Give a Little Love ((open))
Sept 20, 2012 14:40:17 GMT -5
Post by kneedles on Sept 20, 2012 14:40:17 GMT -5
[Della Conagher|Sixteen|District 5]
I could wile away the hours
Conferrin' with the flowers
Consultin' with the rain
And my head I'd be scratchin'
While my thoughts were busy hatchin'
If I only had a brain
[/i] (Della’s read a few medical books on the subject and has always wanted to see if she could pull off an amputation, but it’s hard to come by anyone willing to partake in that particular experiment) And as harsh as it sounds, a guy without arms on an oil rig is about as useful as a bike is to a fish.You can argue that the science removes a little of the beauty in everything; the clump of smog withered wildflowers, yellow bellied rock thrushes nesting in the gutters and a girl biting down on a plump lip, glistening with a layer of petroleum jelly but cracking and feathered like water on a duck’s back. All carbon based, all pretty much the same when you break them down to their very base fundamentals. Proteins, nucleic acids, carbohydrates, lipids. The shopping list of life, from the single celled organisms to whoever Della is sharing a bed with, curls crinkled on the pillow, thick lashes fluttering with deepest sleep. Beneath the surface a thousand cells are dying, being created, over and over again- and even while she’s resting the world is in the most organised of chaos, her body a machine. Della doesn’t remember her name; slides her socks over slim pale ankles, wincing as the bed springs groan- but she loves her all the same. Her nervous system, the flutter of her heart, from mandible to medial cuneiform. Della doesn’t know her name, but she can name each of her delicate bones, each section of her heart and the different nerve cells that make her eyes flutter so. And how can that possibly be anything but beautiful? Buttoning up her shirt, shapeless, made of rough woven flannel- Della ducks down to kiss her cheek, Goodbye you beautiful carbon- based organism. She leaves behind a courteous note in her square and precise hand writing on a sheet of folded graph paper and a mug of sweet milky coffee. It’s just good manners.
Mustn’t forget her charity collection box though, Della reminds herself. It’s lying tipped on its side at the foot of the bed- not all that professional looking; just a shoebox wrapped in tin foil, a sign sticky taped to the side. Help for Cannel Bauer. Honestly, it just makes her giggle, reminding her that when she’d come to the door of this particular house, waking up in the early hours with a pretty girl next to her was the furthest thing from her mind. (Unless Della is actually being honest, because waking up next to pretty girls is usually never all that far from her thoughts).
Cannel Bauer is the latest in a string of casualties from out on the oil fields. “A real stand up guy, always ready to lend a helping hand,” her father would say- though of course he can’t say it now, since he doesn’t have any helping hands to spare no more. Or any arms for that matter. These are the dangers of life on an oil rig; the rusting machinery is far from up to code, steel structures piercing the sky like petrified trees, loosing twigs, loosing parts, falling and crushing people. Cannel Bauer was smart and rolled onto his side when a steel girder dropped from the sky- his head was spared but both of his arms were crushed right up to the shoulders leading to double amputation. The first step is ligating the supplying artery and vein, to prevent hemorrhage. The muscles are transected, and finally the bone is sawed through with an oscillating saw. Sharp and rough edges of the bone are filed down, skin and muscle flaps are then transposed over the stump,
The rigs are government owned, and government run and injury liability aint a word in Panem’s dialect. Nor are pensions to people out of work before retirement age; Della knows this because her daddy had her look at the contract for him. I aint got a head fer readin, and there’s you with a brain the size of a planet, little darlin’. It’s more a token than anything, little more than a piece of paper guaranteeing the riggers a tea break every once in a while so in typical rough neck ‘sticking together no matter what’ fashion some of the guys from his post are trying to raise the severance package that the government wouldn’t grant him. Keeping it on the quiet, like, rattling their tins where Peace Keepers won’t find them. Della’s daddy was meaning to go out canvassing the night before, but since he’d had a long day and homework aint no trouble at all for Della, leaving her after school activities free for her own ‘personal study’ – namely fiddling with explosives in the backyard,- he pushed the tin in her direction. See if you can’t put that brain to this, before you burn the entire blinkin’ house down, Dell.
Honest, she didn’t know it was gonna turn out like this. Not that Della’s exactly complaining.
Outside of the house, the ground glistens a little from the early sprinkling of rain, spilled oil on the tarmac immiscible, creating shimmering rainbows, metallic blue and gold. Someone else might ask why it always does that. Thin film optical interference, thinks Della just as soon as she sees it. The answer doesn’t remove the mystery or make it any less lovely. Cirrus fibratus, dappled gold with the morning’s light, streaks across the pale blue sky like watery paint strokes and Della knows that on average a cirrus cloud contains thirty ice crystals per litre and is one of the three genera of high level clouds ( cirrus, cirrocumulus and cirrostratus) but it doesn’t stop the way that she tips her head towards the sky and smiles, her self-satisfied sigh as soft and as golden as the dawn.
You’d never guess, on a day like today how toxic that district five can be; streaming thick pollutants into the air from burning oil, the ill heavy smell of heated plastics. Della’s nose is filled with crisp sheets, the scent of skin and the faint flutter of morning breath against her face. Shaking the tin, the rattle inside is somewhat pathetic; a few lonely coins rolling around on their own even though the ten the girl slipped her was more than a little generous. She’s a little embarrassed about taking home such a meagre donation after staying out all night- sometimes her daddy expects miracles from Della, like being smart is the same as being a deity or something- so she sets up outside of a store on a busy corner of the district, standing and rattling her tin. “Help for Cannel Bauer,” she announces to the passersby. It’s early, but the work never stops and already people filter into the district like fine wisps of cirrus fibratus themselves.
Somewhere in the distance comes the rumbling of machinery and her engineer’s mind dissects each joint and mechanism. You can argue that even without the science behind it, the oil fields of district five will never be beautiful. But Della disagrees; to her the sound will always mean home. [/color]
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