Never, Neverland {Neverland plot}
Feb 22, 2012 22:47:57 GMT -5
Post by Rosetta on Feb 22, 2012 22:47:57 GMT -5
[/i] Growing up. The words were much too hideous for him to even say out loud. What had happened to the days when he could cause mischief and no one would think much of it, saying it was his age? What about those times when he could talk for hours without end and people were listen and nod along, never wishing him to be quiet? What had happened to those days when his chin was smooth and his voice matched with that of the birds'? Peter cast his eyes away from the mirror propped up against the truck of the tree he'd climbed and down towards the ground where his friends were playing some kind of game of catch with a pinecone. All boys were the exception of a tiny girl who called herself Tinkerbell, Peter envied them for their youth, their ability to retain it. Or perhaps they were just as secretive about the changes as Peter, hence the reason he was hidden among the green leaves and branches. The air was still cool, but it was warming up. The wind, though biting at times, no longer seemed to both Peter as it blew through his bright red hair. In fact, it calmed him, spreading over his skin and slowing his heart rate. He had to calm down. The hair was gone. He'd plucked it out.Peter Herne
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If he could look into the future, Peter Herne would find what had caused him to go into District Five and leave with a little more than a story would be the hair on his chin. Dark red and longer than the ones he usually found, Peter spied it as he was peering into the dusty cracked mirror he kept in his bag. Hair on the chin was a rather usual occurrence for one of Peter's age, but rather than cause the usual effect: a straightened back, a superior smile and a saunter in one's step, it caused Peter's breath to catch in his throat and his heart to skip a beat. Quickly, his hands flew to his face and his dirty fingernails groped at the hair until, with a sharp prick, it had been yanked from his chin. His back relaxed, but, yet, Peter was still not satisfied. This wasn't the first time he'd found a hair.
It had started with a hair. A single hair on his chin. He'd plucked it, but like some disease, the hair had spread to under his arms, his legs, his chest and places he didn't even realize were possible to grow hair on. His voice was soon to follow. A horror it was to realize one day that his voice was slightly lower than it was the day before. The changes in his voice had been so slight, he didn't even notice it until one day when he tried to mimic the singing of the birds and heard his too-low voice crack, scaring the birds away. There were other changes too, but Peter would always blame the hair.
And he'd just found another one, only days after plucking and plucking all those others, once more sending him reeling towards the painful truth: he was growing up.
Eyes travelling back towards the ground, Peter watched the pinecone fly threw the air in the forest clearing. They'd stopped in yet another clearing for the day, hidden amongst the tall trees that formed a canopy above their heads. The sun was low in the sky, marking the late afternoon, dying the clouds a soft pink in the otherwise serene blue. The wind wasn't slowing or dying, just soothing Peter's skin, cooler than a blanket, but still effective. His mind, before racing for an answer, an idea, a cure, found itself dangling over one idea. Why didn't he go play with them? Stop hiding himself and reveal his now clear chin. The pink clouds drifted lazily over head. And...and...perhaps when night fell... Glancing around the trunk, towards the rest of the forest, the tree tops waving at him in the breeze, Peter couldn't see the fence, but he knew it was there. He knew that there was a hole in that fence and he knew that beyond that hole was a house and he knew that in that house were words. Special words. Certain kinds of words that could fill a child's heart up and possibly save him from his curse. Make him feel like a kid again. Just for a little while.
A shout arose from the game below, soon followed by more shouts, an argument. Peter turned his attention back to them. He'd take Tinkerbell, his most faithful companion. They'd go under that fence and to that house and listen for those words, let them fill their heads, soft, warm and golden. And then, and only then, he'll be a child again, with a smooth, hairless chin and a voice that matched the birds'...
Stars winked at them as they crept through the streets. Charles had always told him that the stars were just fairy dust, thrown into the sky. "Get ahold of some fairy dust," Charles told him, "and you'll be able to fly." Now, Peter turned his eyes towards the glittering fairy dust, paying his respects to his brother, before looking away, the memories of his lost brother sending painful jabs through his heart. Houses were silent, but lit up as the two went past. Inside, families would be preparing for bed, their bellies warm and full with dinner. With a jolt, Peter Herne saw the house up ahead and hurried towards it. It was a modest thing, but quaint nonetheless. It was the kind of house Peter would want to live in if the forest wasn't an option. It was just...comfortable.
"This way," Peter whispered to Tinkerbell, tip-toeing around the back of the house. There, he glanced up towards the upstairs window, which was aglow with golden light, spilling out into the dark-blue night. The window, just as he hoped, was slightly open, conveniently above a patch of ivy, just strong enough for Peter to climb. With hesitation, he dug his fingers into the ivy and began to climb, feet catching into holds in the plant before he reached the window. Glancing inside, he found the nursery empty. But, he knew not for long. Hastily, Peter climbed inside and ducked behind the large bookcase in the room, his usual hide out to await the stories.
Although he knew otherwise, Peter hoped that the journey into the fantasy world of fairies, dragons, distressed maidens, heroes and castles would transform him. That it would smooth his chin once and for all, raise the octaves of his voice just a little higher and make him the person he once was, the person he longed to be forevermore, the person he knew he was at heart even if his body disagreed. A child.[/color][/size][/blockquote]