If I Should Die Tonight :: Elegant ::
Jul 1, 2012 1:16:33 GMT -5
Post by meg. on Jul 1, 2012 1:16:33 GMT -5
[/color]
I put one foot
In front of the other it
I don't need a new love
Or a new life, just a better place to die [/size]
EVEREST ROUTH
[/center][/size][/right]The wind pulled against him, straining him as he struggled to keep his feet planted. The kite, like a red postage stamp, danced in the sky as if it was free, not at all chained down by the string that attached it to his hands. A quiet laugh at the bubbling joy in his chest. Grey hills rolled away from him, and he and the kite were the only sources of colour in an absolute world. The heavy sky frowned upon them, but they step-stepped out a tango that was in perfect sync, no matter what the rest of the planet might say.
The wind changed, pulling him around. As he turned, he noticed out of the corner of his eye another little pile of colour, on the crest of the next hill, just before the land merged into the sky. The figure, crumbled in a heap of striped-knit on the silver grass, looked vaguely human, and so he released his hands from the kite. In that instant, as his hands recoiled, the electric-heater glow of happy went out, as if someone had submerged him in a bucket of cold water on a lukewarm day. But he fought through it, ran to the child-like pile of wool on the ground. By the time he reached it, his legs were hot and his lungs, charred, but he was there. “You-“ he panted, chest heaving. “What’s wrong? What can I do?”
As the child turned over, he watched a shaky smile rice-paper-sketch onto her face. Dark hair clamoured against her sticky pale skin, eyes sluggishly searching. He dropped to his knees beside her, and held her there. The thought that her face was oddly familiar tickled the back of his mind as she started to talk, voice pallid.
“Nothing, Ev.”
“No, no, there must be something. I can help you, I can!”
His voice desperate, searching for something, anything. The fact that her dark eyes and delicate features belonged to a much younger version of this year’s district ten tribute switched in his mind, but he didn’t care for that fact that she knew his name. The words had no voice, yet somehow stuck to his mind like glue.
“Not this time. You can’t help us all.”
If there was something that Everest had always been, it was a fighter. He was not ready to give up on this child who had so many more miles to go, so much more ground to cover.
“No. No!” he said, agitated, fanning her clammy face with his hands. It did nothing. Her eyes started to drift downwards like dirty snowflakes, breaths becoming laboured. And then, with her last one, all the effort in the world- “Thank you, Everest.”
He awoke with her last breath lukewarm on his lips, the memory of her face dying as he awoke to a technicoloured world where the grass and the sky seemed much brighter than they were, and human emotions so much duller. A semicolon in his stomach squirmed, regret like lead sweat on his brow.
Thank you for what? For the nothing that I did? For the everything that I wanted to do, could have done, had I tried that last push harder?
---
The last scent of his broken dreams reflected in the cracked footpath in front of him, foot fell heavy after foot as he traversed them with care. He could not, would not step on the cracks- for no reason, he just couldn’t. It was as if it was part of his own fundamental morality, a thing that he had been born just knowing- he could not step on the cracks, because that would fracture greater things.
The summer air was thick and still, the sort of muggy day that reminds you of eating soup when the weather is warm. The scarred wooden door that appeared to him seemingly out of nowhere was unremarkable. Knuckles connected with wood once, twice, three times- perfect rhythm- and it was then opened from the inside.
Once in, it took his eyes a minute to adjust to the gloom. The smell of tobacco smoke was almost overpowering. A mismatched array of lounge chairs and sofas were scattered over the room, a small platform of a stage on the left-hand wall and the bar on the right. This little coffee lounge was where he went to forget. It wasn’t often that he wanted to do so, but sometimes he needed to lose himself in a world that was not his own, where his actions had no consequences. Here, he was nameless, and could be anyone that he wanted to be.
“Black tea, thanks” he said to the guy behind the counter, never having really been a fan of coffee, and at two in the afternoon, it being too early for him to start drinking. Paying and taking his drink, as he moved towards a seat, a boy of perhaps a year or two older than himself came out on the stage and stood in front of the mike. In an unusual way, his elfin features were attractive, and as if under a spell Everest was enchanted. Taking occupancy in a chair directly infront of the platform, he sipped his drink and just watched. Eyes taking in every little detail, he just watched the world unfold.
[/color]
[/blockquote][/blockquote][/justify]
But I will die for my own sins, thanks a lot
We'll rise up ourselves thanks for nothing at all
Up off the ground
[/color]We'll rise up ourselves thanks for nothing at all
Up off the ground
Our fathers are nothing but dust now [/CENTER] [/size][/blockquote]