61st Games Post-Death Reports [Clover's gift]
Dec 23, 2012 14:44:05 GMT -5
Post by Sunrise Rainier D2 // [Thundy] on Dec 23, 2012 14:44:05 GMT -5
The stranger answered noncommittally, and asked them where they were. Elon looked to Mahlah, waited for her to answer first, and then said, "We are in the forever. Maybe we are the forever." He could not feel regret, or curiosity. He could grieve, and he could test the limits of wonder, but these were avenues to healing. To acceptance. He had not found death so very troublesome after all.
As it turned out, the afterlife was just as Elon had always hoped: it was more.
He made note of their responses, and then asked about their time together. He deferred to his companion once again, memories of the jungle dulled by the brilliance around them. Elon let the breeze and the wheat fronds twist through his open hand. "It wasn't enough time then. I didn't understand what time was, really, or companionship. But we're here now. I remember wanting to say more, to understand better. There was so much to Mr. Liggens and Mr. Moreno, sides of stones I barely held."
He looked down at Mahlah, at their joined hands, and brightened. "We do not see them often, but they are here, too. And Leblanc. It's the way it should be. There's no right or wrong here, just contentment. Whatever led us here, whatever path we took - long or short - there is no other way to be."
Elon felt his throat stick, as it so often did when he thought of those last few weeks. A few tears fell, diamonds in the light. He looked towards it, towards the clementine orange or sunset. Or was it the coral of sunrise? The day warmed them eternally, and it was a comfort, as was feeling what he had left behind. "I know some day all will be led here. We'll be ready for them, right? Julian, and Cygnus, Icarus, and Mace, and your parents, Mahlah."
He sniffed. "Some day even Klaus, too. I remember his eyes. They were one of my last thoughts before this forever. I cherish the memory of them. Of what might have been. I don't thinks his heart was set on being a victor. I think it might have broken it. I know Klaus felt deeply, and I know that more than being a fighter or strategist, he won because of his heart. I wouldn't have had it any other way." And though Elon meant to wipe his tears, instead his fingers found his lips. A kiss. A gift as great as a song. Elon closed his eyes, and fell into the memory for a very long time. When he opened them again, the stranger was gone.
"I guess he found out whatever he needed to know," Elon hazarded, turning Mahlah around in a lazy circle. "It occurs to me that this field might not do for some of our future guests. You know Three better than I do, and I want to make sure our victor feels at home when he is ready to join us. Our victor," he repeated, tasting the phrase. Because Klaus belonged to the twenty-three more than anyone else, and because they belonged to him. Forever.[/ul][/size]
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Mahlah Shea
Isn't it funny how things that seemed severe suddenly become so trivial? Like life. It all seems so very long ago for the girl now but faint memories of pirate ships and blood would slip into her mind on occasion. Living had seemed to be the most important thing in those moments but now, she couldn't figure out why she had ever thought that way. Here everything is so calm and crisp. With soft grass beneath her and Elon's fingers working in and out of her hair, Mahlah Shea had never felt more at peace. Not in District Three, not in the Games, not even as she lay dying took her final breath. None of what happened before in those short twelve years mattered anymore. She had Elon beside her now and no other world could be anymore perfect.
It was rare that the girl ever saw anyone besides Elon so when the stranger approached them a flutter erupted in her stomach. She knew that face, didn't she? This new comer seemed so old in her mind, yet fresh in this place as if she was meeting someone for the very first time. Elon introduced her to him, the stranger's name was on the tip of her tongue, as if she was balancing a sliver of ice there but it melted into a cool pool of oblivion. Her fingers threaded with Elon's again as they had so many times before.
The stranger asked them where they were. This puzzled the girl for she had never thought to ask the question. Her dark eyes swiveled over to Elon's who wanted expectantly for her answer. Gazing back at the stranger she took in his appearance once more trying to place it but coming up just short of the memory. "We've been delivered home."
The stranger's curiosity wasn't quenched by that answer alone and threw another question at them, inquiring about their time with one another. Thinking back to that week in the Arena, Mahlah suddenly felt a chill run across her skin. The field that they milled around in had always felt warm and welcoming but remembering the damp nights curled up around a switchblade left the girl feeling cold and hollow. "It's better here. You feel as light as air. It didn't feel like that before we came here, the world was dense and weighed on your shoulders like iron chains. You never feel how heavy the load is until it is lifted and then there is no turning back."
A tiny shiver shook her frame, her fingers squeezing Elon's even tighter. "Time is simply not here, and we can live in this eternity."
Elon, being older and and more experienced, had a clearer more eloquent answer. Mahlah had never been brilliant at speaking her feelings aloud, especially after coming here. The field was an entity in itself and you could go on forever without saying a single word but knowing exactly what your companion was thinking.
Then her brother began talking about the Goravich boy. Klaus. Her District Partner. Her Victor. The boy who stood beside her on the platform in District Three and on the deck of the ship as she bled out. She had so many memories and thoughts about the boy that she could not fathom into words. Where could she even begin?
Her heart swells with pride that the boy from Three was the one to take the crown, but a drop of disappointment also falls into the pit of her stomach. If Klaus had lost, he would be here, wouldn't he? Then maybe Elon would be even happier and he would stop touching his lips so often. He doesn't think she sees, but she does and Mahlah can't help but wonder if the boy from Three could help that phantom feeling. She could see his face right now as if it were the day they were Reaped and it was plastered up on the big screen in the square. How interwoven into her life he seemed, yet so distant.
She had seen him kiss Elon's cold lips when she herself had to force herself to walk away. She had watched his face as she lay dying and pictured what it would look like with a crown resting above it. She had even seen it years ago just passing by in the District. All of these emotions tumbled inside the girl but she could only mutter an agreement with Elon's words.
"I wouldn't have had it any other way."
"Neither would I."
Her brother did it again, his fingers brushing his lips. She gazed up at him, reading the emotions spelled out on his face. When she turned back their visitor had vanished, melted into the wheat and leaving not a single trace. Elon turned the girl in a circle and she continued, throwing her arms out to the sides and twirling around in the golden wheat.
"You know Three better than I do, and I want to make sure our victor feels at home when he is ready to join us. Our victor." Mahlah slowed to a stop, letting the warm bright world dance around her as her balance began to come back.
"Home?" she asked, leaning her head to the side ever so slightly. Tip toeing forward through the crushed stalks, she raised an arm, setting her pointer finger in the middle of Elon's chest. "It's right there."
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hmmm woah yea...
I feel these four walls closing in
My face up against the glass
I'm looking out... hmm
Is this my life I'm wondering
I feel these four walls closing in
My face up against the glass
I'm looking out... hmm
Is this my life I'm wondering
Why the man stood there he could not say. A few lingering words scraped across your lips, but they would not escape. They sat there between the boundaries of reality and the spoken realm, balancing delicately between the air in which the words would be real and the time in which they stayed simply in his head. Haff Ferde had not spoken a single word since death. His hand stroked the soft fur of Anima, the horse that was his, the horse that had died with him and lived with him. He had grown up with the horse, learning the world as the horse did and thanks to his brother Andal they had both died together.
The man stood before him covered in black, long black sleeves draped down, brushing against the ground, and his hair was black. It shone the darkest black that Haff had ever seen and not even the blackness that crept up on you when you died could anything match the rich strength of the black that flowed like a curtain around his head. He stood there, silently and Haff in turned watched him, his mare standing tall beside him, her breathing the only sound to echo through the air. Silence fell over the place like a blanket as the two of them stared at each other, Haff was weary of the new comer, having seen no one since he had died, and he had only had Anima.
”Good evening Haff, I’m here to ask you a few questions, I wanted to interview you on your thoughts about the victor of the games that you happened to be killed in.”
The word killed tipped from his lips with a certain menacing under tone, Haff flinched and took a step back and away from the mysterious man, he had not even known Klaus Goravich, he had seen a few glimpses of the boy, but nothing really. He started to turn away, but as he did so the other man leapt forwards, closing the gap between them in a few short seconds. His eyes stared at him, cold and hard, there was nothing warm and pleasant there, there was nothing there at all. They were lifeless. But then when you were dead there was truly no life. He swallowed hard, forcing himself to hold his ground and not step away from the other man.
His eyes were as black as his hair and Haff found himself unable to break the contact and look away from them. They seemed to egg him on, the words of the question playing across them, forcing him to stay put. Anima nickered anxiously, sensing the fear that seemed to leak off of Haff.
I wanna break free
All I want is the wind in my hair
To face the fear but, not feel scared
Wild horses I wanna be like you
Throwing caution to the wind
All I want is the wind in my hair
To face the fear but, not feel scared
Wild horses I wanna be like you
Throwing caution to the wind
”Now Haff, what did you think of Klaus?”
Haff tried once more to look away, but he couldn’t bring himself to, his eyes were locked into that cold gaze, where he was frozen into place.
”I-I… I found Klaus to be quite n-nice. He didn’t look very scary in the training centre, he looked –vulne-vulnerable and awfully scared, he wasn’t that intimidating. B-but then he scored a nine and he was suddenly very dangerous. I never had the opportunity to speak with him, but I r-respected him.” For a brief second he finds respite and the other man looks away from him. Haff’s eyes flicker away.
He could remember the skinny, lanky boy clearly. The boy, at first hadn’t made much of an impression, but then no one had, except for Chole and Noreen. After his training score had been announced Haff had looked at him more, trying to figure out the small child, the boy from the big family. But Haff had never been made for that kind of thinking.
”Do you despise him for winning? Do you hate him because you are dead and he is breathing and living?” The questions come one after another and Haff stares blankly at the man, uncomprehending for a moment.
”Why would I despise him? He was like us all, the only thing he did differently was one, he had the skills to win and he did. It wasn’t wholly his choice.” Each word that left his lips was stronger and more confident than the previous ones. The steadiness to his words mad him proud, not long ago he had not been able to talk even a few sentences.
”Klaus Goravich deserved to win. Out of them all I am happy he won, he seemed the most decent and respectable, he wasn’t blinded by blood and lust.” Haff looked the man in the eyes, his hand fumbling with Anima’s man, it was silky and smooth under his tender touch. Anima whinnied as Haff pulled himself easily up onto her back, before spinning her around and walking away, leaving the man dressed in black behind.
I wanna run with the wild horses, run with the wild horses!
I wanna run too
Breaklessly abandoning myself before you
I wanna open up my heart tell him how I feel
I wanna run with the wild horses
I wanna run too
Breaklessly abandoning myself before you
I wanna open up my heart tell him how I feel
I wanna run with the wild horses
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
To Claws:Or, if you prefer, To Louse. Depends on how attached you are to the rhyme scheme.
Well, what do you want, a congratulations? Yeah, right. Honestly, you were probably my third guess for victor. I mean, it obviously wasn't going to be Baby Rey, with his ridiculous anchor, or Mini-Mace, that big softie. And, hey, it was nice of me to get rid of the girl who held the spot above you (but obviously below me) wasn't it? Yeah, you're welcome. I've had some time to dwell on it, and came to the conclusion awhile ago that killing Penelope was my undoing and, by the same token, your salvation. The key there, of course, was that Fish Ripley.
You know, I'm actually a little surprised that you turned on him the way you did; they way I saw it in the Arena, the two of you were a matched set. Of course, the whole of your little gang was a little nauseating with that whole we're-family-no-I-swear-we-love-each-other bit, but even beyond that, you two were a pair, weren't you? Friends or buddies, or soul mates, or whatever crap you cooked up. Court jesters was the theme, wasn't it? But that's how it was in my head, anyhow, I remember that. It was Fits and Claws. Louse and Fish. Whatever. Anyhow, I did you a real favor getting him all riled up the day before you killed him. You noticed, I imagine, how he wasn't quite in his right mind, how he hesitated just long enough for you to go in for the kill? Yeah, like I said, you're welcome. While I certainly didn't mean for it to save your ass, that was still my doing.
Anyhow, I deviated from the point a little bit. The point is, I am — to some extent — proud of you, winning the way you did. I don't know if you turned on him because he was obviously the biggest threat (clearly he's capable of great things if he managed to take me down — though, in my defense, I'd been through hell and back already; he practically didn't have a scratch on him when we met up) or if you turned on him because you wanted to ensure that your district won, or if you turned on him just because you're the same kind of wretch that I am, but I certainly applaud the treachery. It makes for a great show — and so what if you're the bad guy? Audiences eat that betrayal garbage up like it's tesserae grain. It breaks their wee little hearts to think of how much hurt you must've caused Fishface in his last moments — and I'm not talking about how you couldn't even bring yourself to lop off his head or something humane like that. How you just cut him and let him bleed. Good Ripred that was delightful, how you devastated him like that.
So, yeah, whatever, good for you and all that obligatory bullshit. Enjoy your Stark Harper seal of approval; I'm sure, from our few run-ins — the Bloodbath, the Feast — you can imagine how rare they are.
I hope you're enjoying your sleepless nights.
— Stark Harper
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[/size][/blockquote][/blockquote]
Perhaps seconds have gone by, or minutes, or days, or years. I can’t be sure, because I am surrounded by blackness. Honestly, if I were to make a bet on where I would end up after death, I probably would have said Hell. Am I here? Is this it? There is nothing, only blackness, and only me. The darkness overwhelms every part of me, so when I look down at my fingers they do not exist. Or is that just because I lost so many of them? My eye could be gone too, but it’s impossible to tell. This is death, after all, and you would think death would be generous in reuniting a poor guy with his body parts.
Oh, but it couldn’t have been a day since Mahlah killed me. Aren’t dead people supposed to go somewhere? Perhaps this is an in-between space, and I, Jae Moreno, am simply lost. On the other hand, what am I waiting for? Hell can’t be a picnic, and there’s no way I’ll end up anywhere else.
Floating in the nothingness (am I floating? It feels like floating, but then I can’t feel anything) my mind wanders until the blankness takes over. Nothing, nothing, nothing! I wish I could feel something, even pain. There is no sensation, no light, no touch, no smell, and most of all no sound. I think I might be speaking to myself rather than thinking, spewing out all of my thoughts into the blackness. I hope nobody is listening. How could I end up here? If this is death, I want no part of it. I want to be alive, or somewhere with even the slightest sensations. Not this.
The hallucinations set in, but I’m not sure when or how or why. They might not even be hallucinations.
A man, fuzzy and grotesque, emerges from the darkness. Can I see? Is he real?
“Why hello there, boy,” he says after a few moments of staring, his voice slimy and fake. There is no sound, but he is here, inside my head, and I can hear him. What does he want me to say? How will I speak if this is all a nightmare and I am surrounded by nothing?
I decide to test out my voice. ”What?” I sound shaken and nothing like myself. My whole life has been devoted to acting the part, to being somebody else, but perhaps my death is different. Surrounded by nothing, the only soul capable of being fooled is my own. There isn’t any lying or trickery here. Except.. this man. If this is real, he has brought back a flicker of life. Slowly, a tingling runs through my fingertips. When I look down, I can even see them, hovering there in the dark. Color and shape spreads quickly, making my form, and nothing else, clearer.
”Do you mind if I ask you a few questions?” the fuzzy man asks. His clothing is covered in fuzz, not his body. It’s as if he tried to steal from a Capitolite’s wardrobe, but somehow died in the process.
”What questions?” I ask, in control now. The sound! It doesn’t reverberate around my mind anymore. This is real sound that touches the air.
”About dying, of course. And your past.”
It occurs to me that my past is not as exciting as I once thought, but I nod.
”Are you upset that you died?” the man asks, staring at me with wide eyes and a twisted smile.
I ponder this for a moment. If I could look around, I would, except there isn’t anything to see. Just this fuzzy man with lots of questions and a world made out of blackness.
”I don’t want to be here,” I say, looking him straight in the eyes. If my eye is still mangled, I could get a kick out of freaking him out. Alas, I believe death has healed me. As terrifying as it was during the Games to have lost so much, there was a part of me that relished the feeling of looking like a monster to scare the living daylights out of them. I shake my head and continue. ”And I didn’t want to be there. The world didn’t have much to offer, did it? Just the people – oh, they were fun – and the candy. I worked in a candy shop, if you can call it work. I just kind of sat there behind the counter and stole chocolates while I waited for customers.“ The thought makes me laugh, and suddenly I crave chocolate.
Other more painful memories arise along with the nice ones, and suddenly I’m shaking my head firmly.
”No. I think.. I’m better off dead,” I say, my voice almost soft.
A few days before (or hours?) I would never have let the thought grow. Now, in death, I realize how true it is. If anything, I’m just frustrated that there isn’t anything here.
”What do you remember of the Games, and what do you think of the Victor?” the man asks, his eyes locked on my face.
Shutting my eyes, I try to think. The Games come back to me in small bits, but I can’t feel. The Bloodbath, the killing, the acting, the loss of various body parts.. HA. Perhaps the Games weren’t emotionless after all. I mean, now that I’m dead, what do I care if my eye was mangled? But I can feel the memory and the sudden realization – that feeling which generally shows up after something disastrous, like ”I want to go back and undo that moment” and ”What just happened?”
”I remember lots of stuff,” I say, eyes still shut. ”I was so.. involved in my own Games that I never stopped to think much about the others. Except my alliance – Mahlah, and Elon, and Walker. Fitz, too. He was fun to kiss. And – wait, who won?”
I swear I died seconds ago.
”Klaus Goravich,” the fuzzy man replies simply.
”Oh,” I say, thinking back. How am I not angry? How am I not sad about death? How could I have paid such little attention? ”There was.. the Bloodbath. The Feast. And the day Elon died, he was there too. He was a threat, and that’s it. Guess that’s why he won.” I sigh. Apathy doesn’t suit me. I want to be angry, to wield a weapon, to kill, to feel. This blackness is not real, because if it were, and I could feel completely and wholly like myself, I would have a knife at the fuzzy man’s throat, demanding answers from him instead of answering halfheartedly. I must have buried my face in the sand the entire Games. Here I am, dead, and I can’t remember or feel enough to come up with a decent answer. Still, I’m not wrong. It takes a lot to win the Games, and whoever the boy was, I don’t hate him I suppose. I don’t hate Mahlah either, and she murdered me. I hate this, whatever it is, suspended somewhere in the middle between hatred and love, life and death.
Can’t I just go to Hell already?
”No.. no.” I whisper, looking down at my fingertips. ”Where am I? Why can’t I feel?” I ask, glancing at him hopefully.
He stares at me with a knowing smile.
”You’ll see.”
And he disappears.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
There are some days when I forget that I’m dead.
The afterlife is an endless blur, an infinity that spins on and on through summer heat and autumn colors and winter winds all in one day. (There’s never spring here. Spring means rebirth, life, and that is the only thing we may not have.) I often go down to the market, though I’m not really certain why. It’s nice down there, though. The people don’t even look like I imagined ghosts to me, their skin warm and solid rather than frigid and transparent, cheeks brightly flushed rather than hollow. My age varies when I skip down the path canopied by trees - some mornings I’m five years old and doing cartwheels, and others I’m ten and skipping, and others still I’m seventeen and happier than I ever remember being when I was alive.
When I was alive. I don’t really think about it that often. In this eternity, my life feels like a single instant, a snap of the fingers that lead to this bliss. Mother doesn’t mention it, not ever. No one does. I think they’ve forgotten, but that’s okay. There was nothing significant about the lives we lived save the fact that it was a test that led us here. And here is far better than there - here there are summer mornings when I read on the porch swing while mother makes lunch inside, and autumn afternoons where I climb high up into the trees with some of the friends I’ve made here, and winter nights spent telling stories with old friends in front of the fire. Occasionally at the market some people will strike up a tune and everyone will dance, spinning and laughing until they are breathless. I like to climb up onto the rooftops and watch when that happens.
Today, though, there is no dancing or storytelling or climbing or reading. Today, it rains, a thunderstorm that drags its crystalline fingers down our windowpanes and whispers above us. I light the candles throughout the house while mother vanishes into the basement to read. I choose to sit by the windowsill, a sphere of warm light illuminating my face while I watch the showers beyond our house. It doesn’t rain here often, so it’s not a sad thing, like it was back when I was alive. Instead, it is fascinating and beautiful and quiet, a cleansing of the afterlife. Usually it means the arrival of another young soul, like myself. Mother says it rained for many days before I came. That’s how they know when the Games have arrived - the storms come and don’t leave for a long time.
A knock sounds suddenly at our door, quick, neat raps causing it to bounce on its loose hinges. I glance over at the stairs across the room, but Mother must not have heard. I rise to my feet and hurry over, tugging at the stubborn doorknob and then ushering the wet stranger inside. That’s another thing about this place - you trust everyone. They wouldn’t be here if they were bad. Without turning to face our guest, I gesture toward the sofa and begin to head toward the basement. “Please, sit down. I’ll get my mother.” I haven’t been dead long enough for any visitors to come for me.
“That won’t be necessary, Ms. Lenstil,” a cheerful, oddly familiar voice replies. “I’ve come to talk to you.”
Frowning, I turn slowly and peer through the dim light. I can recognize a deep blue suit and odd hairstyle, and my eyebrows shoot up. “... Caesar Flickerman?” But then I see the angles of his face are somewhat different, the shape of his face slightly altered, and I realize that this isn’t him. A dead ringer, but not him. “Sir, I’m sorry, but, ah... who are you?”
“I’d like to ask you a few questions, Destiny,” the man replies enthusiastically, as if that answers my question. “An interview, if you will, about the 61st Hunger Games.”
My eyes flicker closed and suddenly my life isn’t just a moment before forever - it is minutes, hours, days of torture that strike painfully into my chest. My lips press together firmly and I sigh, shaking my head before gazing at the man evenly. “I’m sorry, sir, but you’ll have to leave now.”
“I’m afraid I can’t, Ms. Lenstil,” he says brightly, straightening his back slightly and glancing back over his shoulder at the window I had been sitting at moments ago. “You see, it’s raining, and if I leave now I’ll dirty the afterlife and this whole process will have to start all over again. Don’t you know that?”
I didn’t, but I pretend otherwise, nodding and sitting down stiffly in one of our kitchen chairs. It creaks under my light weight, the only sound besides our voices and the quiet hum of the raindrops hitting our roof. “Fine, then. You may remain for now.”
“And the interview?”
“The Games are a past I’d rather not dredge up at the moment, sir,” I say, my voice steady though my hands fidget, fingers twisting in my lap. “I’m perfectly happy here, where I don’t have to remember them.”
“The Games are not something you should forget, Ms. Lenstil, if you don’t mind me saying so,” all the while he keeps a light, polite tone, as if we’re talking about something beautiful and happy. But we’re not. We’re talking about blood and agony and betrayal. “It is good to remember the pain. To know why you’re here.”
“You were not in them,” I’m angry, now, though I’m not really sure why. My voice rises slightly. “You speak of what you do not know. The Games were horrible, and if you were me you would do everything you could to banish them from your mind.”
“I think they’d be quite exciting,” he says, smiling. “Quite an adventure.”
“An adventure?” My pitch raises as I stare at him, wondering just how much of an idiot he is. “Exciting? Do you have any idea what it’s really like? What I went through?”
“No,” he says brightly. “That’s why I’m here, Ms. Lenstil. We all know that you went crazy in the Games. That you fell apart. But what we don’t know is what it was like for you, truly. All we ever heard were the crazy ramblings of a strange little girl. But there was more to it, wasn’t there? There must have been.”
I pause. Yes, there was more to it. So much more. There was heartbreak and betrayal and fear and anger and brokenness, something the Capitolites would never understand unless I told them directly. Unless I told him directly. I hesitate. Maybe this is my chance to become someone other than the girl who went insane in the 61st Annual Hunger Games.
“Alright,” I sigh heavily, running my palms up and down my thighs to warm them. “I’ll do it.”
“Fantastic,” the strange man grins from ear to ear, stretching his freakish figures and making him look almost grotesque. “Let’s begin then, shall we? FIrst and foremost, how do you feel about your killer and former ally winning the Games?”
I shift and the chair creaks again. At least the first question is somewhat easy, although it forces me to remember lying in agony upon the sand while my head rested on Klaus’ lap and we watched the sunset together. “Klaus still is my ally. Killing me didn’t change that. I was the one who asked him to do it. And I’m glad he won. He... he was good, in a way that I don’t think any of the rest of us were. Brave. He held it together when I fell apart.”
“So you aren’t angry about losing?” Surprise is clear in the man’s voice and his eyebrows climb close to his hairline. “You don’t wish it had gone differently?”
I turn my head toward the window, trying to join together the right words. “I’d like to say that Klaus deserved it more than the rest of us, but that’s a bit tricky. Surely someone could say that the mother should have won, or the twin, or the girl who lost every person she ever loved. But the truth is, none of us were... I don’t know, pure? Not like him, anyway. He was like... like the sun. And we were just tiny stars in comparison.”
It’s a horrible metaphor, but I’ve never been good with words. The man nods, though, as if he knows exactly what I’m talking about. “Are you glad he killed you, then? Do you like being dead?”
It’s the most ridiculous question I’ve heard, insensitive in it’s ignorance, the kind only a Capitolite would ask, so I can’t help but give a snort of laughter. “As much as anyone can, I guess.” A pause. “I mean... dying wasn’t pleasant, and I wouldn’t encourage anyone to do it willingly, but the afterlife’s really nice. It’s like the home I never had.”
“Indeed,” he nods again, like he’s known all of this before I’m saying it, but before I can be annoyed by that he’s asking another question. “Now Destiny, when you fought Pandora Woodard’s alliance, Klaus didn’t attack the boy you loved. And yet, you can’t say the same. You nearly killed the person he loved. How does that make you feel?”
I chew on my bottom lip, frowning. “Guilty, of course. Just another reason why Klaus is a better victor than I could ever be. That’s one of the reasons I wouldn’t have blamed him if he had killed me in spite. He didn’t, though. He did it because he felt sorry for me. I guess that makes me all the more despicable, doesn’t it?”
“So how do you live with yourself here, then?”
“I don’t know,” I shrug, drawing my legs up onto the chair and hugging my knees close. “I forget, I guess. That’s all I really can do anymore.”
“If you could have done anything differently in the Games, what would it have been?”
I stare at the worn floorboards. There are so many things I know he expects me to say. I wouldn’t have fallen for Pan, I would have left my alliance to be with him, I wouldn’t have killed the boy Klaus loved, I would have left with Fitz the night before I died. But the truth is, those aren’t the things I regret the most. “I wouldn’t have lost myself. I wouldn’t have gone insane. Maybe people would have seen more to me if I had kept my head. I was weak, and I think I hate that more than anything.”
Suddenly I notice the absence of the whisper around our house, and look outside to see the rain’s stopped.
“Well,” the man says, standing up and brushing himself off. “I suppose that’s my cue to leave. It was very nice speaking with you, Ms. Lenstil.”
“Likewise,” I say, though that’s a blatant lie. I show him to the door politely, closing it firmly behind him and then leaning against the framework, dipping my head down. I want to cry. I want to cry, but I don’t. Maybe he was right. Maybe I need to remember what happened, the reason I’m here. But as rays of sunlight begin to burn through the clouds, I realize that even in the afterlife, in the choice between what is right and what is easy, I always choose the wrong thing.
I open the door again, run out into the puddles, and forget.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
{ p a n d o r a w o o d a r d s }
"Go on ahead, I'll catch up..."
[/i][/right]i painted a picture of the things i wanted most
to color in the darker side of all my brightest hopes
but there's a monster standing where you should be
so i'll paint you wings
and i'll set you free
Floating around a desolate void with nothing but memories to keep you occupied can do bad things to a man's mind. I've been bored for an eternity. The afterlife was not created with Pandora Woodards in mind, and whoever the hell made this place needs to take my concerns into consideration. I'm going mad with the vast nothingness that I find myself staring into, searching for a way out. I've been dead for a long time, yet as time stretches, I'm still not getting used to this place. It's just... black... and empty. The numb throb hits the side of my head again, like a reminder that I am dead. My fingers gently stroke the side of my face that is missing, the part that blew off from the latch crab muttation's explosion. It stings on contact, even in this place. Pain is warped and strange, but still recognizable as an unpleasant feeling. I sigh, letting my body swim still through the abyss.
I'm not alone. If I've learned anything about death, it's that you're never alone. It's like being at a train station. You see faces move past at different speeds - some slow and steady, waiting and watching. Others have no time to stop and whiz by impatiently. All I can do is watch them, never speaking never looking never hearing. It's like they are not aware of me, and my existence is somewhat separate. The faces are those of people I do not know, each with strange features and interesting stories in their pasts. I only wish my boredom could be quelled with conversation, but they are not parallel with me, and instead tangent away to disappointing effect.
Occasionally, Death will float by, giving me an icy stare that I enjoy. It is the closest thing to communication I have had in a long time. I only wish I could see the people I love, but we are separated by two realities. To see Rubik one more time, to comfort him, or just to see how his life is going without me. I crave that more than anything, but wishing for the impossible is pointless.
As if Death can read my foggy thoughts, he drifts over to me. His yellow eyes bleed through his nightmare-dark cloak. I am not afraid of Death, not like I was at first. Death is but the god of the afterlife, a silent guardian who seldom speaks. He is my friend, he is everyone's friend... And why be scared when you are already dead? Death puts words into my head, and this is how we speak. I have 'talked' to Death before, twice on occasion. He spoke to me briefly after my arrival, and then again much later. It has been a while, but his golden eyes look at me like he has always known who I am.
"You have something on your mind, Pandora." He says, or rather he thinks. With no face or mouth, it's hard to tell what he is doing, "You must clear it from your conscience." He decides, floating closer to me, his body looming over mine in a ten-foot tower. I am not nervous, nor afraid. I am in fact excited to have something to do, instead of floating around with Rubik on my mind.
"You have no regret." He says, more than he asks. Like it's a fact.
"You know I don't." I say, thinking back to when Death first spoke to me, and asked me at length if I regretted any of my life decisions. I died with no regret, and take a clean slate into the afterlife. Death circles me, staring at me with those burning eyes. Doesn't he have anything better to do?
"I must ask you about the Games." Death declares, stopping a few feet in front of me. The Games? Why is Death concerned about the Games? He must have always seen the Hunger Games as a sad little thing, but I can't help but think that Death enjoys watching the mad scramble for life. Children trying desperately to run from the one thing they all fear: Death himself. I screw up my face, floating on my back, moving in the abyss' stream, going nowhere yet always moving.
"The Games?" I ask, my hands reaching behind my back as I try to relax. What I'd do for a cigar.
Death nods, floating along with me, but remaining more refined than my casual and slack figure.
"Twenty Three fell, but one avoided me." Death tells me in his dark voice, "I am aware of how the Games work... Klaus Goravich did not cheat me, but I wish to know more about him. I feel he is one I would have liked to have claimed." He finishes, sounding as bored as I. At least this will kill some time. Time, time. So much time. I shrug, staring upwards. So Death wants to know about Klaus, the Victor, the survivor? Death does have a fascination for the living, especially for the famous and the ones he nearly claimed for himself. It's like he has a figurine collection, and it's not complete without Klaus Goravich, and won't be for a long while.
"What do you want to know?" I ask, thinking how I am the wrong person to have come to. I would have though that Death would have gone to Fitz or Penelope, even Destiny, but instead he comes to me. I find myself wondering why. Why me? Maybe he has already asked them, and I am just another opinion.
"You met him. What is your view on him?" Death softly ushes, like a child asking questions to the storyteller. I smile, closing my eyes to remember the Games. The highlight of my boring life.
"Klaus was just an ordinary guy, from what I remember." I begin, stretching my limbs, even though I never get tired in the afterlife. I find that pretending I'm alive keeps me sane.
"He was just one step ahead of everyone else, that's why he won." I state, "He's from Three, therefore he's logical... Combine that with a well-built body and some good allies, you can't argue he wasn't deserved." I open one eye to look at Death. I find myself grinning as Death himself shrugs.
"I do not wish to know the reasons behind his victory. I want to know what you thought of him." He corrects me, and I roll my eyes. It's all the same, isn't it?
"Klaus spared my life, so that I may speak to Destiny." I inform him, "He gave me free will where others would have cut my throat. So, I like the guy." I say, spreading my arms and swimming along through the void. Going nowhere, going nowhere. I dislike talking about the Games, it brings too many bad memories, but still this is the only conversation I've had in what feels like months. Death tilts his head, staring into me still.
"He also killed his friends." Death says, the words like a kick to the stomach. I stare up, my eyes transfixed on a spot.
"We all did." I am tempest and pensive, Death grows impatient..
"Tell me more about Klaus Goravich." He says, like a robot not being able to process a command. I smile at his childlike impatience. He isn't human, and the barrier can be humorous at times.
"Look, Death old buddy, old pal... There's nothing more I'd like right now that to be left alone with a glass of whiskey and a high-grade cigar, thinking thoughts of summers past... Yet seeing as how those aren't available in the afterlife, I think it'd be best if you could at least just leave me in peace..." I say to him, a little fed up myself. I crave conversation, but not ones about my own past, and my sins. I killed Naveen, my friend, my ally. I don't need Death hanging over my shoulder to remind me that I killed a mother of two.
"I will see what I can do about the cigar." Death says, which makes me sit up with a stupid grin on my face. I forgot that this is Death's world, and he can likely conjure whatever he likes. I take this as a bribe, and decide to tell him more about Klaus.
"He's one of six or seven siblings, which is quite unusual. I'm a twin, but I think he's a quadruplet, or a quint', or something. It's strange." I say, wondering if Death knows what twins are. He told me once that he had never been to the mortal realm, and only knows what people tell him. Death is silent, as if he is waiting for more.
"He's intelligent. He certainly didn't win it through brawn, I'm certain that I could have taken him one-on-one, but it wasn't meant to be." I say, thinking how it could have been me. Should have. No regrets.
"What do you think of Klaus Goravich?" He asks me for what is the third time, and I start to get annoyed at Death's lack of understanding. Maybe I'm not giving my opinion of him, as much as my knowledge of his lift. I sigh, leaning against thin air like it's a barrier.
"Klaus is honestly one of the nicest guys that I had the pleasure of knowing. He was fair, and I respect him..." I say, "I wouldn't have wanted anyone else to win it."
Death seems to be content with my answer, as he swiftly turns and drifts off in the opposite direction. I sigh, thinking about whether or not I have answered Death's questions in the right manner, and if he's satisfied? As if to answer, Death returns, sticking a long brown cigar in my mouth. I can hardly protest as he clicks his bone fingers to create a flame, which he uses to light my cigar. I take a puff and grin widely, watching Death as he goes. I laugh for a while, taking the cigar and exhaling the smoke. I think I'm going to enjoy being dead.
i was a pawn in all of your plans you kept me busy
locked behind your chamber doors when you felt frisky
until you got sick of me
i was never good enough to be anything but remedy
to all your constant pressing needs and i never learned
[/i][/right]locked behind your chamber doors when you felt frisky
until you got sick of me
i was never good enough to be anything but remedy
to all your constant pressing needs and i never learned
[/color][/blockquote]
notes: Merry Christmas<3
theme:[/color] "Paint You Wings" - All Time Low.
graphics:[/color] all done by me.[/color][/size]
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[/justify]Even when my legs collapsed under me and my unknown knife flew from my blood-slimed grip, I kept on running. The poets and philosophers say that your family beckons you when you die, all the dead who you knew invite you to join them. They promise it's peaceful, so that passing through to the other side is easy. Death is slow, and often it's better an easy lie than a painful truth. That's not how it is at all. Dying is a water sodden road, which you run barefoot, and the roots reach out of the ground and tie themselves around your swollen ankles, and your knees give way, but every time you feel like you're about to fall another burst of agonising strength comes to you and you keep on running. You know, in the corner of your mind, that behind you the road is crumbling, and there's no way back to that crowd of lost children all fighting for their lives and supplies or your broken body with its sword-short hair and muscular, gangly legs. The only way is on.
Here, it's always day, and the sheer immensity of this place means there's always somewhere to be alone, when you want to be. My family isn't here, nor Bethlehem or any of the workers my father was in the factory with who I know for sure died in fire or fever or fumes of nightmare gases. Only new people walk here, people who I can't be certain are real. Maybe Death is simply another mind place, where you're still aware, just not awake.
One thing's for sure - I can see so much more clearly now. It's not just from the lack of my District's smog, or the absence of the fear I felt, standing on that podium as it rose into the Arena. I can remember events from my life, and see exactly why they happened, what would have happened, what happened next.
District Five couldn't have had another victor - not with Klaus Goravich and his allies fighting together.
I think I first understood that when he came charging at me, with the Two and the Fours, and I had the chance to really look at him. Though I would have liked to, running wasn't an option. He has bright blue eyes, vulnerable eyes. I imagined then what it would be like if that camera of his worked the other way - so that the tributes, interviewers, Gamemakers or Peacekeepers could see into his eyes, and into his mind. I can understand now that we would have seen the same thing that was already plain on his face. A terrified boy, laced with secrets, always with open eyes and ears. Not born to be a Victor, but inevitably one.
It would have been an honour to have been killed by Klaus himself. No doubt he murdered many, but I imagine that he did it, at least in the first few days of his horrific Tribute life, with mercy and regret. Having someone so fearless, but so terrified, open, yet still secretive, not ready to admit his intricacies and complexities just yet, deliver that fatal blow, would have set my mind to rest. For I see it as it is now: a hero isn't someone who can naturally rise above the others. A hero isn't someone whose holier than thou attitude makes them superior. A hero is someone who can fight and keep on fighting. Someone who doesn't strike fear into their enemies, but instead fills them with acceptance and calm, so when their time comes they take it smiling. Running. A hero is Klaus.
May the Forces that Be save his troubled soul.
-----------------------------
[/blockquote]
Thank you to everyone from the 61st who sent me their tribute's response. <3 I hope you like this, Clover!