little miss salutatorian >> billie, 94
Jul 15, 2023 11:01:47 GMT -5
Post by Deleted on Jul 15, 2023 11:01:47 GMT -5
g r a d u a t i o n d a y .
Addiction be damned, she was getting this degree one way or another.
Some days she had big dreams, some days they felt so large they'd crush her whole. That she was too small to ever make it, her scarred arms struggling to hold herself up on her own but that's all she's wanted the past few years - to be alone. To make it on her own, to prove to herself that she could change things without a single hand out from someone else. Maybe it's that lingering trauma, her circle gets smaller each year and she pictures it cutting her own head off at the end of it all. Eventually she'll grow so cynical all that'll be left is this damn graduation gown, herself excluded from her own dreams.
Hey look, dad, I'm highest honors, little miss salutatorian. She sits second in her class of 538, twenty two year olds from all across Panem coming to District 6 all for the same cause and she beat all but one. It's funny, because nobody cares unless you're number one. She worked and worked and worked, and she still has the comforts of being in someone else's shadow - it's a boy from three, one of his parents is a CEO of a mega conglomerate for tech yet he wants to save lives. Don't we all, bud? Don't we all want to save someone? It's funny though, because mister valedictorian hates her guts. Has hated her since Microbial Genetics, thinks she's a nepo-baby who's only here because of Avriel.
Avriel, Avriel, Avriel. Cool.
She doesn't disagree - Billie doesn't talk much these days altogether. She feels as if she's growing too quick for District 6 to keep up, she feels suffocated by how many bodies are in this room. It's a grand stadium, only the best for the graduating class set up to honor that of Blessing Fenwick, and looking up she can count the empty seats on one hand. Still, enough empty seats for all the people she cares about; she pictures who she'd pick to fill them as she waits to give her speech. It's all memorized, some bullshit story about losing everything except hope.
Haha, hope. Here she is with a psychotic murderous brother who orphaned the both of them and a degree she almost killed herself for several times over, but there's always hopes for the future, kids. Unlike the rest of you, she's got hope, so she'll continue to do great things and go on to the Capitol and learn under the best, and have a great, prosperous future from the seeds she planted at 16.
Only she still fears she won't make it. Won't tell a single soul, won't go to therapy until she's 46 wondering why she's still so bitter at the world, and she's aware of this, too.
So she's twenty two with a bachelor's and the world in her palm, opportunities that 16 year old her never thought she'd stumble into, and she still hates her life. If anyone believes a word of her speech, she'd think them the dumbest motherfucker in her graduating class. Their leading director is gushing about their successes as the valedictorian points his family out of the crowd to her - now that the competition is over, it seems he couldn't give two shits about hating her anymore. Unfortunately, everything about him makes her bitter, so she the best she can fake is a half-muttered, "cool," as she looks for Flynn.
It's a pipe dream, she knows he's out in the Capitol, forced to do his victor duties but she craves one familiar face, one person to care about. One person to care about her, she pictures Duke out there somewhere. So small she can't even find him, but she's always been too much of a nihilist for hopeless delusions. Eventually, the director makes way for her to come on stage and deliver her speech, and she just knows the valedictorian's will be better. Something authentic, perhaps, from a boy who doesn't know what it's like to go up against the world and lose.
This is supposed to be the moment she wins, yet she's still just second place.
All eyes are on her, and she goes pale. Clammy is her steady hands as the words spill out of her. It's an out of body experience, if she forgot a word or a phrase she wouldn't even realize it. Be terrified of regret, she says as if it means anything to her. They are the body of the future, they are the children of the plague, nothing is more pivotal than the resilience it takes for them to change the world. How can she speak of it when she can't even change herself? She craves a needle, she craves a shadow, she craves to have her body back.
She misses her family, and no matter how hard she works, she'll never get it back.
But eventually it all does, the lights turn back on and her wandering spirit finds its way back to her chest by the time the applause cradles her. She lingers like a ghost until the moment passes, the words end and she forgets what to do next, feet planted at the podium as she absorbs the world celebrating her. Little miss salutatorian, she makes her way back to her seat and passes the proverbial baton to the valedictorian. He compliments her speech, she looks him in the eye without realizing she's crying. It's a silent few tears, she spends the rest of the evening looking at her feet. They don't say a word to one another.
Billie Baptiste takes her degree in stride once her name is called.
Well. At least that's over.