Quiet everyone my shows onđââď¸
Cato Hadley x reader
Warnings: sparing, weapons, blood, kills, violence, fear, dictatorship, itâs the Hunger Games lol
Word count: 1,751
Masterlist
<<< Previous part
Y/N's pov
The screen had become a permanent fixture in Y/N's life. Days blurred together as the Games dragged on, filled with blood and rain and death. Her parents no longer tried to pull her away. She trained in the mornings, listless and robotic, but each afternoon and evening, she was back on the couch, eyes locked on the television, heart clenched in constant dread.
Clove had still been alive until two days ago.
Y/N could still hear her own scream echoing in her earsâraw, brokenâas she watched Lucian drive a spear through her best friendâs chest. Clove had fought like hell, refusing to go down, even after he severed her arm. She had taken his hand in the fight, cut it clean off in one brutal strike, her last act of defiance.
Y/N had collapsed to the floor, sobbing, her fists slamming against the wooden panels of her living room.
Clove was gone.
Clove, her best friend, her sister in everything but blood.
She was gone, and all that remained in the arena were two boysâboth from the Career alliance that had ruled the Games like gods among mortals. Cato from District 2. Lucian from District 1.
Selene had died the same day as Clove.
Y/N had watched in numb silence as Cato finally turned on the girl who had flirted with him so shamelessly. It was brutalâCato had lured her in with the same smile, the same charm she had used on him. Then, when she had let her guard down, he struck.
No hesitation.
A sword through the chest.
Y/N didnât know if it was revenge for Clove or just a final shedding of the act. Either way, Selene died staring at Cato with confusion, her hands clutching his shirt as she fell.
And now, only two remained.
Lucian, bloodied, one hand missing, barely able to hold his blade.
Cato, wounded at the thigh and side, soaked in rain and blood, breathing hard, but alive.
Y/N sat forward on the couch, her heart in her throat, barely able to breathe.
"Here we are, folks!" Caesar Flickerman's voice boomed through the speakers. "The final showdown of the 72nd Hunger Games! District 1 versus District 2. Two of the fiercest warriors we've seen in years!"
Claudius chimed in, voice reverent. "Cato looks like a stormâcalculated, deadly. But Lucian? Heâs not going down easy. That boyâs rage is burning hot. This could end in any direction."
Y/N didnât blink.
The arenaâonce a city, now reduced to broken buildings overtaken by natureâwas a battlefield. Rubble and ash littered the streets. Rain fell in slow, steady sheets, soaking through Catoâs dark clothes as he stalked forward. Lucian stood across from him, breathing hard, swaying slightly. His face was pale from blood loss, his severed arm wrapped tightly in what remained of his shirt.
They didnât speak.
They just charged.
Catoâs sword met Lucianâs in a violent clash of steel. Lucianâs eyes were wild with fury, his movements sharp despite his injury. But he was slower now, weaker. Catoâs injuries were severe, but his stance remained firm. He fought like someone with something left to lose.
The sound of blades rang through the Capitol broadcast. Y/Nâs nails dug into the armrest of the couch.
Lucian landed a shallow cut on Catoâs shoulder. Cato roared in pain and slammed the hilt of his sword into Lucianâs face, breaking his nose. Blood poured from both of them. It was vicious, relentless.
Lucian screamed, charging with a final burst of strength. But Cato ducked, pivoted, and in one brutal, final swing, drove his blade through Lucianâs gut.
Time stopped.
Lucian gasped. His sword clattered to the ground.
Cato didnât let go. He twisted the blade once before pulling it free, stepping back as Lucian fell to his knees, and then face first into the mud.
Silence.
Then the arena erupted into the sound of trumpets and cannon fire.
"AND WE HAVE OUR VICTOR!" Caesarâs voice roared, overwhelmed with joy. "CATO OF DISTRICT 2 HAS WON THE 72ND HUNGER GAMES!"
Y/N sat frozen, tears streaming silently down her cheeks.
Cato stood over Lucianâs corpse, his sword shaking in his grip, his eyes distant and hollow. The rain soaked him, blood pooling around his boots. His chest heaved, but he didnât move.
He didnât celebrate.
He just stood there.
And on the screen, the Capitol crowd went wild, chanting his name. A name Y/N had whispered in the dark. A name she had screamed into her pillow. A name she had cried for when he walked into that arena.
Cato.
Victor.
But Y/N couldnât feel victory.
She felt like something inside her had shattered beyond repair.
Cato's POV
The pain was gone.
At least, the physical kind.
Capitol medicine had seen to that in less than twenty-four hours. The torn flesh in his thigh, the deep slice at his ribs, the cracked bone in his shoulderâall healed. He stood in front of the mirror in the lavish victor suite, dressed in an impeccably tailored black suit that fit him like it had been sculpted directly onto his body. His hair was neat, face clean. Too clean. Too untouched for someone who had just bathed in blood and rain and death.
He didnât recognize himself.
Behind him, Brutus leaned against the dresser with crossed arms, sharp eyes tracking him in the mirror.
âYou remember what I said?â Brutus asked, voice calm but edged with steel.
Cato nodded, jaw clenched.
âNo mercy. No empathy. You won because you're the strongest. Own it. You show them anything softâregret, pain, heartâand they'll smell it on you. And then theyâll use you.â
Cato turned slightly. âTheyâll sell me.â
Brutus didnât look away. âIf they think youâre pliable, if they see someone the citizens will want to touch, they'll put you up for auction. Maybe not right away. Maybe theyâll call it charity, or a celebration tour. But itâll happen.â
Catoâs chest felt like it was caught in a vice.
âAnd if I act like a monster?â he asked.
Brutusâs lips curled in a grim smile. âThen theyâll fear you. And no one wants to touch a monster.â
Cato looked back at his reflection. The boy staring back wasnât seventeen. He wasnât even human anymore. He looked like a weapon carved out of victory and vengeance.
âGot it,â he said quietly.
Brutus stepped forward, placed a heavy hand on his shoulder. âGood. Donât flinch. Donât smile. And whatever you do, donât look sorry.â
The prep team appeared minutes later, dousing him in expensive cologne, smoothing out every crease, brushing invisible specks from his jacket. Then it was time.
He walked the gleaming halls of the Capitol studio with silent footsteps, cameras already catching his entrance. The roar of the crowd from inside the studio was deafening. They chanted his nameâCato, Cato, Catoâas though he were a god.
As though he hadnât just killed 23 other kids to be standing there.
Y/N's POV
Y/N couldnât sit still.
She stood with her arms wrapped tightly around herself, just in front of the television in their living room. Her parents sat on the couch, silent, the air around them thick with tension. The moment Caesar Flickerman appeared on screen, dressed in a shimmering emerald suit, her stomach twisted.
âAnd now, ladies and gentlemen, the moment youâve all been waiting forâplease welcome, the victor of the 72nd Hunger GamesâCATO!â
The audience screamed. Lights burst across the screen. Cato walked out onto the stage like he owned it.
And in a way, he did.
He was beautiful in a way that made Y/Nâs heart ache. But something was wrong.
His eyes.
They were empty.
No smile curled at his lips. No trace of the boy she had trained with, laughed with, spent the night with just days before the Reaping. He sat beside Caesar like a lion among sheepâcold, composed, calculating.
âCato!â Caesar beamed. âYouâve had quite the journey! The highest score in training, you dominated the Careers, and nowâyouâre our champion! Tell us, how does it feel to be the victor of the 72nd Hunger Games?â
A long pause. Cato tilted his head slightly.
âExpected,â he said flatly.
The crowd laughed nervously. Caesar chuckled, brushing it off.
âWell, modesty certainly isnât part of the package, is it?â Caesar joked. âTell meâwas there any moment in the Games where you thought, âthis might be itâ? Any moment where you were afraid?â
Cato leaned forward, one elbow on his knee.
âNo.â
Caesar blinked. âNo?â
âIâm from District 2. We train our whole lives for this. The moment I stepped into that arena, the only thing I saw was victory.â
Y/Nâs breath caught. This wasnât him. It couldnât be.
âI killed because thatâs what I was there to do,â Cato continued. âAnd if I had to do it again, Iâd make the same choices. I didnât come to make friends. I came to win.â
Gasps and murmurs from the audience.
Y/Nâs hands trembled. Her nails dug into her palms.
âEven with Clove?â Caesar asked gently. âShe was from your district. She was your cousin and your ally.â
Catoâs face didnât change. âAllies are temporary. I didnât kill her, but if it had come to that, I wouldâve.â
Y/Nâs knees gave a little. She sat down on the floor without meaning to.
âAnd tell me this,â Caesar continued, voice more serious now. âWas there someone back home? Anyone special who you fought for?â
Cato hesitated.
Y/N leaned in.
His jaw tensed. Then he looked into the camera, eyes hard as granite.
âNo.â
Laughter from some of the crowd. Others murmured.
But Y/N⌠she saw it. The flicker. The shift in his eyes.
He was lying.
He was lying, and it hurt him to say it. She could see it in the way he blinked a little too long, the way his hand twitched slightly on his knee.
He was protecting her.
Her heart ached in her chest, torn between pride and grief.
Caesar wrapped up the interview with charm and grandeur, ending it with: âCato of District 2, the Victor of the 72nd Hunger Games, ladies and gentlemen!â
Applause thundered. Lights blazed.
Y/N sat in the dark of her living room, tears slipping silently down her cheeks.
He was alive.
But he wasnât Cato anymore.
Tag list: @inky-bonnie @russianspy24 @whitlocklibrary @simpingcorner @mischivana
thereâs not enough of felix in his murder attire on this site so here i am to deliver
i had max & yuki duo for a week, but if anything happens to them i will fight.
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Cato Hadley x reader
Warnings: sparing, weapons, blood, kills, violence, fear, dictatorship, itâs the Hunger Games lol
Word count: 2,989
Masterlist
<<< Previous part
Cato sat at the long dining table in the Capitol apartment, a heavy silence in the air. Before him was a breakfast fit for a king: steaming eggs, crispy bacon, fresh bread with creamy butter, and exotic fruits he had never seen in District 2. He picked at his food, his appetite dulled by the weight of the morning. Across from him, Clove was eating mechanically, her expression blank, but her fingers were clenched tightly around her fork. Brutus and Enobaria sat at either end of the table, watching them with unreadable expressions.
âEat up,â Brutus said finally, breaking the silence. âYouâll need the energy.â
Cato forced himself to eat, knowing he would regret it if he didnât. The food tasted like nothing. All he could think about was what was to come. The blood, the fight, the survival.
After breakfast, they were escorted down to the launch area. The hallways of the Capitol building were eerily quiet, only the sound of their footsteps echoing off the walls. When they reached the transport bay, a sleek, white hovercraft was waiting. A Peacekeeper checked their identifications and motioned for them to board.
Inside, the hovercraft was cold and sterile. Cato took a seat, Clove beside him. Across from them sat the District 1 tributes, Lucian and Selene, both looking as focused as he felt. No one spoke.
A woman in a white uniform approached, holding a small silver device. Without a word, she grabbed Catoâs arm and injected the tracker just beneath his skin. He barely flinched, only watching as she moved to Clove next. The Capitol always wanted to know where their tributes were. Always watching, always in control.
The hovercraft continued its journey in silence. Cato tried to push all thoughts out of his mind, but a pair of piercing eyes haunted him. Y/N. Was she watching? What was she thinking? He shook the thought away. There was no room for distractions now.
After what felt like an eternity, the hovercraft landed. They were led through a series of underground hallways, eventually being split up into individual preparation rooms. The walls were stark white, the only thing in the room being a chair and a large glass tube in the center. His stylist appeared shortly after, giving him a quick once-over before nodding in approval. There was no need for any touch-ups; the Capitol had already ensured he was in peak condition.
âGood luck,â the stylist said simply before stepping out.
Cato stepped into the tube, heart pounding. The glass slid shut around him, and suddenly, he was rising. The platform beneath his feet hummed, and he gritted his teeth as light flooded his vision.
When the world came into focus, the first thing he noticed was the rain. Heavy, torrential rain. Water pounded against his skin, soaking through his clothes instantly.
Then he looked around.
The arena was vast, stretching as far as he could see. It was designed to resemble a ruined city, overgrown with thick vines and vegetation. Crumbling buildings stood at odd angles, some barely intact, others completely collapsed. The ground was slick with mud and water, the streets filled with deep puddles.
But in the center of it all, standing tall and imposing, was the Cornucopia.
His pulse quickened as he scanned the golden structure. Weapons. Food. Supplies. He could already see the glint of blades, the handles of swords sticking out like a beacon.
Perfect.
He glanced at the other tributes, all standing on their platforms, drenched and waiting. Clove was to his left, her eyes locked on the Cornucopia with the same hunger he felt. To his right was Lucian, jaw clenched, body tense. Across the clearing, the weaker tributes were already shifting on their platforms, nervous, uncertain.
The countdown began.
Sixty seconds.
His muscles coiled, ready. His mind went blank, focusing only on the strategy he had been trained for his entire life. Get to the Cornucopia. Get a weapon. Kill anyone in his way.
Thirty seconds.
The rain blurred his vision slightly, but he didnât care. He had fought in worse conditions before.
Fifteen seconds.
The sound of blood rushing in his ears was the only thing he could hear now.
Ten.
Nine.
Eight.
Seven.
Six.
Five.
Four.
Three.
Two.
One.
The horn sounded.
And Cato ran.
The moment the countdown hit zero, Y/Nâs breath caught in her throat. The screen in front of her flashed as the tributes launched into action. Cato was the fastest. He moved like a predator released from a cage, his powerful legs propelling him across the wet ground. Rain poured down in thick sheets, making the ruined city arena look even more unforgiving. But Cato was undeterred. He reached the Cornucopia first, his hands gripping the hilt of a massive sword the moment he got there.
Lucian from District 1 was next, just a step behind, followed closely by Clove and Selene. The four of them wasted no time. While the weaker tributes hesitated or ran, they armed themselves and began their ruthless work. The Careers had trained for this their entire lives, and now, the bloodbath began.
Y/N felt her stomach turn as Lucian swung a battle axe, embedding it deep into the chest of the male tribute from District 7. The boy barely had time to scream before crumpling to the ground, blood pooling beneath him, mixing with the rain and mud. Selene, the District 1 girl, had a spear in her hands, and with perfect aim, she hurled it at the female tribute from District 5. The spear struck true, piercing through her stomach. The girl gasped, a horrified look on her face before she collapsed, unmoving.
Clove moved like a shadow, her knives flashing as she attacked. The female tribute from District 9 tried to run past her, but Clove was too quick. One blade to the throat and the girl went down instantly. Y/N squeezed her eyes shut, her heart pounding. She had known Clove was lethal, but seeing her best friend kill someone so effortlessly sent a wave of sickness through her.
But nothing compared to watching Cato.
He was a force of destruction. A hurricane of power and skill. The male tribute from District 3 had made the mistake of grabbing a weapon, thinking he could fight. Cato didnât hesitate. He brought his sword down in a brutal, swift arc, slicing through the boyâs chest. Blood sprayed, mixing with the rain, and the tribute crumpled, lifeless.
More tributes tried to flee. The girl from District 4 sprinted away, but Lucian was faster. He tackled her to the ground, pinning her before slitting her throat with a dagger. Selene cut down the female tribute from District 11, her blade quick and merciless.
Y/N wanted to look away, but she couldnât. Every time she tried, her gaze was drawn back to Cato. His sword swung again, and another body fell. The girl from District 9, a desperate look on her face, tried to make it to the treeline, but Clove threw a knife that struck her in the back. She hit the ground face-first, unmoving.
Y/N's hands clenched into fists in her lap. She had known this would happen. Had known what Cato and Clove were capable of. But seeing itâwatching them kill so easilyâmade her chest tighten painfully. She had trained for this, had sparred with them both, but there was a difference between training and reality. Between friendly matches and life-or-death battles.
Her mother placed a gentle hand on her shoulder, but Y/N couldnât react. She was frozen, watching the chaos unfold. The Cornucopia had become a graveyard, bodies scattered across the wet ground, rain washing away the fresh blood.
Only a handful of tributes had made it out alive. The tributes from 12, 10, 8, and 6 had all fled, along with a few others from different districts. They had chosen to run rather than fight, and for now, they had survived.
Cato stood at the center of it all, chest rising and falling steadily. He wiped the blood from his sword on the clothes of a fallen tribute before looking up, scanning the area. Even through the screen, Y/N could see itâthe wild, dangerous glint in his eyes. This was what he had been made for. What he had trained for.
He had never looked more like a victor.
Y/N swallowed the lump in her throat. She should be proud. Cato was proving himself to be the strongest, just like she always knew he would. But all she felt was cold dread settling in her bones. Because the Games had only just begun.
And there was still so much more blood to be spilled.
The bloodbath was over, leaving only the strongest standing. Cato, Lucian, Clove, and Selene wasted no time. While the arena around them was soaked in blood and rain, they focused on what matteredâsecuring supplies. The Cornucopia was theirs. Weapons, food, medical kits, even survival gear. Everything they needed to dominate the arena.
Cato slung a heavy bag of supplies over his shoulder, scanning the area. âWe should move before nightfall,â he said, his voice firm. âThereâs a river nearby. We set up camp there.â
Lucian nodded in agreement, grabbing another backpack. âGood call. Weâll need water.â
They each took what they could carry. Clove stuffed extra knives into her belt, while Selene gathered rope and other essentials. When they had everything they needed, they left the Cornucopia behind, making their way toward the river. The rain had finally started to let up, leaving the ruined city damp and eerily quiet.
They reached the river within minutes. The water flowed steady and clear, reflecting the artificial sky above. The arena was a masterpiece of controlled destructionâhalf nature, half ruins.
Selene stretched, tossing her damp hair over her shoulder. âNot a bad spot,â she said, eyeing Cato with a smirk. âGuess weâll be spending a lot of time together.â
Cato forced a smirk, leaning casually against a broken pillar. âGuess so,â he replied smoothly, meeting her gaze. He could see the interest in her eyes. She was playing the game, just like he was. And that was fine. If he had to play along to secure sponsors, so be it. But she meant nothing to him. Only one person did, and she was far away, watching this nightmare unfold.
Selene stepped closer, tilting her head. âI saw you at training,â she murmured, dragging a finger down his arm. âYou were incredible.â
Cato chuckled, making sure the cameras saw. âYou werenât so bad yourself.â
It was all an act. He played the role of the arrogant, charming Career, just like Brutus had told him. He flirted, smirked, made sure the Capitol saw someone they could adoreâor fear. But in his mind, all he could think about was Y/N. Was she watching this? Did she believe any of it? He hated himself for even pretending.
Night fell quickly. The rain had made the temperature drop, and a cold breeze moved through the ruins. The four of them sat in a circle, eating the food theyâd claimed.
Then, a flicker of light in the distance caught their attention.
âA fire,â Clove whispered, her eyes narrowing.
Cato tensed, gripping his sword. âIdiots.â
Lucian smirked. âLooks like weâve got more work to do.â
They moved swiftly, silently, weaving through the broken buildings. The fire was small, barely noticeable, but in the darkness of the arena, it stood out like a beacon. As they got closer, the voices of the tributes became clearer. The three of themâthe male tribute from District 12, the one from District 8, and the female from District 3âhad gathered together, probably thinking there was safety in numbers.
Fools.
Cato moved first. He was fast, silent, and before the boy from District 8 even realized what was happening, Catoâs sword was buried deep in his side. The tribute gasped, blood bubbling at his lips as he fell.
The girl from District 3 screamed, scrambling to her feet. Clove was on her in an instant, a knife slashing across her throat. She collapsed, choking on her own blood.
The boy from District 12 tried to run. He made it two steps before Lucian tackled him to the ground, pinning him beneath his knee. The tribute struggled, terror in his eyes.
âPleaseââ he started.
Lucian didnât let him finish. He drove his knife straight into the boyâs chest, twisting it before pulling it out. The tribute went still.
Silence fell over the ruins once more, except for the crackling fire and the sound of the rain dripping from the broken buildings.
Selene sighed dramatically, wiping blood from her dagger. âPathetic.â
Cato stared down at the bodies, gripping his sword tightly. This was the game. This was survival. But for the first time, as he wiped the blood from his blade, his mind wasnât on victory.
It was on Y/N.
And whether she was still watching.
The screen flickered, bathing Y/Nâs dimly lit living room in a cold glow. She sat on the couch, rigid, hands clenched together so tightly that her nails dug into her palms. Her parents were beside her, silent, but she could feel her motherâs worried gaze flickering toward her every few seconds.
Caesar Flickermanâs voice rang out, smooth and theatrical as always.
âAnd there we have it, ladies and gentlemen, the Careers staking their claim! What a thrilling first day in the arena!â
Beside him, his fellow commentator, Claudius Templesmith, nodded. âAbsolutely, Caesar. The bloodbath was nothing short of a spectacle. Our tributes from District 1 and 2 played their part well. And look at Cato! The way he moved, the precision, the sheer powerâheâs a real contender.â
Y/N wanted to scream.
She had seen it all. Every brutal second. Every fatal swing of Catoâs sword. Every scream of the dying tributes. And worst of all, she had seen the way Selene touched him. The way he smirked at her. The way he played along.
Claudius chuckled. âAnd letâs not forget Selene from District 1! She certainly seems to have taken a liking to Cato. That little exchange by the riverâwell, I wouldnât be surprised if we have some romance this year!â
Y/Nâs stomach twisted.
âCatoâs got charm, strength, and letâs face it, the looks,â Caesar added with a knowing grin.
Her chest tightened as she recalled his interview. The way he had looked directly into the camera, the way his eyes softened for just a second before he uttered that awful, crushing word:
âNo.â
No one waiting for him back home. No one who mattered.
And now he was flirting with Selene like it meant nothing. Like she meant nothing.
Her breathing grew uneven. She wanted to tell herself she was being irrational, that it was just a tactic, that this didnât change anything. But the image of Selene leaning into him, the way he didnât push her awayâit played over and over again in her mind.
âY/N,â her mother whispered gently, placing a hand on her arm.
She flinched. âIâm fine.â
But she wasnât fine. She wasnât fine at all.
On screen, the scene shifted to nightfall in the arena. The rain had finally stopped, and the Careers were gathered around a fire, eating, laughing. Y/Nâs gut twisted as she watched Cato sitting next to Selene. He wasnât smiling, not really, but there was something practiced in the way he spoke to her, in the way he let her brush her fingers along his arm.
She felt sick.
âLook at them, completely at ease,â Claudius remarked. âAnd they should be. They dominated the Cornucopia. They have the supplies, the weapons, and letâs not forgetâCato was the first to reach the Cornucopia, making a clear statement to the other tributes.â
âHeâs ruthless,â Caesar agreed, shaking his head with admiration. âThe way he took down the District 8 tributeâbrutal. Efficient.â
Y/N squeezed her eyes shut, willing herself to block it all out, but the sounds wouldnât stop. The clash of metal, the cries of pain, the sickening finality of death. And worst of all, Catoâs cold, calculated movements. This wasnât the boy she had grown up with. This wasnât the boy she loved.
Or maybe it was. Maybe this was always part of him, hidden beneath the surface, waiting for the right moment to emerge.
The thought made her stomach turn.
And then the scene changed again. A flicker of light in the darknessâa fire.
âOh, this is a mistake,â Caesar commented. âA huge mistake.â
The Careers moved through the ruins like predators hunting prey. Y/Nâs heart pounded as she watched Cato lead the charge, his steps sure and silent. The tributes by the fire never even had a chance.
The boy from District 8âdead in an instant, Catoâs sword cutting him down before he could react. The girl from District 3âCloveâs knife at her throat, gone in seconds. And the boy from 12âhe begged. He tried to run. But Lucian ended it just as quickly.
The camera zoomed in on Catoâs face. His expression was unreadable, but his grip on his sword was tight. Y/N knew that grip. She had seen it a thousand times when they sparred together. When he was angry. When he was struggling with something he wouldnât say out loud.
But it didnât matter. Not now. Not when his hands were coated in blood and the arena had claimed him completely.
She stood abruptly.
âY/N?â her mother asked, worried.
âI need some air.â
She didnât wait for a response before stepping outside, letting the cold night air hit her.
Cato was alive.
But she didnât know if she wanted to keep watching.
Tag list: @inky-bonnie @russianspy24 @whitlocklibrary
MeâŚ. Iâm people
this is a face ppl go to war for #literally
I need a little something something with my smut
The truth of it đ¤Ł
What Bella actually saw when waking up with Edward in her room.
(I can confirm I was the book on her dresser)
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