god, i hate shakespeare [ rotten ]
Sept 25, 2024 9:49:05 GMT -5
Post by thompson harvard - d2b - arc on Sept 25, 2024 9:49:05 GMT -5
He finds it hard to believe a book offers him anything worthwhile in the Games. But it offers him a taste of home, which, admittedly, he’s much more interested in. Thompson knows that his chances of winning a fight are small. So why not indulge himself in intellectual knowledge rather than physical? The new addition must mean something unless they’re just looking to sort out the brain from the brawn.
Which is also possible. Make the betting easy, you know?
When the boy steps into the hall, it’s much larger than he’d expect for a typical stay in the capitol. The tall ceilings, the curving gold and white; this was like some sort of fantasy novel that the Harvard home had stored away in their tower. It’s all open (for the most part); three levels, getting softer in volume as academics get higher. Thompson feels attracted to the grandeur of the entire building. He finds it hard to imagine that any other spot in the training center was worth it. To a boy with little to say but lots to write, he likes that it’s all on paper for him.
He takes his time scouring the books. He enjoys the smell of new, a relatively new scent in an upbringing of flea markets, trade shows, and hand-me-downs. The way that the books feel so crisp to hold, resistant to open. The pages are comfortable in their form. They’re untouched by the world, and he’s jealous of that vulnerability. His hands trace every bind, every page, every inscription on the hardcovers.
Eventually, his hands find a cover that intrigues him. Something about some outlaw who lives in the woods. Thompson follows the staircases back down to the bottom floor. The boy wishes there were other places to hide and read and avoid all sorts of interaction with people. What’s the purpose of reading with a group? He’d rather keep that information, the jewels of literature to himself. It’s their choice to read it. After all, if they were that interested, they could have claimed the piece themselves. His thought lingers as if there aren’t hundreds, thousands of literary pieces surrounding them.
On the bottom floor, a boy sits in the corner. Maybe that was the designated tribute area, and regardless, the proximity may help form some sort of association with each other. He approaches but doesn’t claim a seat yet. It was better to ask before being seen an inconvenience. ”Can I sit here?" He holds the book in his hands, shifting awkwardly from side to side. ”I’m uh, Thompson, or Thomas, whatever you want to call me." Besides loser of course. He hopes that this other tribute hasn’t seen his national failure.