Shades of .:Grey:. {Lydie}
Sept 11, 2011 20:16:38 GMT -5
Post by Morgana on Sept 11, 2011 20:16:38 GMT -5
Theron Rells
This has been going on too long.
Things rarely stay exactly the way you leave them, but you always hope it will be. You hope you'll come home and find out that your father isn't dead, your mother isn't crazy, and your brother's still perfect. but most of all, you hope you haven't changed. It's easier to believe everyone and everything else has changed while you have remained constant, but in most cases, that's just not true. Chances are, you've changed the most of all. When I came home, I don't know what I was expecting. I knew Dad was dead. He always would be. All my running these past four years hasn't changed that fact at all. Mom's mind had been going when I left, but I thought she'd still be doing okay when I got home. But Fledger, always perfect in his ways, had assured me she was too far gone. She couldn't remember who she was some days, she attacked Fledger because she thought he was a thief invading her home. He told me there wasn't anything he could do for her, so he sent her away to be taken care of by someone else. Fledger had effectively wiped his hands of her.
But that wasn't the only change I found. My room had been taken over by some drunk, the father of Fledger's girlfriend, River. I didn't like River from the start. It was her that had driven Mom out of the house, of that I'm certain. She had manipulated Fledger somehow so she could make room for herself, her father, and the baby she was expecting. Brooke was born a few weeks before I came home. She sleeps in Fledger's room with him and River. I can tell Fledger loves his daughter. He's a good father. I never liked him much as a brother, but I can see it in his eyes whenever he looks at little Brooke. He's not going to let her get hurt.
I've been reduced to sleeping on the couch. Not that I do that much sleeping anyway. It's hard to even close my eyes at night, knowing that the images I try so hard to keep locked away during the day will just come flooding out. I'm tired of reliving that nightmare. Tonight, I don't think I'd be able to fall asleep even if I wanted to. My arm's twitching too much, refusing to give me so much as the hope of a good night's sleep. Maybe it's a blessing in disguise. I'm sick of waking up to hear Fledger's door creak open, see him stick his head out and ask if I'm okay. He wouldn't know about the nightmares at all, except I shout when they come. I hate that he knows there's something wrong. I hate that he thinks he can fix it.
I roll off the couch and slip on my well-worn shoes. It's been cold the last few nights, so I grab a jacket from a chair nearby and put it on. I don't know where I'm going, but I need to get out. I've been stuck inside this house far too long. I keep telling Fledger I want to get a job to help pay for things. If I make enough money, I might be able to convince him it would be okay to bring Mom home. But Fledger won't even let me look for a job. He just keeps telling me to wait, but for what, I don't know.
Slowly, I pull the door open and slip outside, closing it softly behind me. I let my feet carry me wherever they want to go. Once I realize I'm headed for the ocean, I want to turn back. I don't want to be here. The memories will come back to me, and I've tried too hard to keep them at bay. They aren't even memories of the ocean, but of another place, far from here. A place where, for a time, I was happy. The place where, inevitably, my nightmares began.
My shoes make imprints in the sand as I walk down to the shoreline. I should turn around and walk back home, but that place doesn't exist anymore. It's Fledger's home now, and I'm just a stranger, invading his world. The last place that was anything close to a home for me is gone now, just a mess of shattered glass and dying bodies. I pull off my shoes and roll up my pants as I step into the water. I let it push at me, pull at me. A wind rolls off the surface and blows into my face. Closing my eyes, I try to figure out what was ever innocent about the world. It's cold and cruel. It eats you and spits you out. It takes what it wants from you, then throws you in the rubble pile. It gives you something good, just so it can laugh at you when it rips it away. I won't let the world hurt me anymore. And I won't let anyone else sacrifice something for me.
Someone is shaking you, trying to wake you up. You try to shrug it off at first. You've been up late the past few nights, doing work for Milo. You don't want to disappoint him. You really like it here, and you don't want to mess this up. "Come on Theron, you have to go, you have to
You stop fast. There are Peacekeepers here. One holds a dagger to Milo's throat. He spots you and Desiree. His eyes are wild. These creatures are his life's work, his passion, but at this moment he cares more about you. You don't understand why he's doing this, why he's risking his life for you. You don't deserve it. He screams at you to run, but you can't move. Not until you see the red jewels come spilling from his neck, not until you hear Desiree's earth-shattering scream. Then you run. You run so fast and hard, you don't dare stop until you reach the edge of the district. You have to leave, but you don't want to. Desiree's saying that she can't come with, her family would worry. You want to make her come anyway. You don't think you know how to live alone anymore. But maybe it's better that she stays behind. Maybe the horrors will fade faster this way.[/i]
My eyes snap open. The memories always come without warning, shaking me hard. Desiree's scream echoes still in my mind, two years later. I still see Milo's wild eyes as he stares into the face of death. My arm's trembling harder now, shaking more than it ever has before. I grab at it, try to make it stop. And suddenly, my legs don't want to take me to shore. They want to take me out, further and further until the waves close over my head. But surrendering to that would mean that the two of the people I love most in the world have died in vain. I have to keep living, no matter how hard it is, because that's the only way I can make it up to them. It's the only way I can live with myself.
I head back to the shore, sitting down ten feet from the waves. I envy how the waves can be so careless. They don't make mistakes, because they can't. Not like people. But how do you know when you've made a mistake and when you've done something right? You can never know what would have happened had you chosen a different path. There's no way of telling where a road leads until you reach the end of it. And once you're there, all you can do is look back at your footprints and pray you've done the right thing. Was running the right thing? Or should I have accepted my fate then and there? Should I have let the Peacekeepers take me? They got me in the end. All I accomplished by running was stall the inevitable. Maybe, by running, I gave myself the chance to be stronger, to prepare myself for the Detention Center. I gained the time I needed to build up the walls around me, so no one else gets hurt.
There's one thing I know for certain was a mistake, and that was going back to District Six. If I hadn't gone back, Desiree would still be alive. I'd still be running, and Fledger would still be pretending I didn't exist. I know why I went, though.
This had been going on too long.
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