being so normal | korinna/ajanie
Mar 24, 2023 10:11:25 GMT -5
Post by pup on Mar 24, 2023 10:11:25 GMT -5
korinna
Sleep hadn't been easy last night. With the official industry change, she could hear her father's voice becoming increasingly tinged with stress. The peacekeepers abounding the streets and the new militaristic quality to district nine meant that the family business--and it's side businesses--were not meeting their quarterly projections, and to Mr. Winslow, that's unacceptable.
Each night since the announcement, she had seen various officials walking through the gates under the cover of darkness to meet with her father. Hushed tones often turned to boisterous arguments ricocheting out of her father's office doors and through the household.
Her mother pretended everything was fine. Each day continued the same. Korinna had the same piano lessons every Tuesday, her voice teacher would come in every Wednesday, and her post-school business classes would continue as normal. As her father had so properly put it over dinner one night: Nothing will break the Winslows.
However, Korinna knew that something was wrong when she had been called into her father's office after coming back from school.
"Korinna," he had said, shuffling through some papers and looking up at her, pulling down the rim of his glasses.
"Yes, pa?" She had responded, starting to pick at her cuticles as she always did when confronted with the business side of her father. He noticed and looked pointedly at her hands then back up at her, his eyebrows raised in a we talked about this sort of manner. She dropped her hands to her sides.
"You're growing up, and it's time to start learning more about the businesses you'll acquire when you're old enough," he said, pushing some papers into an oblique manilla folder.
"You know our wealth is all thanks to the Capitol, he continued, "but sometimes the Capitol likes to... be a bit difficult."
He explained he was starting to be put under a little bit of surveillance and needs someone a bit more unsuspecting to make a delivery for him. Korinna stiffens, starting to realize what the delivery could be about.
"Just some documents about morphling shipments from district six, no big deal," he says with a chuckle, handing her the manila envelope and providing her the meeting instructions.
That's how she'd ended up leaning against a wall in an ally-way near the town center, keeping watch for someone who fits the description her father gave her, peacekeepers, or for one of the gangs she heard roams the district. It was the furthest out her father had let her go before without armed escort, so it certainly made a day of new experiences.
At the sound of approaching footsteps, she turns.
"Ajanie, right?" she says tentatively and clutches the bag at her side. If it's an undercover peacekeeper, her day was going to be ruined trying to bribe her way out of it.