[8th] The Reaping - District 7
Apr 16, 2023 19:24:58 GMT -5
Post by thompson harvard - d2b - arc on Apr 16, 2023 19:24:58 GMT -5
says hearsI miss having family outings. I miss having a family that did things as a whole unit, not halves like they are now. We used to go out all the time together. Once dad got sick, though, everything changed. It was Lu and our mom and then me and dad. It wasn't like... a total pair between us two, either. That's what I've gotten the most jealous of. Dad's body is so tired by now that all he can stay awake for is food, water, medicine if needed, and some long-winded story about how he misses when he was young. "You should get on out there someday, kid," he says it to me like I'm some random kid off of the street. Dad stifles a sob, just like any other time he tries to inspire me to get into the world. "Before long, you'll he coughs, his lungs hardly able to withstand the pressure. The asthma attack lasts a few minutes before he can speak again. "You'll be stuck in a bed like me." I wish I could, but I just can't. It's my life to watch over him. It's hard to predict my life once he's dead. When I leave the house now, it's to pick up medicine. Even then, I'm alone.
The only time I leave the house with her anymore is for the Reaping. And our parents don't join us. Dad is so bedridden that if he stands up, he'll pass out. What we've done the past few years is that mom wakes us up, we get ready, and then our uncle gets us escorted to the town square for the ceremony.
"Come on, Lu, get up!" I slam on her door as I finish buttoning up my shirt. Mom had already awakened us both, but time was dissipating. Before long, the PeaceKeepers would be banging on our door to do the sweep for children hiding away. She likes to take her time getting ready. But I just want to get outside, which should not be excitable given the circumstances.
It's nice to have our uncle being the one to take us there. It's like a middle ground, in a way. If Mom went, she'd hold Lu's hand as they used the sidewalk. I'd be stuck walking on the grass. I take a few minutes before I knock on her door again, yelling to get her ass moving, before I join our uncle outside. The morning was still young, the sky painted a soft yellow mixed with blues. Our house is farther than most from the square, so walking there took some time. And the sooner you got there, the sooner you're at an exit aisle. My uncle stood outside with his hands in his pockets. His lips pressed together as he's stuck waiting - I feel bad that he has to take us there. "Sorry, sir. She'll be out any second." Or at least I think she will.