oliver replied with a tight forced smile glued to his face.
As the
waiter poured the wine into his glass Oliver snuck a glance at Laurel across
from him at the table. She was playing
with the penne on her plate. Her thick,
brown hair fell in gentle curls down to her smooth curved shoulders. The faint blonde highlights she had added
shimmered in the candlelight as she slowly shook her head back and forth to
decline the waiter’s offer to refill her wine glass. Her faint green eyes had an agitated look to
them tonight. The slight stress line on
her forehead only increased the look of worry she was trying to mask. Something was definitely wrong. Yet, even like this she looked as beautiful
as ever…
“Ollie!”
“Hmm…what?”
Oliver asked as he snapped out of his trance with Laurel practically yelling
his nickname from across the table.
“You were
staring at me,” she said.
Pinching
his eyebrows in what he hoped passed for a quizzical and surprised look of
innocence Oliver replied, “No I wasn’t.”
“Yes you
were Ollie,” Laurel said. “I called your
name like three times. You just kept on
staring at me.”
“I was just
admiring the new highlights in your hair,” he replied quickly to mask his
embarrassment at zoning out to thoughts of Laurel.
Smiling
politely, Laurel grabbed a strand of her hair and twirled it around her finger
awkwardly as she said, “Thanks…but I got these done like two months ago…”
“Ah…well
they look good on you,” Oliver said sheepishly.
“Thanks…”
A moment of
awkward silence filled the air between them as Laurel continued to play with
her hair.
“So…what’s
up?” Oliver asked. “Why the fancy
dinner?”
“It’s…it’s
everything Ollie,” she sighed. “It’s my
work, it’s my dad, on top of the fact that Tommy isn’t speaking to me…”
“That makes
two of us,” he said with a bitter smile.
“What?!”
“Tommy and
I…we’re not on the best of terms at the moment,” Oliver said slowly. “We had a disagreement…about the club.”
“Really?”
Laurel asked with a disbelieving expression plastered on her face.
“Yes,”
Oliver replied a little too casually.
“I don’t
buy it Oliver.”
“There
were… a few other topics that we didn’t agree on,” he admitted slowly.
“Like
what?” Laurel asked, leaning in with the inquisitive intensity of a practiced
lawyer playing a hunch.
“I believe
we were talking about you and why we’re here… not Tommy and I,” Oliver said
with a slight smile, leaning back into his chair and resting his hands on the
table.
With an
exasperated sigh Laurel replied, “Same old Oliver Queen, giving nothing of
himself and expecting the world in return.”
The smile
on Oliver’s face deepened. It was a
smile to mask his vulnerability. Laurel
had no idea how close to the mark she had hit with her comment. Ever since he had returned to Starling City
from the island, he had been having trouble letting people in, especially those
closest to him like his family and Laurel…always Laurel.
“I’m sorry
Laurel. I…I’ve never really been good at
this sort of thing,” he said slowly.
“I know
Oliver,” she sighed as she leaned back into her chair and crossed her arms
under her breasts. “When we
were…together…you weren’t exactly open with me then either.”
Swallowing
the lump of guilt forming in his throat he decided to take a chance. “Tommy and I…we had a disagreement about our
opinions of…the Vigilante.”
“That would
make two of us then,” Laurel replied quietly.
“What?!” Oliver
said, just managing to catch her words.
“We…Tommy
and I have been arguing about The Hood a lot lately. Ever since I lost contact with him after the
incident at Iron Heights Prison…”
“You mean
the incident where you almost got yourself killed,” Oliver said seriously.
“I know
Oliver,” Laurel snapped. “Ever since
then…with everything that has happened…I can’t seem to get him off of my mind.”
“Well you
are dating him Laurel,” he replied jokingly.
“Not Tommy
Ollie,” she snapped. “I can’t stop thinking
about The Hood.”
Shifting
slightly in his seat he asked, “What about him?”
“I don’t
know,” Laurel said. “I just feel
like…like I know him somehow. It’s just
something about the way he watched me, you know? It was almost protective. It was…it was like he knew me too. I told Tommy all of this and he got mad at
me. He told me that he’s a dangerous
psychopath. After that he hasn’t really
come over and he’s barley spoken to me.
When I tried to call him to apologize he would just make up some sort of
excuse and hang up.”
“Well, that
definitely sounds like Tommy,” he said stiffly.
“Yeah,”
Laurel sighed sadly.
“Just give
him some time Laurel,” Oliver said. “He
really cares about you. He just needs
some time to het his head around it all.
He can be a little stubborn at times.”
“Tell me
about it,” she said with a laugh.
“Thanks Ollie.”
“For what?”
he asked, blinking slightly from confusion.
“For
listening to me…and for just being here.
After everything that we’ve been through together… I still feel like I
can talk to you and be honest with you.
With everything that I felt when Sarah died and when you came home
alive… I never thought we would be able to do something as simple as talk and
be honest with one another again. I’m
glad that we can be friends.”
Suppressing
the sudden immense feelings of guilt and shame over all that he had done to
Laurel and with all the lies he had told, and was still telling, Oliver smiled
at her, a smile that didn’t reach the sadness in his eyes. Looking at her seriously he said, “I haven’t
been completely honest with you Laurel.”
With a
worried expression, which quickly switched to the emotionless mask learned
through countless hours spent practicing law, Laurel softly asked, “With what
Oliver?”
“With
things about Tommy…and the Vigilante …to start,” he said, timing his words
carefully as his brain raced in circles at the thought of telling laurel the
truth. There really was no good time to
tell her everything Oliver decided.
“Excuse me
Mr. Queen,” a deep voice said just off of Oliver’s left shoulder.
Turning,
Oliver saw Diggle standing a respectful distance from the table with a very
serious and impatient expression on his face.
“What’s up
Digg?” he asked with a hint of urgency.
He really didn’t know how much longer he could wait to tell Laurel about
who he really was before the moment had passed and he decided against it.
“I’m sorry
to interrupt your evening sir,” Diggle said professionally. “But there is a
problem with one of your liquor suppliers at the club. Mr. Lawton is waiting to have a ‘pointed’
conversation with you.”
Looking
back at Laurel, Oliver was torn. He may
never again get another chance to come clean with her. Before this moment, he hadn’t known how much
he had really wanted to tell her everything.
“Just go
Oliver,” Laurel said with a measure of guarded disappointment staining her
voice.
With one
last pained look into Laurel’s disappointed eyes he got up slowly from his
seat. Turning to follow Diggle out of
the restaurant he quietly whispered, “I’m sorry.”
FLASHBACK TO THE PRESENT
What a
disaster it had all been. Laurel already
had enough reasons to not trust him. His
confession of dishonesty along with his abrupt exit had probably made her
fragile trust of him shakier than it already was. Leaning heavily against the steel railing
Oliver felt the weight of his bow as a hundred pounds of burden resting in his
hand. The lives it had taken, the few
that still had innocence within them that he had failed to protect, an the
countless guilty that it had struck down in cold vengeance all rested there in
the palm of his hand. The weight of his
duty laid only heavier, a mountain of immovable responsibility sown into the
soil of his body, grown from his father’s failures…and from his own. Oliver felt so tired, and so alone.
Breathing
deeply from his core he steadied his weariness after a few moments. He had no time for weakness and self-pity,
not until the mission was done. The
mission always came first. Everything
else was secondary.
Once again
as calm and focused as he could be, Oliver trudged his way down the remaining
steps and entered the cavernous basement of Verdant. After the disastrous dinner with Laurel and
failing to kill Deadshot again, there really was no place else he would rather
be at this moment.
Looking
around the room as he placed his bow and quiver on the nearby table, he stopped
for a moment to take it all in. The
first thing that hit him was the silence.
There was no noise in his sanctuary, no music, no steady drip of water
from the piper that long ago should have corroded and burst. There was just the sound of his
breathing. Nothing more. The low level of light registered to his
sense next. It cast a pale gloom over
the place. The light coupled with the
crisp chill of the out of date heating system made the place feel like the a
cave that he had stayed in back on the island.
It felt strangely reassuring. As
his eyes scanned the room he saw the tools of his trade. Everything in the place was an instrument to
be used, from the carefully arranged arrows, the knives that he had taken from
Slade’s plane, the state of the art computers with access to almost any
information he could think of… and even the empty Chinese food boxes plied on
the desk next to the black rimmed glasses?
“I don’t remember ordering take out,”
Oliver thought to himself, confused as to their place in his private musings of
mission and purpose.
Walking
over towards the desk where the empty food containers lay, Oliver noticed the
sleeping form in the single high-backed, black chair just off into the
shadows. The chair’s resting occupant
was blonde of hair and small of stature, wrapped in a make shift blanket of
leather jackets and a plain black cardigan.
As his eyes adjusted to the dim lighting he recognized the form of a
very tired looking Felicity Smoak bundled up against the chill of the room.
“What is she still doing here?” Oliver
thought, though he did not immediately make a move to wake her.
Looking at
Felicity closely he couldn’t help but smile to himself a little. She looked so peaceful asleep in her chair
with her long blonde hair pulled into a tight ponytail. Her red lips wore a slight smile at the
corners, which accentuated her pale face with the simple joy of sleep and
dreams.
The faint
blush of her cheeks added a feminine radiance to her sleeping form that Oliver
only noticed on a few other occasions.
This quirky I.T. girl had a strange sort of beauty to her at times that
was born of a quick intellect, a surprisingly passionate demeanor, and an
honesty about her to rival that of a saint.
She was actually one of the most honest people he had ever met, and also
one of the hardest working he noted to himself as he glanced at one of the
computer screens on the desk. She had
been up all night updating the tracking software she had installed a few months
ago it seemed.
Crouching
down and gently touching her shoulder he whispered, “Felicity. Hey, wake up.”
Stirring
slightly in her chair Felicity mumbled something incoherent and rolled over so
that part of her back was facing Oliver.
Tightening
his jaw in amusement he called out to her again as he shook her shoulder a
little more vigorously, “Felicity.
Felicity, wake up.”
Rolling
back towards him slightly and opening her eyes slowly from her slumber she
recognized Oliver’s face. With a dreamy
smile she said, “So this is what it’s like to wake up next to you.”
Blinking,
Oliver slowly raised a single eyebrow at her comment.
With her
brain actively catching up to her groggy comment, Felicity quickly sat up in
the chair and stammered, “I mean… you look bigger on top of me. Crap! Ummm…what
I meant was… you’re huge! Damn it! That all came out so wrong.”
Smiling to
himself secretly in the dimness of the room, he walked over to the desk to
retrieve Felicity’s glasses and said, “Good morning Felicity.”
Rubbing the
sleep from her eyes she mumbled, “Good morning.
What time is it?”
“Just a few
minutes past 7 a.m.” he replied as he handed over he glasses and leaned back
against the table.
“Holy
crap!” Felicity yelled as she shoved her glasses onto her face in a panic and
scrambled to put her cardigan on.
“What’s
up?” Oliver asked urgently, surprised at the burst of energy from Felicity.
“I’m so
late for work. I stayed up way too late
updating our tracking algorithms and operating system,” she said in a rush as
she fumbled with the last few buttons.
“My so-called department boss is going to freak!”
“Relax
Felicity,” Oliver said wearily from his perch over by the table. “I’ll make a call. You’ll be fine.”
Stopping
her fumbling with the last button on he sweater, Felicity glanced up at
Oliver. With a look of concern on her
face she asked him, “What’s wrong?”
“Nothing,”
Oliver said all too quickly.
Walking
over to the table and standing in front of him she said, “Something is
definitely wrong. You sound off.”
“It’s
nothing,” he said as he looked up at her standing there. Reaching over he carefully did up the last
button on her black cardigan.
Following
the movement of his hands, Felicity swallowed visibly and grabbed both of
Oliver’s hands as he began to pull away.
Looking him steadily in the eye she again asked, “What’s wrong Oliver?”
Sitting
there against the table with his hands in Felicity’s, he looked pointedly into
her blue eyes. A mixture of confusing
feelings welled up in his chest right then causing a strange tightness to
spread across his upper body.
Accompanying the tight sensation was an odd sort of energy that tingled
up his arms, starting from his hands and racing up and through to the rest of
him.
“It’s…everything
Felicity,” Oliver found himself gushing quickly like water spraying from a
crack in a pipe. “It’s this whole
night. It’s this life. All of these lies
that I’ve had to tell and to live are just eating away at me. I lie to everyone around me. I have to lie to my mom, to Thea…to
Laurel. On top of that, Deadshot got
away tonight and Diggle isn’t in the greatest of moods about it. I had a chance to end it tonight
Felicity. It would have cost the lives
of many innocent people. I just couldn’t do it.
Now someone else will die because I failed to kill Lawton.”
“Oliver…”
Felicity said tenderly as she placed a reassuring hand on his chest.
“I keep telling
people that they’ve failed this city Felicity,” Oliver whispered as he stared
intently into her eyes. “But…I’m the one
who keeps lying to those closest to me.
I’m the one who keeps on failing my friends. I’m the one who is really failing this city.”
“Oliver,”
she said, cupping his face gently into her hands and staring just as intensely
back at him. “You haven’t failed this
city. You’ve shed blood for it. You may have to lie to everyone you care
about now, but one day, after everything is said and done and you’ve shot your
last arrow, there will come a time where you won’t have to lie to anyone ever
again.”
Entranced
by the intensity of her gaze Oliver mumbled his deepest fear out loud without
even thinking about it, “But I’m so alone.
I’m so tired of being alone. I
don’t want to be on an island by myself anymore Felicity.”
Moving in
closer so that she was just an inch from his face, Felicity whispered, “You’re
not alone. You’ve got Diggle… and you’ve
got me.”
Something
passed between them then. In that moment
Oliver felt a loosening in his chest. It
was as if a few pounds of burden had been lifted from his shoulders. He just sat there, trapped in the fire of
Felicity’s piercing blue gaze. The
warmth of her hands on his face supported him in a way he didn’t know was
possible.
“She is definitely something else,” he
found himself thinking. “Maybe I don’t have to be so alone…”
Leaning
forward ever so slightly, Oliver moved his face closer toward hers. He could feel the molten heat from her lips
calling to him in a way he had not felt since…
“Oliver?
You down here man?” a voice called as the sound of heavy feet coming down the
steel staircase echoed throughout the room.
Standing up
quickly, Oliver moved away from the desk a few feet. Looking over from the corner of his eyes he
saw an intense blush radiating from Felicity’s face. The look of supreme disappointment was not
missed on him either.
“There you
are man,” Diggle said as he reached the bottom of the stairs. Seeing Felicity and Oliver standing there he
stopped in his tracks. “Am I…interrupting
anything?”
“No,”
Oliver said quickly.
“Right…”
Diggle said looking back and forth between them.
“You two
have some talking to do,” Felicity piped in. “And I need to get to work.”
Turning
towards Oliver she quietly said, “You can come talk to me anytime if you feel
that you need to.”
“Thank you,”
he whispered.
As she left
the room Oliver couldn’t help but watch her go.
She had reawakened something inside of him tonight, but he really wasn’t
sure just what exactly to do about it now.
“Look man,”
Oliver heard Diggle say as he listened to Felicity’s footsteps fade up the
stairs. “About the whole Deadshot thing tonight…I didn’t mean to…”
Raising a
hand Oliver stopped Diggle in mid speech.
Looking at him in all seriousness he said, “It’s ok.”
“No man it’s
not…”
“Digg,”
Oliver interrupted. “It’s ok. We’ll get him next time. When that happens, I promise you that I won’t
hesitate. We’ll sate your bloodlust
Diggle…and my own desires in the process.”
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