Spoke in a Voice that Distrupted the Sky // [Courtney+Guest]
Nov 26, 2023 22:36:59 GMT -5
Post by Baby Wessex d9b [earthling] on Nov 26, 2023 22:36:59 GMT -5
COURTNEY PERSIMMON
It was late on a Sunday night and all the good cows had already wandered on home.
There'd been a time in District Eleven when that meant every sleepy lean-to and every try-too-hard victor mansion had boarded up for the night. It wasn't just etiquette; some years it was just plain unsafe to be out after dark. It felt to her that the wind might be shifting that direction once more, that safety was an illusion, a blanket more privileged people like Katelyn Persimmon drew across their mind's eye.
For her part, Courtney always welcomed the coming of a storm.
Deep in the corner of Killian Telemachus' unmarked bar she perched on a stool and promised not to sing. The old assembled-from-scrap jukebox groaned an old-time piano tune. Arrayed on the high top table before her balanced four shot glasses: barrel-aged whiskey, grain alcohol from the next district over, small batch whiskey from the cellar and just a half shot of tequila. She didn't think it proper to ever pour a full glass of something that could kill ya.
The basement door shuddered and wheezed every time it opened and shut. It wasn't raining, not quite yet, but it would soon. Her pale eyes, so reminiscent of her cousin, snapped every time she felt the pressure change. And despite this vigiliance she didn't know him when he entered.
"Howdy stranger," she said, low and slow, when he filled the rest of her corner. "I didn't even properly recognize you. Thanks for comin'. I didn't know what your poison is these days but you better decide quick: we ain't stayin' long."
Liquored up and electrified Courtney threw open the door of the secret bar with a crack and led him up the stairs and into the maw of the approaching storm. She'd worn her very best dress - black velvet - and it seemed a shockingly poor choice given her plans. But then, that would be the Persimmon brand, hot ironed into her soul.
"Come, come," she whispered, letting the wind amplify her intonation. If she ran instead of flew across the square, Courtney could not have recounted. The only thing she would remember is the warm, steady, familiar feeling of his calloused hand in her own.
Beyond the market and victor's mansions Courtney finally slowed to take shelter in the lee of pillared building. The rain swept past them, coming just yet in fat droplets that took their time to fall. She pulled him close, fortified by the alcohol and the fact that he'd at long last said yes.
And there in the shelter of the mausoleum's columns, she proposed: "I thought we'd talk a little with some ghosts tonight."
[title from "let me sign" by robert pattison]