mama // storm and his
Oct 21, 2022 2:13:16 GMT -5
Post by lance on Oct 21, 2022 2:13:16 GMT -5
Tears are a funny thing, he's found. Before the Games, he'd rarely shed them (at least genuinely; lord knows how many times he put on the crocodile tear act in front of Eve in order to exact revenge on someone who'd wronged him), with the phenomenon coming only ever when he'd been overwhelmed, and only ever in private. Before volunteering, he could count the number of times he'd shed true, genuine tears on one hand.
To say that the count had increased exponentially in the months since then would be, well, an understatement. Hell, at the rate things were going, he'd probably match his all time record before he went to bed tonight. Between the overwhelming emotions of the homecoming, the relief at seeing his old room again, and the catharsis that came with clearing the air with his father, well, it's a good thing he's learned that tears flowing liberally alongside the emotions that generated them wasn't necessarily a bad thing.
Hell, the entire damn Capitol had seen him making a crybaby of himself more than once on the giant screen, and they'd still welcomed him with thunderous applause. He'd cried right on Avriel's well wishes mere hours after his victory, and he'd still reassured him like an older brother.
(Speaking of...no, he'll get to that part later.)
Right now, there's a mental checklist going down his head. Clearing the air with his father had been step one, the one he'd most dreaded, but step two had the potential to be even worse. Not in the same way, really - his mother had never had the same capacity for intimidation that his father did, but that almost made the whole thing worse. Disappointing someone who held such high standards for their children when Storm himself had often struggled to meet them was one thing; disappointing someone who held no such standards in the unconditional love between mother and son was something else entirely.
And for all of his intents and plans, Storm had nearly given his mother a reason to weep at night. He'd almost committed the worst sin a child could place on their mother. He'd almost forced his mom to outlive him and live with the consequences of those actions.
One hurdle overcome, so many more to go. If his father had his retreat in his study, his mother was harder to pin down, flitting between room after room with each passing night. It was almost easy enough to harness that excuse, use it for himself. You can just get it over with in the morning, the devil's advocate on his shoulder whispered. Let her come to you. Who knows? Maybe she won't even make the first move herself.
Shut up, Storm thought back. That's worse.
Steeling his resolve, he knocked on yet another door, another separation between himself and his second and most necessary confrontation. "Mother?" he half-whispered, half-announced. "Are you in here?"