Last Night I Heard Everything In Slow Motion[Onyx]
Jul 27, 2012 2:37:39 GMT -5
Post by cyrus on Jul 27, 2012 2:37:39 GMT -5
Naif Malloc
Narration
Thoughts
Other’s speech
What I Say
ExclamationsA journey is a person in itself; no two are alike. And all plans, safeguards, policing, and coercion are fruitless. We find that after years of struggle that we do not take a trip; a trip takes us.
When I was a kid, we’d sit out on the porch, you and me, and we’d look up at the stars. ‘Cause that’s all you’d wanted to see, every night. And you’d say, I wonder if there’s anyone out there, looking back at us, like we’re looking right now.
There are a few places where I’ve got some bad scrapes. I think the troll might have broken something—my chest hurts like hell if I move too far to the right—but all in all, Carver didn’t hurt anything worse
I’d made a fresh start of I the morning after sleeping in my own metal coffin. The rain was still falling, and my clothes smelled a bit moldy, but I decided district two was a little too rough and tumble for someone with a mouth like I had. F—king jerks they were here.[/color] That and it seemed far less likely that I’d find charity here—no, they would delight in stringing me up or worse, maybe use me as a practice dummy before turning me over to the peacekeepers. Someday though, I’ll be back to settle the score with Carver.[/color] Until then, it was time for me to find a way out, through the fence, and off the horizon toward someplace hospitable.
My side hurt as I forced myself up and out of the dumpster—did he crack one of my ribs[/color] —and a few of my fingers felt worse for wear. The rain hadn’t let up, and so I was drenched yet again as I made my exit from the alleyway. I didn’t stop to see if anyone gave me strange looks, but made my way further and further out of town, until there were fewer and few buildings, and only a great big wall separating me from the outside world. And so I wandered along it, searching for a suitable space, and without a second thought scrambled through a cracked section of concrete blocks and barbed wire. I managed to only slice up the side of my arm some as I scrambled through it quickly, stopping only to give a good yank on my bag that had gotten stuck. This sent me backwards onto my ass, but thankfully it was one of the few places that hadn’t been injured, and I was up and running once again.
At least I wasn’t going to go thirsty.[/color] I could collect some of the rainwater in the little pot that I’d brought, though it meant sitting in a spot for longer than twenty minutes. I’d taken to pacing back and forth, throwing looks over my shoulder to make sure I wasn’t followed or that someone wasn’t sneaking up on me. Not that it would make much difference out here. One teen boy wandering around with next to no knowledge of the wilderness, was he a sitting duck? You betcha.[/color] I said to no one at all, my accent shining through. You f—king betcha.[/color]
It gets easier, though. When everything is rolling hills and birds chirping, trees like I’d never seen in the little gray bubble of district six, I feel a bit of happiness sink in. Because I can’t go on hating everyone and everything—I don’t have the energy to—sometimes I look at the rain dripping off a leaf and down into a puddle on the ground, and I think, well, maybe some of this is beautiful. Maybe some of this I’m supposed to see, and some of it is supposed to see me, too.[/color] But just as soon as I’ve started to think that I can move on from all of it, my stomach groans because I haven’t had anything to eat in days, or a fever runs through my body and the cut on my arm throbs. And I realize that I’m fooling myself, because I can never be happy. It’s not a real happiness, it’s a false one, brought on by keeping my mind busy and not thinking.[/color] And so the heaviness sets in again, and I tramp along through the mud and around another f—king bend that led to—you guessed it—another long patch of nothing.
Where are the stars?[/color] It’s dark now, too dark to see much further than my nose. I keep going anyway, not wanting to lie down in a field in the middle of nowhere. The rain’s turned into a hazy fog at this point, with drizzle cascading across my face in the wind. I shiver and take a few more steps before running smack into stone. The wall is well made, but it’s no more than up to my chest, easy enough for me to climb up and over if I tried. Oh for ripred’s sake, what, did they run out of money?[/color] But I don’t question just why it’s so low. Instead I reach both hands onto the top and grab onto the wet stone. For a moment my fingers scream out, clearly broken still, and my arms strain at my weight. I kick my feet up along the wall and come tumbling over the top, landing smack into the muddy earth on the other side. And with the graceful landing, Naif Malloc—ten points.[/color] I stand, arms in the air, congratulating myself as though before a crowd. Except that I’m entirely alone.[/color] And in that instant, the false happiness disappears, and I soldier on into the night.
The ruddy red sky of morning reveals strangeness in the air here. The clouds aren’t gone, but they’re mixing and mingling with the manmade smoke in the distance to form different hues of orange and red in the sun. Lights flicker from hunks of metal, and a burst of red from the tips of smokestacks signals humanity. The smell of rotten eggs fills the air and I bring up the zipper of my hoodie to block my nose into underneath. Along the break in the woods there’s an outcropping of rocks, and a hole that isn’t reflecting any light back out. I poke my head inside and hear the drip, drip, drip of water, and a fain echo as I toss in a loose rock. My back was hurting from the fall, and with one more look at the looming rigs billowing black air in the distance, I decide I’d rather rest my head in here. And so I slip in and curl up along the dry ground, tossing my bag against the wall. My eyes are heavy, and it’s not long before I’m back on my front porch and underneath the stars again.
How would we ever know what they wanted anyway? They wouldn’t speak like us. I scrunch up my face. Sometimes you don’t speak like me and I still figure it out. You’re there now, giving me that grin. It makes me huffy. That’s different, you’re different. But you shake your head at me. No, it’s only different because you say. Well… stars are stupid. You can’t talk to stars.The neither of us say anything for a while with you, on your stomach, chin resting on your palms an elbows on the porch, continue to stare up at the sky. No, you can’t… They’re too far away to talk too I suppose.
Too far, yah. You’re just too far away to talk to, I suppose…[/color]
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