Equally Quiet & Uproarious // [Nixon]
Apr 16, 2012 15:10:42 GMT -5
Post by L△LIA on Apr 16, 2012 15:10:42 GMT -5
You are nearer than heaven
I get the feeling I get nearer by the day
I've seen the people go forever descending
It's when we're all inside
That summer's on the way
Reyes Moreno died today. He used to be my brother and so I cried, even though I couldn't recall a single memory he had ever given me that possessed a reason for sorrow. Maybe it's my old habit of loving people that never loved me back, simply because we shared something for a while — although perhaps little more than a last name and the air we breathed as we slept, inhaling the constant and heady scent of each other's endless fear — but it's difficult to say. At the 60th Reaping, I went sick and rigid as the name Moreno ricocheted through the air again and again. I recognized Reyes and Ezen's names, even though their faces were a blur of frantic memories: hide, fight, run, disappear, eat, sleep, repeat. Honestly, I can't remember if either of them ever attacked me or not and if they did it hardly matters to me. Other people would say that it should, that I ought to hold grudges and a desire for retaliation, but that has always been so much the opposite of the thoughts I hold within myself.
What I wanted was never a festering hatred. I suppose that's why I couldn't watch a single second of his Games, eyes squeezed shut on days of required viewing when I was forced to stand in front of television screens and bear witness to the violence of the Quell. At first I was terrified my defiance might be noticed, but I had spent years teaching myself how to be unnoticeable and so I faded into the crowd effortlessly. Besides, there were far more interesting things for people to look at than my closed eyelids. I know; I heard the wailing screams. Despite having the courage to refuse to watch the carnage Reyes both caused and that was inflicted upon him, the risk of boxing my ears with my hands to shut out the sound would have been too much. Although I wanted to. Desperately.Bullet took it easy
Dollar lit the room
Monsters making the evening news
Packing up a round trip
I get in the way
Over the past several days I had listened to him murder I don't even know how many children. Their death-rattle cries rang through my ears again and again, with scattered words that begged for life or at least temporary escape. One more day. One more hour. One more moment. Anything other than the nothingness of death.I could sympathize.They all just wanted a little more something and none of them got it, not in a place like that. Well, none of them except Julian Bryze. There was a part of me that thought Reyes might come home and the way that word twisted through my thoughts confused me even more than the idea that I was crossing my fingers for my not-brother brother (we shared so much blood, just never in our veins) to kill one last time and return to District One. He had resisted the soul-tug of death for so long that his life began to feel inevitable.
Today, I might have gone to listen to sounds of violence even if it weren't mandatory, but it was. Fighting — seeing it or feeling it; being near it or being a part of it — has become the very bane of my existence. If I am capable of true hatred, it has never been for any of my adopted siblings, who used to mercilessly slam their knuckles and knives into my too-soft body, but only for the act itself. If I could live my whole live without seeing another fist, I think I could die a happy man. However, this fight wassupposed to bedifferent. This was not going to be a fight to the death; it was going to be a fight to the life... Reyes' life.Now I know that
You are nearer than heaven
I get the feeling I get nearer by the day
I've seen the people go forever descending
It's when we're all inside that summer's on the way
Laughter swelled in my ears, filling up the dark that stretched out infinitely behind the shield of my eyelids, as a slur of words about dumpsters and picket fences fumbled awkwardly through my lack-of-understanding. According to the whispers and cries of the crowd of people pressing in on me from all sides of the District Square, Reyes Moreno was dying. Our District would have no victory this year — that was what they said. "It's my life, thank you very much." That was what they said, but it wasn't what I heard, not when those final words crackled out the speakers and across the whole of Panem. I had never felt so close to Reyes as I did then, listening to him die. He sounded happy and in the beat of silence that followed, I felt so proud.
There was a smile on my face, evidence of a sudden knowing that I wasn't the only Moreno who had realized we had a choice and found an opportunity to run away from our upbringing. Then, in wicked contradiction, the Capitol's music blared out to announce Julian Bryze as Victor and my grin vanished, eyes flashing open just in time to witness the final image of my brother's body sprawled across the blood red sand and exactly how well he matched it now. It sunk in quickly: Wrong. I was still the only Moreno who had escaped. Reyes was gone and before I knew what my own feet were doing, I was tearing through the crowd, hurling my body towards the empty streets beyond as the salt-burn of tears trickled down my cheeks. In despair, regret, or frustration, I wasn't sure, but I let them run free and shameless, hoping the souls of the day's dead might find the same kind of liberation.We could talk forever
Nothing would get done
Stake your claim
On the morning sun
I get in the way
By the time I returned to the house, sneaking in the back way so Ender and the other Lost Boys wouldn't see the tragedy etched across my face — puffy, bloodshot eyes or lips swollen and cracked with traces of blood from being bitten during useless attempts to choke back a sob — it was late and quiet. Stealthy as I am, the subtle creaks of my bare feet against the old flooring echoed bright and sharp through the hallways and it felt like ages before I managed to slip into my own room, a numb fragment of relief finding me as the door clicked shut and I leaned back against it. Eyes drifting closed, I took a moment to breathe in the familiar scent of graphite, tangy and metallic, and the way I was certain I could feel the lush scenery drawn over the door's surface coming to life beneath my touch. With a shaking exhalation, the last dredges of grief began to escape from the corners of my eyes, punctuated by a series of stuttering hiccups.
It wasn't until I heard that telltale creak of the floorboards that I realized I wasn't alone. In less time than it took for my eyes to flick open, my spine straightened out to bring me to my full height — someone as lanky as I am is rarely seen as intimidating, but hunched shoulders and a bowed head never struck fear into anyone — and my hands began pawing roughly at my cheeks, shepherding away whatever evidence of tears they could find. With my jaw clenched, jutting up with an almost predatory defiance, and my eyebrows furrowed with enough alarm to turn my forehead into a labyrinth of creases, I was a flawless picture of Moreno instinct, every hint of vulnerability repressed with an abrupt and almost violent shift in my stance. Habit. I'm not sure who I expected to find, standing atop the tufts of grass I had carefully rendered onto the floor and beneath a canopy of false stars drawn into imaginary constellations across the chipped ceiling. Another Moreno from my past, perhaps, here to haunt me relentlessly. History told me there would be a threat awaiting me, not Ender's newly found little sister.Now I see that
You are nearer than heaven
I get the feeling I get nearer by the day
I've seen the people go forever descending
It's when we're all inside that summer's on the way