~When the \Day/ Met the /Night\~{Kay}
Jun 26, 2011 23:16:09 GMT -5
Post by Deleted on Jun 26, 2011 23:16:09 GMT -5
/*\ If I owned this city, I'd make it behave /*\
If my hands could hold them, you'd see
I'd take all these secrets in me
And I'd move and mold them to be
Something I'd set free
[/justify][/size]Riley Lightwood was a ray of sunshine.
Or at least so people said, distant great-aunts and ten-times-removed cousins and family friends that were constantly on the outside looking in, never really understanding the intricacies of life underneath the pristine exterior of the Lightwood family. No one ever seemed to realize that while quiet smiles and gentle laughter were genuine for Riley, they didn't come easily, not after twelve long years of being mother and father and eldest brother all at once to six children. After six years of horror and pain inflicted by someone they all should have been able to trust. After murder.
Just because I don't want to think about it doesn't mean it ever goes away. It never does.
Riley was more like the moon than the sun.
He contemplated this as his fingers danced over the metallic strings of a fairly new acoustic guitar, a cool breeze ruffling his already-messy dark curls and sending them flying distractingly into his eyes. The moon had a quieter, more muted sense of radiance, a light surrounded by inky darkness that slowly smothered it in a repetitive cycle every month, much like his struggle to remain afloat in the oppressive fog that seemed determined to pull both him and his entire family back under into those dark days where nothing, even their survival, had been certain. Yes, the moon was a far more accurate comparison, he decided, callused digits plucking out a sweet but mournful melody into the air.
Going to the park hadn't been on the top of his to-do list, but Chyba had begged and pleaded for over an hour and so here he sat, strumming absently while his seven-year-old half brother played quietly in the mud nearby. Riley paid the boy enough attention to ensure that he wasn't doing anything overtly dangerous or putting anything in his mouth that he shouldn't (what was it with eating foreign objects?), but otherwise let his mind and eyes wander, taking in the park's many other inhabitants enjoying the pleasant summer afternoon.
Now that girl over there, she's far more like the sun than I'll ever be.
And she was. There were very few truly radiant people in the world, at least from Riley's somewhat jaded perspective, and the girl a few yards away was one of them, beautiful in that striking, memorable way that he had only seen a handful of times in his life (Keela's rare smiles, Avon laughing, the look in his mother's eyes as she told him once how proud his father would have been of him). She glowed, all defined features and rapidfire energy and bright, bright eyes that screamed nothing in this world will ever hold me down. She was one of those people that you had to stop and stare at, who could probably light up a room with so little effort that she never even realized what she was doing. Riley couldn't help but smile slightly as he looked away, focusing back on Chyba and on the song blooming beneath his fingers.
I wonder if there was ever a time when I was like her.
Maybe he had been, back in the first six years of his life when living had actually been pleasant instead of hellish or more lately, just tolerable, in that long-gone fantasy world that he sometimes liked to revisit. It was a nice place, this could-have-been life full of mothers who cared and fathers who never died, but thinking about it for too long sent a heavy sort of pain blossoming behind his sternum, so he shook his head slightly and threw all of his consciousness back into the music.
Riley didn't write music as much as he lived it, chords and melodies thrumming through his veins until they came to life on the strings. While there were countless notebooks littering his room full of of carelessly scrawled tablature and snippets of heavily scratched-out lyrics written and rewritten over and over again, he always worked best out of thin air, knitting songs together from his surroundings and anything that might have been running through his mind at a particular moment. And at this point in time Riley's mind was a swirling mess of responsibility and lingering darkness, the enviable freedom of the girl with the sunshine smile and I can't live like this anymore but I have to.
He couldn't sing. He was more than aware of this more as a result of his own objective view of his talents than the years of Antoinette screeching to shut up and that she was trying to sleep, dammit. But none. Oh sure, his pitch was fine, but Riley's voice would never be anything special, its tone simple and earthy, lacking anything distinctive that could give him any sort of description like being a good singer. And he was content with that, happy to trade in any potential vocal talent for the ability to work miracles with six strings and a few minutes to experiment. So while the underlying accompaniment of the impromptu composition was just as confident as always, any vocalization was half-voiced and halted, uncertain."I got troubled thoughts
And the self-esteem to match
What a catch, what a catch..."
Riley paused for a moment, chocolate-brown eyes blinking slowly as he evaluated the small snippet of improvised song. Never-ceasing digits still traveled arbitrarily over the strings as he sat in consideration, finally giving a wry smile and a small shake of the head to no one in particular. "God, that's depressing."
Isn't it always?
I want to darken in the skies
Open the floodgates up
I want to change my mind
I want to be enough