The Lucky Ones // Charity
Sept 17, 2012 16:46:47 GMT -5
Post by kneedles on Sept 17, 2012 16:46:47 GMT -5
[T a l l o w T a n s y}
{S c u t c h e r T a n s y}
The Lucky Ones
"Singing oh, the hazards of love
You'll learn soon enough
The prettiest whistles won't wrestle the thistles undone..."
You'll learn soon enough
The prettiest whistles won't wrestle the thistles undone..."
I
[/color]Years passed, shaping the world in strange new ways, but the reaping day routine never changed. Momma cooked sausages for breakfast, even during dark times like these. They hadn’t eaten properly in weeks, eking out what was left of the meat Tallow had won when she’d entered the beauty pageant at the fair, but their momma stubbornly kept the sausages aside for today. As though she were frightened that daring to serve something different would spoil all of the years of good luck, that their survival, being passed over each year was tied so carefully in the routine. Their fates sealed up in sausage casing. Today, Scutcher was glad that she had done, glad that there was something heavy and hearty in his stomach even if the fear made it swim and churn up uncomfortably. Tallow needed a good meal more than he did, he observed, marking the pale edge of her skin, tinged with a little cold sweat, the tiredness in her eyes. She was frightened, perhaps more so than any other reaping before. Scutcher didn’t know much, but he was almost certain he knew the reason why.
She knelt behind him now, while Scutcher sat dirtying up the tepid water in the battered tin bathtub, her hand delicate against his neck like spiders’ webs. Blades swiping together filled his ears and the ends of loose curls fell against his shoulders as she trimmed his hair, humming something softly while she worked. He recognised it, an old folk lullaby from out east that their father used to use to soothe them when they were children, and slurred loudly when he’d had too much to drink now. It was a sad one, as old folk songs from out east always seemed to be. Tallow didn’t sing well; voice as thin as string, wavering over notes, straining to catch the higher ones and never quite managing it-but there was a lightness in her voice that made the bitterness taste somehow sweeter. The mistakes made her human, like he could hear blood and bone behind her voice. Scutcher thought about losing her today, Tallow’s name being pulled from the bowl, having to watch her on the big screens alone in the district square, watch her frightened and crying in the arena before bleeding out onto the sand calling out for his name and Scutcher knew that he couldn’t go through it again. Not after Noreen, the wound where she’d been ripped away from him still so raw and open, not to Tallow.
“You should tell dad to go sit an’ spin, you know,” she started idly, cupping his chin to still his head while he scrubbed at the dirt under his nails. He never managed to get it all out completely, and Scutcher was pleased for that- pig farmers were always supposed to be dirty and it felt as though washing away all of the dirt meant washing away all of himself too. “Look for a job someplace else- a government farm, just for a little while. After today, you’re a man, Noodle, you’ll be done with school and you can go wherever you want.”
Freedom. It was so close that Scutcher could almost taste it, though he still couldn’t quite comprehend what it meant. No one could ever be really free in district ten- not when there were walls keeping them in, their bellies and their bodies needing money, needing food and their hearts keeping them tethered to lovers, to family and the not so long dead. He was eighteen experiencing his last reaping, no more standing in the district square like animals awaiting slaughter, no more trembling hands, no more hunger games; stepping away from the cusp of manhood and clearly onto the other side. Perhaps this afternoon he would feel differently but for now Scutcher felt the same- as confused as always, really. Not at all like a boy about to be, at long last, what they all said was free. You can go wherever you want, her words echoed in his brain. But where else was there? The corrugated metal walls of the Tansy families’ home, the rotting wooden fence posts that encircled their land and the oval sheet metal pig huts sitting in the yard like tin cans half submerged into an ocean of muck and mud was the only life that Scutcher knew.
Besides, Tallow was only fifteen. She still had three years left to go, and how could he be free when she wasn’t?
“Stay at one of them halfway houses for a while- I’d come visit you all the time. Every day. And then, when you get your own place, I’ll come and live with you. It’ll be just you and me,properly.”
He couldn’t help but worry on his lip, thinking that his sister’s plans may be a little premature, like they may be tempting fate. Tallow had a way about her, of speaking, of tilting her head and smiling ever so slightly that made him want things- he didn’t doubt that she could make other people want things too in much the same manner- and there was nothing unattractive about her proposal really. Scutcher loved the pigs but two thirds of them were dead now, carried off by illness, and he had no real ties to the house, not really. It was a miserable place with nothing but misery right at the foundations and the only real light in any of it was Tallow. Escaping the shouting, the boozing and the beatings with her, finding a small room in town- even if it was nothing much, even if there was no land, no space to raise even one pig- where they could grow flowers on the window sill and cuddle close at night without having to leave each other the minute that the dawn rose, was a pleasant proposition. Wonderful, even. But they were the Tansy kids, wonderful things didn’t happen to them; there was always sorrow lurking at the very bones of them, deep within the blood of how they were made. What about Momma, what about keeping this place going, what about today? Tallow wiped the hairs from his shoulders and made him so very happy that Scutcher felt sure something was going to take her away from him. Reaching up, he caught her hand in his before it could move away from his shoulder, turning around to look at her.
“Did you think I wouldn’t know?” he demanded in a strained voice. “I looked in the rent jar. There was a hundred and sixty dollars extra last week. I didn’t put it in, momma didn’t neither and dad would’ve sooner taken a hundred and sixty out.”
“I sold some makeup. Did a bit of work here and there, sold off a bit of meat,” his sister shrugged, sitting back on her knees. Lies tumbled out of her mouth as easy as each breath and there was no shift in her tone, not a single flicker on her face. Scutcher would have believed her so readily were it not for the numbers, which never could lie.
“A hundred and sixty dollars, Tallow,” was all he could repeat feebly, gaping at her with his mouth open. It was a lot of money, practically a fortune to them now, but it still wasn’t nearly enough. Not for her. She was supposed to be the smart one, the safe one. And risking your life for a hundred and sixty dollars, taking out tesserae and having your name entered more times than it needed to be didn’t seem smart at all, more like something Scutcher would have done. “Why?”
“I sold the year’s supply of grain I get for one tessera for forty whole dollars and I got all the money up front. So I did it as many times as I could. For childless couples, those with kids too old or too young. When was the last time either of us made a hundred and sixty dollars that easily in a couple hours?”
“Why?”
“I won’t have Elias own you,” she said firmly. “It’s worth it to help with the debt. You take out tesserae all the time, Scutcher. You like math don’t you? Who’s got the better odds, me or you?”
“Tal…your life…” he sighed, holding her hand tighter, pulling Tallow around the edge of the bath so he could look at her properly without having to twist. Fifteen years old, with wise sharp eyes, striking features and hair that framed her face like a crown. Everyone thought that she was so strong, and if she did get reaped he didn’t doubt that she would be the kind of tribute district ten put money on- but she wasn’t nearly as strong as everyone thought, because there were parts of her- secret parts that were as soft and as fragile as the underside of a baby rabbit. Scutcher skated his thumb against the corner of her mouth, delicate as a tipped buttercup, across her cheek before threading it through her hair, “there aint enough money, or oil, or grain in the world…”
“My life’s worth exactly the same as yours, down to the last penny,” was her reply, kissing his wrist and leaning forward to press her temple to his. “We’re the same… one person. “ Scutcher pulled her closer, feeling her breath on his lips first, then hers against his, her tongue sliding against his teeth, “You hurt, I hurt,” she broke the kiss to whisper against his mouth, soft as a sigh but heavy in her chest over the sound of their breath rising. One of her hands, cold and delicate slid against his chest, still damp and shimmering from a layer of soap while the other pushed down the straps of her nightdress. “You bleed, I bleed.” The dress slipped down her body and she grasped his head in both hands, kissing along his jaw, her eyes slipping shut as his hands found her breasts sliding a thumb across her nipple, small and hard like the pearl cupped inside of an oyster. Tallow bit down on her smile as soft keening escaped her lips.“You come, I come,” she whimpered as she slipped into the tub, moving on top of him, writhing, wet and wily like a slick minnow in a stream.
The swirling water spilled over the sides of the tub, pooling in puddles on the floorboards.
“You die, I die.”
They were later than usual to get dressed, but even then it felt too soon. The hours leading up to the reaping were always agonising, spent pacing with sweating palms and trembling knees before being herded like cattle into pens in the district square. Each second that passed in a limp, dragging crawl was yet another second of torture and perhaps they did it on purpose- to heighten the drama, so things were more interesting in the capitol, so people in the districts were more afraid. You wouldn’t think it to look at the Tansy children though, changing in silence and grinning guiltily whenever one turned round to look at each other, as though the smiles were stolen. Scutcher leaned over, briefly planted a kiss on her shoulder blade before she slipped her dress over her head. There might not have been anything outside of their room, no sign of names in bowls or lingering threats of death to be found playing on their lips and in the corners of their mouths. On the surface at least.
Scutcher couldn’t make his buttons work, fumbling with sticky trembling fingers until she saw him struggling, smoothed away his mistakes, fixed up his shirt for him the way she fixed up everything. She was wearing a dress the colour of buttermilk- the same one that she’d worn to the reaping last year, when Noreen Lexington left his life for good taking all the flowers and light and goodness with her. He couldn’t help but see it as some kind of ill omen.
Something in Tallow did too, as she hissed sharply, hands coming to twine up around her stomach. Scutcher started forwards immediately, while her eyes clenched up with the pain but she put her hand out to his chest to stop him “Just a cramp, it’s fine, I’m fine,” she gasped, fingers curling around his shirt. “Just give me a second….”
Was it nerves, Scutcher wondered, feeling his own stomach clench. It affected everyone in different ways, whether it was sweating, and twitching, feeling intense pain in their heads or in their guts. He was sure that when they got to the district square every person standing there would be hurting in their own way.
“I never liked sausages.” Straightening up, she tried to laugh it off, stepping into him, flapping butterfly hands drifting up to his body. “Perfect,” Tallow smiled, brushing his shoulders, tucking his shirt into his pants.
“Here…” she went to her dresser and plucked up the other part of the routine. The flowers were different from the last time, Scutcher remembered the little violet heart’s ease pinned to his chest falling in the dirt when Noreen was reaped and the flower was spoilt for him forever now, it meant death more than any other. Wisely, Tallow had picked something different; pale blue flowers with a ring of yellow around the centre. Forget me nots. “Matches your eyes don’t you think? “She smiled, pinning hers first to her dress the colour of buttermilk. Forget me nots for remembrance, as though he needed any help to remember the dead.
When she went to pin his own flower to the breast pocket of his shirt, Scutcher wrapped his arms around her, burying his face into her hair. She smelt of talc, of cigarette smoke and lemon disinfectant.
“Mind out! I’ll stick you with the pin,” Tallow laughed, but softened in his grip. It wasn’t enough though, he couldn’t hold her close enough, for long enough- not today. Three years had come and gone of Tallow being eligible, and that went double for himself. But after Noreen died, it had stopped being a dream- one day in the year that passed like a shadow going over them, dark for a few brief seconds before the sun came out and they forgot about the night, about how hopeless and desolate it could be- and turned into something real, something darker still and impossible to forget.
“When Noreen…I didn’t go to her…I never got to say goodbye and now…”
“You won’t say goodbye to me neither,” said Tallow drawing away to face him, a stern edge to her voice. “Why would you ever need to? There’s nothing in the entire world that would keep me away from you,” She leaned up, breath heavy, mouth poised to press him into one of those deep, searching kisses that could rob a man of air, words and all of his senses when a voice called from along the hall.“Tallow…take your brother- you’ll be late if you don’t start now!” Their frustration was a collective sigh, and she drew away from him.
“How should I take my brother, momma dear?” Tallow said softly to the door, a wicked gleam in her eye. “Later,” she smiled, with utter conviction that there would be one. Scutcher was not so sure.
II
[/color]It was always the same; years did not alter it, seasons didn’t weather its constancy. Life could spiral beyond all control, they might fill the square with blood but just as day follows night there would always be the reaping. Familiarity didn’t exactly make it better, and Scutcher could safely say he wouldn’t miss this; all of them hanging from hooks like the pigs back at the farm, life in the oh-so precarious balance, waiting for the metal glint of steely knives. Though it never seemed to come.
‘Ladies first…’ came the usual sound, marking the point where Scutcher would bow his head into his chest and repeat the mantra, like a prayer, like the chorus of a desperate song, ‘not Tallow, please, not Tallow’ never not himself, that didn’t matter. Lydie Masonna. The name was not hers and he felt sick with the relief that overtook him, so powerful that he could barely stand, couldn’t feel sad for the girl who went instead of her and every other girl in the district, each of them loved by someone, each of them with someone to miss and to mourn when they were gone. His elation was purely selfish, purely theirs and in this moment Scutcher didn’t care one bit.
Damion Winters, followed, another name and face he didn’t know. That made it so much easier to be relieved and though he might have noted for a second how easily the boy went to die, the tributes didn’t strike him at the core or leave him screaming in the dirt the way that last year had.
Yes…I’ll do it, he imagined saying to Tallow, riding so high on a wave of relief that he forgot about all his responsibility and ties to the Tansy farm. I’ll start looking for a job and then you’ll come with me. We’ll be free- to start over and start life properly.
They waited until the tributes had vanished behind the door, of course they did- out of respect, but more so than any other pen in the square, the one holding the eighteen year olds erupted with silent elation, and though no one cheered you could just tell that a lot of them were thinking it. “It’s done, man, it’s done,” he heard behind his ears, back slapping, friends embracing into brief hugs- timid with the peacekeepers present and the soft sniffling and low weeping of children for their new dead. But they couldn’t help it, it was like being cleared of a disease that could have killed. Later they would descend on the bars in town, the lucky ones, and drink themselves into stupors but for now they beamed, feeling slightly guilty for it but doing so all the same. “We made it, Tansy,” said a boy he’d never spoken more than two words to in his life, but who now ruffled his hair as though they were kin. “ Lucky fucking bastards, all of us, we made it. Out the other side of the tunnel.” And here on the other side, everything was illuminated.
After the reaping, Tallow went out with her friends and didn’t come home til much later- that was another part of the routine and for the first time Scutcher wanted to join her; crammed into some dive bar in town with watered down beer that stuck to the sticky tables waiting for a fight to break out to remind everyone that they were so alive. They might raise a glass to the tributes, depending on how well everyone knew them, perhaps solemnly, perhaps disrespectfully saying ‘better you than me.’ And Scutcher would raise a glass to Noreen, in thank you for keeping him safe, recalling what she’d told him on that strange night with Naif and needles and a strange buzzing wonderful feeling that he can’t quite remember and will probably never be able to recapture again; I have a new home...and some day after you've lived a wonderful and long and happy life then you can come with me. But not yet, you're too special to leave everyone. Too strong. They need you more than me. Drug induced stupor or not, he was certain she’d been the one protecting him today.
His sister might not want him along though and Scutcher didn’t want to be a burden, so he figured he’d check with her first. As they tramped out of their pens, in an atmosphere so much lighter where it had been heavy with fear and tinged with sweat beforehand, Scutcher made his way towards were the fifteen year olds were. Normally, people couldn’t wait to get out of the district square as soon as the reaping was over but for some reason the girls in the pen were still huddled around, their backs turned away from Scutcher, encircling something like a secret. Before the peacekeepers could come over to poke their noses in and make them disperse, Scutcher sluiced through the crowd, standing heads and shoulders above the girls so he could try and pick out Tallow from the tops of heads, their hair all neatly parted and combed for today, just to get her out of trouble.
The girls in district ten that hadn’t been reaped were flushed with life, dirt scrubbed from their cheeks to reveal the round rosy apples beneath. Their lips were parted like petals unfurling, nervous chatter slipping between their teeth as they held their secret tight in a huddled pack, in a way that girls often would and that Scutcher always thought unfathomable.
He found his sister at the epicentre of the circle; like she was the sun and the girls around her were planets and constellations drawn in by the pull of her gravity. She even looked like a dying star, not the kind that explodes into a swirling supernova with a burst of light but one that begins to go cold from the inside out, on the floor, curled up, clutching her stomach, pale as a sheet and clammy with sweat, her colours fading so that she began to turn to sepia, like an old photograph of herself.
For a minute he didn’t think that it could be his sister at all, Tallow who was so fierce, so brave, full of colour and so…almost infallible at times it was as though there was no storm she couldn’t weather, no hardship too great for her to at least deal with. I win, I always win, he could hear her crowing after some race, to the edge of their land when they were kids. And she was right. Tallow would never ever end up on the floor in front of so many people. She’d never cry like that in public or show anyone she was weak, would never ever show anyone how much she was hurting.
“What are you staring at you fuckers?” he heard her mumble between gritted teeth and, as he pushed through the crowd to crouch beside her knew that it couldn’t be anyone else. The first though he had was that she’d been stabbed; close to the ground, he could see the blossom of blood sticking to the skirt of her buttercup yellow dress and for a moment he wondered if this was some kind of dream he was having. But she felt real enough, twining a cold hand around his arm. “Fuck,”he just about heard her gasp over the roaring of blood in his ears, “Fuck it hurts. Fuck. Fuck. Fuck.” It must have been a wave of pain that made her dig her nails into his flesh, hard enough to draw blood, but he took it- if it passed on the pain she was feeling right now into him then he would take it for a hundred years if he had to. “Take me home, Scutcher…” she began to shiver, a line of tears starting to fall down her face. “I don’t feel well, take me home.”
“I seen this happen before,” he heard a girl say behind him, in a strange smoky sort of voice for someone so young but he didn’t turn to look, running a desperate hand through his sister’s hair. It’s gonna be okay Tal, you’re gonna be fine and we’re gonna move out of the farm and go live together and our lives are about to start properly. Please be okay. “My neighbour’s appendix just bust one day…weren’t nothing no one could do after that. Not here.”
“It aint her appendix, she wouldn’t be bleedin’ from there. It’s a tumour for sure. People get tumours and just start bleeding out.”
“Shut up,” he snapped sharply to those that circled them, girls high on the fact that they hadn’t been reaped and now desperate to see more blood before the games began. Tumours, burst appendixes and all other kinds horrific, almost certainly fatal in district ten, medical disorders started to whirl and hurtle against the sides of his brain but he couldn’t think about that now, not when he couldn’t afford to panic, when he had to do all that he could to save his sister. It’s not supposed to be like this. This isn’t how today is supposed to go. We’re safe now…the reaping is over. “Tal, it’s okay, we’re gonna get you a healer,” he said softly, sweat pooling beneath the curls on his head, wrapping his arm around her waist to help her to her feet.
“No, no healer,” she wailed, leaning into him. “I don’t need no healer.…we can’t afford Ahhh Fuck,” a cry wrapped around a sob escaped her throat, and Scutcher gripped on harder, pressing his nose into her hair and shutting his eyes tight. Every time she cried in pain he wanted to cry out with it too, a desperate painful spike hitting his heart. “I’m sorry Tal, I’m sorry,” he whispered. “I’m gonna take you home. I promise. You just gotta walk a little. ” Staggering he could hear her whimpering softly, as the circle parted for them as though a comb had been run through it. If there were offers of help, he ignored them and no one could be surprised. They were the Tansys and the Tansys kept their business in the family, holed up away from the district beyond the walls encircling their pig farms, their secrets hidden beneath the swirling mire of mud and pig shit. And who would have offered anyway? Who cared? There was no one else; they only had themselves to look out for one another.
We’re the same; one person.
You hurt, I hurt.
Pressed close and forming some strange stumbling, four legged creature they made it a little way before Tallow ducked into herself and cried out again, breath heavy, bending over into herself like crumpling paper, “What’s happening!?” she yelled out one minute, and god Scutcher wished he knew, but he never knew anything and the world must have been turning inside out on itself if she had to ask him something she didn’t know. Vomiting thickly into the ground with a wet splatter, Tallow keened like an infant. It smelt rank and raw, Momma’s sausages churned up in the mix. They were supposed to be lucky. What happened to the routine? Maybe it only worked against the hunger games. Maybe there was a price to be paid for being spared and the price was her life. legs falling under her weight so that he had to catch her and hold her up, slide his hands around her and pull her up into to his arms.
He could feel her blood, warm and sticky seeping into his shirt and though he’d been brought up elbow deep in pig’s blood and intestines he still fought the urge to vomit too. Her blood was his blood, matched in the way it ran through them, the way that it ran out of them.
You bleed, I bleed.
Over the last few weeks the Tansy house had started to recede into itself almost, more than before even, and passers-by might even remark how dim and unsettling the corrugated metal shack seemed to be. The rust had started to cause the metal to crumble; shards of the place flapping loose in the wind like scabbed, peeling flesh. Though the fires of the burning pig corpses, piled high with a third of the farm struck down with a disease, had long burnt out, the smoke seemed to remain- heavy in the air as though the house had sunk behind a thick fog. Beneath the gloom wrapped around them like funeral gauze, their parents always watched the reaping across the districts all day on the small screen in their family room, including the district ten ones- they got the television special from the government on account of their father’s amputated leg preventing him from getting easily into town, which was…so very generous of the of capitol. There was another one showing, some other kids sentenced to bleed out and die in a matter of weeks, when Scutcher burst through the door of their corrugated metal shack, arms full of Tallow who was bleeding out and dying right now. “Momma!” he cried, “Momma, she’s hurt. She’s hurt real bad.”
While Tallow favoured the Tansy patriarch, carrying the same coltish nose, narrow suspicious robin’s egg blue eyes, long features and prominent ears, there were a lot of similarities between Violet Tansy and her son apparent to anyone; they had the same cow-eyed stare, heavy lidded eyebrows and thick dark lashes. Scutcher’s mom was always more than slightly mannish in body and features, exacerbated with a functional, short hair cut, her shape incredibly square, and her wide shoulders usually hunched over all awkward and shy. In baggy clothes like ugly brown sack cloth, Scutcher’s mom always seemed large for a woman and like her children she was very tall, but Vi was all bone and no flesh, collar bone poking savagely through her skin, so hollow that it could scoop up the falling rain during a thunderstorm. Her mannish, large hands, bitten down calloused and beat up rushed to her mouth as ran over to them, tugging on Tallow’s skirt, seeing the blossom of blood and crinkling her brow.
“Tallow, baby,” she said quietly, feeling her daughter’s forehead, a hand in her hair. She must have been really sick, Scutcher realised- even without the crying, the vomiting and the bleeding, because she didn’t immediately jerk her head away from their mother’s hand as though burnt; there was no love lost between Tallow and Violet Tansy. Even as a girl Tallow had seemed suspicious of her, shrinking silent and moody into herself when she was asked a question, twining her hand around Scutcher’s if Violet ever suggested they did something just the two of them, shaking her head as though the idea was repugnant. When their momma had imagined up her children as a young woman about to be married, she might have envisaged abstract, perfect little figures who did not age and looked up at her with unquestionable adoration. A son to teach the family trade, to make her laugh, to shake her head sometimes and mutter ‘boys will be boys’, a first born son to fill his father’s heart with pride. And a daughter, beautiful and filled with grace, her ally in the house, to snipe at her brother and cry in her arms the first time she felt the throb of a broken heart. Scutcher often felt sorry for his momma, sitting in silence, stirring up dinner and wondering to herself just when her dreams had curled up into themselves and died; her daughter hated her and her son would never make anyone proud.
“Oh Tallow, why didn’t you tell me?”
Shrugging away from her hand, Tallow shook her head in the same way she might have done as a little girl before burying her face into Scutcher’s shirt, dampening it with her tears as she moaned into the material. Their mother gestured towards the hall that Scutcher should follow her, Loomis Tansy craned his head around to watch but never once got up out of his chair, “Fucking kids,” he muttered, taking another sip of his drink. Scutcher got the wild urge to punch him, but it faded like a short burst of hiccoughs, replaced once again by blind panic.
Tallow’ s room was like Scutcher’s; transient places that had never quite belonged to them, always decorated as though they were merely stopping a few nights; clothes kept in the bureau, bed always neatly made, but sparse and without much character- as impossible to put roots into as concrete. They tried with a few nick nacks here and there, for Scutcher it was his flowers in old jars on the window sill, while for Tallow it was her drawings and pictures, tacked loosely to the walls so that a few slips of paper would slip onto the floor every so often like a snake shedding its skin.
Inside of her room they laid Tallow out on the bed, but she wouldn’t let go of his shirt, smeared with blood where she’d been against him. Let her hold on, Scutcher thought, being pulled down onto the bed with her, but their mother tugged on his shoulder and Tallow let go as another pain hit her and she began to scream. I want to tell you everything’s gonna be fine. You always promise me it’s going to be okay. “Looks pretty sore, but it ain’t lasting- back to your old self in no time, Noodle, just you wait n see,” you always coo, pressing a light fingertip under my eyes, skating around the bruising but it hurts less with every second of your touch. And even if it still hurts a little, and I’m dizzy and I’m frightened that our dad’s gonna come back and do worse because it isn’t all out of his system, I’m happy for the fleeting second you look at me.
And I won’t lose that now.
But there’s so much blood, Tallow.
She came away with the flowers pinned to his breast pocket, a fistful of forget- me- nots. “I’m still here,” he whispered, stroking her hair, sweat sticking a few strands to her forehead and in a brief minute she met his eyes, tried to smile but her face crinkled into tears again and she nodded, holding his hand to her face “I love you. I’ll always love you.” Why did it sound so much like a goodbye? Only hours before she’d told him that they never had to say goodbye, because they’d never need to. “I need you to run into town, Scutcher,” he heard their mother say behind him but Scutcher purposefully ignored her. He wasn’t leaving Tallow’s side. Because she needed him and…in case…in case she wasn’t there when he got back. Scutcher remembered almost a year ago exactly shutting his eyes tight for the briefest moment and opening them to see Noreen Lexington lifeless on a screen in front of him, hearing nothing but a cannon fire. Now, he wasn’t going to blink for one second.
“Scutcher…you have to go into town. Tallow needs a professional….if she doesn’t,” their mother cast a worried glance over at the girl on the bed, before leaning in to say in a low voice. “If she doesn’t then she could be in trouble, okay? You need to be a good big brother for her now.” Tallow let out a huff of pain and Scutcher pressed his forehead to hers. I’ll be back soon, just make sure you stay here, please. Their mother rummaged on the top of Tallow’s desk through her pens and makeup and Scutcher expected her to shout and tell her to get off, but Tallow didn’t, still breathing heavily and sweating. “Go to this address and ask for Petra,” said Violet , finding a page in one of Tallow’s notebooks and ripping it out…Scutcher felt something inside of him rip. No one touched Tallow’s notebooks. “Tell her what’s happened to Tallow and bring her here.” Violet handed the page to him and he could see the last shards of a sketch- she’d always been real good at drawing, back when they were kids they used to draw on the paving stones outside of their old house with the chalk that their father would bring back from town. She could draw a perfectly straight line better than anyone he’d ever met and her cheek was wet with tears when he skimmed his knuckles across her skin. Don’t go anywhere Tallow.
You die, I die.
“I never liked sausages.”
“Tell me what I just said…” momma said, but Scutcher wasn’t listening, not really. “Scutcher, tell me what I just said.” She asked because she thought that he couldn’t even remember the simplest instructions that could help his sister.
“Run into town, go to this address, ask for Petra,” he said distractedly, but when their Momma gave him a push he went , casting one last look into the room, remembering, in case right now was the last moment there would ever be. Out of the house, Scutcher couldn’t move fast enough- he’d always been the slow one, loping after Tallow in his flat footed heavy way. She could outstrip him easily, miles ahead and slim as a stalk of corn while he was content to trot along like a pig. But he couldn’t remember being quite this slow, couldn’t remember town being quite this far away. It might take hours, it might take days, time seemed to speed right up as Scutcher slowed right down to a crawling pace. There’s never enough time.
III
[/color]There was no need to cram houses together in district ten when the district stretched across open fields and dust bowls. In ten they wanted for a lot of things; food to quell the aching in their bellies come winter time, security when the animals got sick or the years herd didn’t turn out right, when the weather turned and the wolves preyed on newborn babies, love- out here weathered by the elements that turned their skin as tough as old leather boots. They wanted for so many things, space, though, was not one of them. But Scutcher still found the address from his scrap of paper nestled tight between two other houses as though for warmth (and it was remarkable how cold it had turned all of a sudden, though he was sweating from the effort of running, Scutcher couldn’t help but shiver too) a golden thatch piled onto the roof and spilling out over the guttering like the shaggy crop of hair on the destitute children that clawed through the ground for animal bones to boil down for soup or tin to trade for grain. There was a little yard out front with a picket fence, poppies grown knee deep over summer nodding in the wind and there was an explosion of herbs and greenery that filled his nostrils the moment he got within ten yards of the place. But he barely noticed, tearing up the stone slabbed path and coming to knock frantically on the door.
The women who answered were vaguely familiar to Scutcher, there were people in town who would often snigger about the two women who lived in the thatched cottage at the end of town and who treated women and were partners in more than just a business sense. When they came to town they pretended to be sisters because that way no one would have suspected anything untoward. No one ever did when it was family, as though the thought was too horrible to comprehend. They were little and large- the little one, the one Scutcher was almost sure was Petra, was skinny with hair the colour of tin and a sour face while the tall one, Bawn or something, was vast and soft like a marshmallow with a very large bosom, ruddy face and thin blonde hair. Strange what people noticed under pressure, strange that Scutcher should ever notice it at all but he had to admit that both of them had terrible haircuts- that would never fill Tallow with confidence in them.
“Yes?” Petra asked, her cold eyes darting the length of his body, following the smear of Tallow’s blood across his shirt though her expression did not flicker once.
“My….ah….my….” he started to choke out, breathless from the run in, the tar wrapped around his lungs from years of sneaking cigarettes with Tallow tightening hard and making it difficult to find air.
“You’re Vi Tansy’s boy aint ya!” Bawn said with a smile all of a sudden, a flicker of realisation as she began to speak very slowly and very loudly the way that some people did even Scutcher was stupid, not deaf and his ears worked as well as the next man. “We delivered your sister. Remember ,Petra? How’s your Momma?”
Scutcher shook his head, hand to his side as he began to garble desperately, “Momma said to come here…for help…my sister…she’s hurt…she’s…there’s blood everywhere and she’s cryin’ and…you gotta come…you gotta make it stop.” A look was exchanged between the two, one that told Scutcher that this was not their first rodeo by any means, reaching for a bag they kept by the door- set aside, almost definitely for emergencies, following Scutcher without any kind of delay. It was both a worry and a comfort, speaking both of professionalism- they would do all they could to save Tallow but also of the gravity of the situation- perhaps nothing could be done.
“How far along is your sister?” Petra asked in clipped tones as they hurried up the garden and Scutcher had to blink at her.
“Errr…I think she’s about five foot nine or maybe five foot ten...”he answered, not quite understanding the relevancy. But then again, no one could argue that he was medically smart, so it just made sense that he wouldn’t quite understand what she was driving at.
“No you stupid…how far along is she… you know, with the pregnancy?!”
Scutcher felt the bottom drop out of his stomach, something fragile and made of glass inside of him shattering loudly enough to drown out the calls of a Jackdaw nestled somewhere in a thick hedgerow. A thick cloud stretched across the sky drawing a curtain over the sunshine, making the earth below seem grey.
“She aint pregnant.”
“Your momma sent for a midwife,” said Petra with a shrug. “Means somebody’s pregnant.”
“She aint pregnant,” he insisted again clenching his fists, it came out louder and more violently than he’d meant it to- making both Petra and Bawn flinch.
It wasn’t that he didn’t know where babies came from; there was no way that even the most stupid of children in the district wouldn’t understand sex. Perhaps it led to the promiscuity ten could boast (though he had no idea how it was in other districts) that it was so much a part of everything out here, horses mounting on Tuesday afternoons when the children walked home from school, rutting, squealing pigs out in the yard and bull semen sold by the bucketful at the general store for insemination purposes. It was just that…he could see how she might be, but he was sure he would have known; Noreen had bloomed full and thick like a luminescent full moon when she’d been carrying her babies but he knew each curve of Tallow’s body and she was still as slim and as reedy as always, built like a stalk of corn with the same yellow head. He was also sure that Tallow wouldn’t have allowed it. While sometimes they were reckless with their entanglements, in terms of timing, in terms of location (admittedly less so since Naif Malloc caught them) Tallow had always been fastidious with contraceptive to the point of obsession, getting by on the homemade remedies that District ten, complex procedures like science experiments, Tallow’s natural resourcefulness shining through in the way that it always did, whether she was mixing lipstick with just a handful of oil and some berries or assembling her own brand of spermicide. She wouldn’t let herself get pregnant. Never had- never would.
“I gotta clean up first,” she would always say afterwards, resisting the urge to slump immediately together and wait for the afterglow to slip away. The little death. He couldn’t pretend that his sister was some virginal creature, pure as the driven snow before him when her smile was all filth and had to assume that Tallow had been doing it long enough to pick up tricks that girls like Noreen Lexington never learnt, the kind of thing that they wouldn’t dare dream of teaching at school. - she was careful, really. Tallow told him that a handful of rosemary leaves eaten at dinner could bring on her monthly bleeding if she was worried over missing it, that lemon disinfectant was the best way to clean up a girls insides but if there was no way to get at that vinegar, tomato juice and even shaking up a bottle of soda to hose down there could work fairly well. She always smelt of a thick field of lemons, though sometimes he’d take her up in his arms and find her reeking of salad vinaigrette.
“You gotta try and tell me when you’re gonna…squirt… okay, Noodle?” She’d mix up a little water and disinfectant in a basin while he watched her, resting his chin on his hands.“I won’t be mad if you can’t. But its better if you do your best to wait til you aint in me no more.”
“Because you could have a baby.”
“That’s right,” she’d say with a nod. “You know how pigs don’t have babies with their litter…otherwise they come out wrong. Well…we’re the same litter, ain’t we?” Tallow crouched over the bowl, wincing as the disinfectant filled her, washing herself out, filling the room with the synthetic, citrus scent. “If you ever put a baby in me, it’d come out wrong.”
“Sick.” Scutcher rolled onto his back, resting his head on his arm and staring at the ceiling. They never dwelt on the subject, no teenager wants to, between the reapings when every discussion of pregnancy seems to end with the phrase ‘like Noreen Lexington’ and the simple matters of another mouth to feed, having to grow up too soon, never really getting the chance to live it was something nobody wanted to think of- least of all two people in a twisted match that could never produce anything but twisted offspring. “Like me,” he might add.
“No. No way don’t talk like that.”Getting up and getting into bed with him she always spoke firmly. Breasts pressed flush against his side, legs tangled, Scutcher would splay a hand across the small of her back, finger tips only just skating across her bare ass and she’d kiss along his collar bone, smoothing and stroking with a hand as she did so, delighting in the feeling just how warm a person could be in her grasp. “You aint sick,” she’d say quietly, kissing him briefly, softly on the lips more like a whisper than a kiss. “And if you are sick, then I’m sicker so we can just be sick together and forget everyone else. Forever and ever.”
And he didn’t notice then that sometimes it would be hours and hours before she went back to the bowl to finish what she started.
What’s happening to forever and ever?
He’d killed her. The realisation came on a wave of horrified misery, grabbing hold of his heart with a clawed fist. There was a baby inside her and the baby was going to kill her because nothing good ever came out of a union between a brother and a sister. After the first time, when the heaven’s didn’t open and the ground didn’t split in two they’d tricked themselves into think that it was okay, that they weren’t disgusting and evil, turning their backs to the natural order of things not realising that their sorrow had always been lingering in secret, waiting for them in the dark.
No debt could go unpaid, no crime could go unpunished.
There had to be a price.
And yet there were still parts of him that couldn’t believe it, hoped it wasn’t true more than anything. Tallow wouldn’t mess up, wouldn’t let herself get caught with a baby and die. The hope was always the worst and but he couldn’t help but be hopeful somewhere inside of him. It lingered at the heart of every man- a pathetic, mewling, infantile thing, flailing with bloodied limbs and knife wounds. It’s going to be okay. It’s not happening the way they say.
If he had no hope at all then perhaps this would all just be that little bit easier, if he could accept it then maybe he wouldn’t be so dreading what he would lead Petra and Bawn home to and grim acceptance would follow. But he couldn’t let go of that lingering hope anymore than he could the bones deep inside of him. Some part of him still pictured going home to find Tallow sitting up in bed and looking bored saying that she’d never known so many people to lose their heads over something so small as a bit of blood. Then again, some part of him was still expecting Noreen Lexington to turn up again one day and smile at him the way she used to, as though he never watched the last of her blood swell out from underneath her body on a television screen. Hope was nothing.
Noreen had been smiling when she said he’d make a good daddy. She could never have meant it to mean something like this.