D[ear] D[earest] D[arlingest] - R[osetta]
Aug 26, 2012 15:19:14 GMT -5
Post by Wonder on Aug 26, 2012 15:19:14 GMT -5
Maybe next year I'll have no time
[/size] The idea that perhaps someday I'd be able to help all of these people by simply writing down five-hundred words in hope they take the sincerest of advice to heart was nothing but simply utterly foolish. To believe that I was more than a man was nothing but a cruel misrepresentation of what I truly was, a man, a boy who was in a higher position of power than most.Dear, Dearest, Darlingest, I am so lost. White envelopes, beige envelopes and the like filled the mahogany desk with scratches etched upon it's surface by pressing the pen a little too hard whilst writing.
The darkness had just peeked, cruel black shadows threatening to swallow the maroon walls of the room. The only light peaking from a small desk lamp that created a triangular shape of light splotched across my desk and walls. There was only this small light to brighten the entire room, and somehow it was entirely fitting. One small light in a room full of darkness was what I was trying to achieve, trying to push forward that despite how awful and terrible things are, well there was a light, and that light was me. To be more than a person was treacherous and yet here I was promoting the fact that maybe I was bigger and better than most, bigger and better than the average man.
Dear, dearest, darlingest, the letters start to repeat themselves after a while. But never does the blue ball point pen stop it's frantic scribbling, never does pen stop touching paper, the second that the words stop is the second the momentum is lost. It took a while to sum up enough muse to help other people, and within that time people could go off and do something so incredibly tragic. People could die. There was enough death in the Districts, enough despair surrounding families who have lost someone so important to them. They were a key piece in a game of chess and slowly but surely the king would be targeted. Death was a chain that never quite stopped. There was enough loss in this District without someone going off and losing themselves. And so the pen kept writing.
A small fragile knock at the door signalled that Septimus had arrived, the little boy was his letter carrier, the only person in the entire District who actually knew who he was. The orphan, wasn't even really an orphan, he'd experienced pain on his own at the young age of fourteen and he knew as well as I did the importance behind helping people. "Special delivery." He muttered. Still after months of working for me, he was incredibly shy and withheld, not really muttering much but he was a good listener. He'd had heartbreak. As had I. And we move on from it, if anything he's a comfort to have around, there was no sense of fake surrounding him, like the usual people trying to get into the mayor's good books. Mature beyond his age, he helped, and that's all that really mattered.
"Special?" I took the envelope into my hands, it was nothing spectacular compared to the others, just as plain, the writing just the same as most, though clearly that of a woman's. Men's writing was never as clear and legible.
The boy smirked and nodded, "You'll understand once you read it." He'd seen who'd delivered it. There were times in this business where I knew who had send the letter, it was quite obvious really, but there was still that sense of anonymity behind it all, I wasn't supposed to know what was going on behind the closed doors of a home, yet sometimes it was so critically obvious who it belonged to. I'll understand. If anything, I'd lived in a world of open-mindedness and understanding for far too long.
"Here, special deliveries call for special compensation." I pull out my money pouch and throw him three times the payment of what I usually do. Money was nothing really to my family, we were royalty of District 5, as much as royalty could be, being related to the mayor. "Make sure Lilith gets a good supper for everyone." Scurrying off, Septimus is out the door quickly, no questions asked, money was money. I opened the letter quickly, it could be anyone writing this but clearly it was somebody special.
'Dear ___,'[/blockquote]
The space after the dear was smudged and unable to be seen as if it were wiped off with a thumb, despite the fact it was written in pen. No one, it could be to absolutely anyone, including myself, and yet it was private. All letters were private of course, but still this letter was already curious, dear.
'In the Arena, I waited for people. They never came. Their faces appeared in the night sky, but at the time, I didn't know who they were. It was maddeningly, really.Staring at those faces and knowing they were someone I once knew, but staring at them like I was seeing them for the first time when really they were the bodies between myself and death.'
Parts of the letter were scribbled and scratched out, though still legible. It was clear from the first line alone who this was from. There was only really one victor in district five, and that was Lethe Turner. She waited. The replays played each year, every day even to remember, everyone was meant to remember her victory and her time in the games. She had waited time and time again, losing allies left and right, Anya, Saskia, Razor. She'd waited time and time again never to find some of them. Anya died before her very eyes.
It was sickening, her time in the games in the hot African weather. As all times were sick in the Games, but the poor girl couldn't catch a break. Anya died, leaving her all alone, Saskia left too and having to kill her sole remaining ally in the finale. Perhaps it only seemed so brutal because she was from home, my home, it wasn't so bad seeing some years I suppose. Our tributes had a knack for dying either early or at the end. But the fact that Lethe had come home made it all so much worse, every second of it. They were all tortured souls, the victors, and clearly with a letter to me, Lethe was no different.
'I can recognize people now. And I know what you look like and I know what our child looks like. I don't have to wake up every morning in fear of the beautiful blonde child in my house, wondering who she is. I know who she is.She's ours.
But, the scary thing is, despite the cure that cursed, I'm forgetting what you look like. After a year of your absence, I can still tell people what color eyes you have, but not the slope of your nose, the nose I think about all the time or your height. I can't remember if you're taller than me or not. Sometimes, I'll go to our baby's bed in the night and stare at her, memerizing what's mine and what's yours. It's crazy. I feel like
The monster crossed out, did she really believe she was a monster? I'd seen Lethe Turner a few times in my life, being a victor put her in constant touch with my aunt. I've seen her blonde ragged curls bounce through the halls, and I've seen them sometimes in the District whenever I dared to step out. Her feet plodding and skipping about the cobblestone roads and her small smirk, despite how haunted so ever beautiful. She was never a monster to me. Despite the knife that had pierced so many, and despite the haunting that she'd gone through time and time again, she was just a girl, not a monster.
She was nothing more than human, just as I. We all think too much of ourselves these days. I forget, sometimes, that she has a child. As do most people, no longer the young soul who graced our flickering television, twenty and the opposite of the definition of youth, she now had herself a youngling to care for. Some Capitol guy, they say. Tabloids had been all over that story, victor's having children was an amazement in itself since most swore to celibacy, praying never to have their young fight for their lives as they once had.
Had they left each other? Flicking through memories I try to remember seeing anything about their relationship on the news, never had I thought they were together still and yet, that was the problem I suppose, the reason in which the letter was written in the first place. Dear smudge, smudge being the boy who once suited her fancy, the boy who once upon a time swept her off the feet and made her feel like an angel not a monster. But that was all once upon a time, Lethe Turner with youth in hand thought she was a demon, and that's what I wanted to help, it continued.
'After I had her, I realized I didn't make a mistake that night at that party. She's beautiful. She's perfect. But, sometimes I wonder if you're the mistake. You didn't even care to contact me during these past Games. I was in the same city as you, yet you seemed so far away. I tried to find you, but they said you graduated from school and they told me they weren't sure where you were living now. One would've thought that you might've cared about your child at least. She's doing fine, thanks for asking. She can talk, but there's one word she can't say yet.
Father.'[/blockquote]
The word bolded as if written over more than a few times in order to make a point, it felt almost like intruding. Should I try and deliver this letter to smudge? I don't think that was the point. There were letters time and time again in which they were written to others and this one was new different. And yet, never in the history of writing and reading these letters had I found myself caring so much. I did care. Maybe perhaps it was because our only recent victor was hurting in an unimaginable way, there was no one around to help a girl who was in an out-of-district relationship since there were seldom people who actually managed to make there way outside the confines of their home, and if there were they were hunted down.
I cared. As each new word appeared on the paper, I grabbed the letter firmer until the sides were crinkled, every word was one last breath underwater that I needed to take, this was a look into the life of the mysterious girl with the blonde hair, and I cared ever so much in a way I hadn't ever before. Two people who were more than people. Two people who'd had accomplishments and mistakes, and I was confided in. I wasn't smudge, I wasn't a name rubbed off the paper, but I was the person meant to help.
'She can say "mother" just fine, but not what you're supposed to be. She's getting too old to accompany me to the Capitol anymore. You lost what was probably your last chance. And I seem to be the only one upset about it. My daughter needs a father. She has an overwhelming amount of aunts and uncles and she has grandparents who spoil her and she's got me, but she's growing to grow up and look around and see all of the other little girls with fathers. I know you're stuck where you are. I understand that. But, you could've at least tried to contact me. I have a phone now and I was going to give you my house number. At least she'd be able to hear your voice.
I'm losing my faith in you. My parents say I'm getting older now and I have a child. I need to settle down. The first year, I remember lying each night in my bed, so afraid that when I finally met you again, not wasted, you'd be a jerk, you'd deny what happened that night and that you'd turn away our child. But, when I came home after those Games, I would lie in bed and smile and even wish you were beside me.
Now, I'm not so sure. I'm lost without you and I'm afraid that when I next go to the Capitol, I'll again not find you. Or you'll refuse me. I don't think this is how love is supposed to feel.'[/blockquote]
The words of the letter were becoming slowly more pointed and unclear, as if it were each letter was now becoming a fierce knife battle in itself, an arena of it's own. Tears stained the white paper making some letters smudged and near unable to read, drawn out ink from water. There were lots of tears. Lethe Turner, a girl once so strong and sure turning into a mess, a girlish monster and not knowing what to do with herself.
I wonder if the name was blocked out by tears. If that smudge that covered the name at the top was nothing but a mass of tears brought together to erase the name from existence, from memory. The name that clearly had become so bitter on her tongue was erased out of my knowledge to be only known as Smudge. A father who was no longer around and doubted ever being around was erased completely from once ever being present in her life, in the life of her child. The tears, the smudge, each stroke getting harder and harder made it a painful read, more than some letters. Perhaps knowing who it was from made it all the more difficult to read, all the more harder to reply to as well.
The tears and words were slowly becoming one and the same, the letter was becoming shorter in sentences and choppy, each eloquent thought was now choppy and unsure nearing the ending. Lost and confused.[/color]
'I keep asking myself, am I in love?I keep asking myself, am I in love?'
The sentence crossed out and rewritten with more distinction, was the girl who pretended to be powerful losing herself? Slowly falling to bits with no where left to stand. How sure was she of what she was feeling and where she was going? Was she in love? Or was she just lost? In a world full of people leaving all the time without ever coming back, each year being partly responsible for the death of two children, there was such a need for confirmation even in the worst of company, and Smudge seemed like the worst.
'I need you to tell me if I am.'[/blockquote]
No. I answer the question myself as if I'd known the girl my entire life, Lethe Turner was only a girl on the television to me, a girl who I'd watched survive the unsurvivable, and there wasn't a doubt in my mind that if she was in love, it wasn't, or it shouldn't be with the man who wouldn't call the broken girl.
'If I was. I need to see your nose. I need to see if you're taller than me. I need you to make an effort. And not just for me. For our little girl. She needs a father and I need you. You let me down.[/blockquote]Please'
Crossed out, again, so many desperate pleas crossed out as if realizing maybe she didn't need to ask, maybe she just needed to demand.
'Don't do it again.'[/size][/blockquote]
'Next time I go to the Capitol, I'll be waiting for you. Then, maybe, I'll know the answer to my question.'
'Maybe with love,
L'
Maybe with love, Lethe Turner. The finishing of the letter brings a wave of emotion over me that is never usually quite there from these letters. There are tons of dark things that I've read about in my time. Suicide, death, pregnancy, every single type of problem that anyone could face in their lives and yet the total feeling of uselessness that envelopped the girl who was supposed to be the strongest of the strong, the fittest of the fit was absolutely in every way possible, heart breaking. Never had I ever felt anything like this in my time of giving advice, a sense of caring beyond that of what I'm used to. How in any way was I supposed to explain in five-hundred words how to turn with her life when she was shipwrecked on an island where no one could access her.
Alone in the world with nothing but a child to a man who abandoned her and left her for good and I'm supposed to help. The tear-stained letter lay carelessly on the desk as I gather myself, how am I supposed to help through only words on a page, there was only so much that a person could do while writing down their thoughts, there was no contact really between two people. There's no way that I could help with Smudge, help with her eternal waiting for someone to come and stay for once through a simple Dear. There was no way, and yet perhaps I could help.
There were a not of never's that seemed to be surrounding the idea of Lethe Turner, never had I revealed myself to anyone besides Septimus. That was a big never and yet it seemed like the only plausible way to go about these types of things.[/size]
'Dearest L
'I'm not the boy who left you with child, and I can guarantee that my nose is nothing really special if only stubby and small.' Starting out with comedy was always better anyways. 'I'm not the boy who left you smudging his name across a letter, and yet I'm here to help as I'm sure you have heard from others - always here to help. There is no mistaken that I know who you are, there is no sense in scratching out your name as I have because it's clear who you are and I think of you no less for it.
Dearest L,
I want to help. I do. I think it may be best - for us - for this - for you, if we talk about this, face to face maybe? I understand the circumstance is, a little different than most, a little bizarre, and I'm sure that there is nothing I could scrawl across this page that will help you in any way possible, there is no words that I could string together that'll make you feel better. However, I can offer a shoulder, and an attempt to use my words through, well, my mouth, as most people do. If you would like to - I will be waiting, tomorrow, at the park, on a bench, I'm sure you'll recognize me from solely my button nose, or the fact that I am taller than you.
Not Smudge.'
I enclosed the envelope and sent for Septimus. It was a waiting game now, I would have him deliver it to her door, and ring the doorbell. Tomorrow, I would go. Tomorrow I would help.
For L.[/blockquote][/size][/justify]
To think about the questions to address.
All the green Lethe colour stuff is clearly written by Rosetta <3