Thoughts of making it away from here and back to the Temple had long since turned from optimism to fantasy. There were some things no amount of willpower could push through. After what felt like an eternity spent trying to rein in the intense pain, Ty managed to only just regain control of his faculties. He expected to pass out from the pain, and the few gaps in his awareness indicated he'd almost made it a few times. A part of him refused to be silenced, however. It forced him to lie there in the dirt, staring up at the sky, only able to hope that things would start to fade soon.
They didn't. Not fast enough.
It took three tries of trying to get to his feet before Ty gave up doing so, and merely crawled up against a set of rocks lying just ahead of the shoreline. Occasionally he thought he felt a stinging sensation coming from his hands, and a quick look showed that he'd cut them bloody as he crawled across the rough ground. There was so little sensation, he couldn't tell at first. Every time the bolt brushed against anything, any time he had to make use of his core, a feeling like an electric shock shot across his body. As he sat himself up against the rocks, he realized he'd left a bloody trail the whole way there.
In between laboured breaths, Ty chuckled in disbelief.
"How... how the fuck?"
He looked ahead, to the vista he was stuck with. The craggy, less-picturesque coastline that no doubt anyone would've passed over for the island's beaches. Waves crashed against the rocks, and thick foam kicked up from where the Lake ran into the sea. It was low enough he suspected large swaths of the area would be covered up at high tide. Ahead of the bolt sticking out of his abdomen, he saw the tattered remains of his jeans and what was left of his running shoes.
Unable to lean down and ply them off, he kicked haphazardly at his ankles until they slipped off. Though he was sure he'd cut open a blister or two in the process, he couldn't really feel it. Awkwardly peeling off one sock and then the other with each opposite foot, he found that he couldn't quite feel either too well. Only the absence of pressure that freeing his feet brought. Relaxation that should've been out of place given the circumstances. Nevertheless, he stretched his toes and gingerly sat back with a sigh.
Sitting on some rocks, peering out at the ocean. Picture perfect, save for the steel sticking out of him and the slow climb of cold up his extremities. He'd always been kind of pale, but the pallor in his skin reminded him of some of the bodies he'd looked past on his journey to find Lucas.
There's a reason for that.
Once again he reached towards the bolt. It looked wrong, like he was some hunted animal. Secondhand anecdotes told him pulling it out would only accelerate the inevitable. On some level he kind of wanted that, but he didn't want the pain. Didn't want to get halfway and ruin the last precious seconds he had left reminding himself how he got there.
I'm in no hurry.
He folded his hands across his lap and laid back, against the rocks. The afternoon sun felt nice against his skin, not too bright. No need to worry about getting burned, anyways. The prideful part of him wanted to relax, to just let it happen. The fact that he was even lying here, instead of floating at the riverbed or downed from a second crossbow bolt, was proof enough his survival instinct wasn't easily assuaged.
Just have to find a way to let go.
The only time he’d seen someone bleed to death, it had happened so quickly. This felt like it was never going to end, and not in a way that seemed at all comforting. The tips of his fingers were numb, beyond cold. The warmth coming from the blood slowly seeping from his gut didn’t seem to keep his hands from shaking, and he held them tighter in a vain effort to make it stop.
"...Please..."
Valuing survival as a defining characteristic as long as he did, and only now did he appreciate how it would torment him at the end. It wouldn’t end quickly even if he wanted to. The gun might've made it easier, but both the Walther and the Uzi were too far way for him. Even if he could find them, with his luck he'd just slip up and leave himself with another grievous wound that would drag on, and on, and on. Given the cascade of fuckups that helped him end Claude, it didn't seem unlikely that whatever trickster god watching over him might just engineer such a thing.
Maybe it doesn't matter. Maybe I won't have long, anyways.
Was it always like this? Denial, bargaining, even when someone welcomed it? Even when relief was close enough he could reach out and touch it with insensate fingers? If he was standing up, looking down on himself, he knew he'd tell the truth. Find the words to make it easier.
You’re done. Take a breath. Think about something that makes you smile. Hold onto a moment that makes it easy to face, the last thing you want to be. There’s nothing else you have to do. It’s over.
Someone else could say that, and he’d believe it. Coming from his own mind, they felt like excuses. Words people only said to fill empty, dead air. Comfort from spirits his mind conjured up to cope with the fact that, after everything he’d done, he would have to face this alone.
A shadow crossed his vision. There were a number of faces he expected to see, none of them currently belonging to the living. The one that met him was a surprise, and enough of a pleasant one that he broke out into a smile.
“D-Diego?”