Vital Signs} Ambrose Stand-Alone
Oct 23, 2012 2:45:36 GMT -5
Post by charade on Oct 23, 2012 2:45:36 GMT -5
Life.
Life is all about the moments of impact and how they change our lives forever.The moment of impact which proves potential for change, its effects rippling far beyond what we could have ever imagined. It sends some particles crashing together, forging bonds and making them closer than before; at the same time sending others spinning off into great ventures. Landing them where you've never thought you'd find them. But the the thing about moments like those that makes them so powerful, is that you can't, no matter how hard you try, control how it's gonna affect you. The impact will do what it wants, and all you can do is wait for the next collision. For Ambrose Dempsey, the moment of impact was the death of his daughter Kiera Niamh Dempsey. The girl that was at the same time the third oldest and yet the third youngest of his five children.
“...es its an extraordinary thing that the Capitol scientists have cooked up for today Claudius, though I’m not entirely sure how it works. I’m sure our viewers at home may have some questions as well, Care to explain?” Eying the television screen with a look of growing annoyance etched on his face, Ambrose resigned himself to listening to what the two pompous wigs were talking about. He was not in the best of moods, not after what had happened the previous night. He has excused himself from the room the moment that his daughters bawdy display with the boy from nine had begun. Somewhere in his mind, he had known that his children were entering the phase of their lives that turned curiosity into action. A natural part of growing up, and yet he had more than a little trouble coming to grips with what his daughter was old enough to decided she wanted to do. But did it have to broadcast to the whole of Panem?
“They call it the Morpheus Strain. During the night, This odorless, colorless and tasteless gas was pumped into several sections of the arena. The plan is to utterly splinter the large groups of tributes that continue to roam around.” The taller of the two nodded expectantly before motioning to the other to continue. “When inhaled, the gas begins to attack the brain stem, affecting the tributes REM Sleep and keeping them in that state while stopping the higher brain functions from making sense of it all.” A diagram of the organ appeared on the screen behind him as he said this. “In laymans terms, all the tributes that inhaled this gas during their sleep cycle will have trouble distinguishing the real from the dream state. Effectively keeping them in a functioning sleepwalking like trance.” Claudius chuckled for a moment before finishing his diatribe. “I’ve been told the hallucinations they experience today will be nothing short of disturbing. We can only wait and see how they react.”
But Flickerman had stopped paying attention to his co-host some moments ago, fixing his gaze on a screen that held a dead tribute and three others unsteadily making their way away from the area. “You’ve just missed it!” The video rewound and showed the action again in slow motion, the girl from seven taking a spear to her eye and collapsing. “Hmm. The Morpheus at work my dear Caeser.” Indeed, the screen split to show two groups of four tributes looking at each other half-crazed, uttering gibberish or shouting at people that weren’t there. A few even began to attack themselves. But Ambrose’s attention was of course, drawn to the form of his daughter driving her blade deep into the chest of the boy she had only the previous day given her body to. A small surge of pride caused a half-smile to grace his lips, if only for a moment. The wild look in all of their eyes was disconcerting.
There was a shriek from somewhere in front of where Ambrose sat; his seat of choice being his favorite rickety wooden chair, the alabaster paint peeling off in curly strips. On screen a fountain of blood appeared where his daughters arm had been.
Kiera is fifteen, plucking angrily at a cracked guitar that he had purchased at the nearest pawn shop for a fraction of its original price. She is upset with the trouble she is having in learning this new song. “Ripred Dad! This piece of shit is going to fall apart on me! Why couldn’t you get a better one?! “Language Kiera! We aren’t gutter trash.”“Oh I’m sorry, I meant this piece of CRAP is going to fall apart on me.”Ambrose shakes his head.“An instrument is only as good as the one who wields it. It is a man-made tool for entertainment, and as such, will work differently depending on the hands that use it."Kiera had continued to grumble. Abusing the strings until one of them had snapped, whipping around to leave a laceration on her arm, to which she had uttered a choice expletive.“Language young lady!he tuts again as he reaches for a washcloth. Placing it on her wound, he instructed her to keep the cloth there as he examined the instrument. Deftly taking the broken string off, he shakes his head and retrieves another from a box within his jacket. “Where’d you get those?"she demands.“If you had listened earlier, you would have known I managed to pick them up for half-price.”The guitar re-stringed, he thumbs it experimentally, before strumming a simple tune. “There we are. Now try it again. And be careful! You need the full use of both your arms with which to play this!
The present comes back with a roar as the announcers discuss the latest developments, including the death of the district three female. But what he sees is the spear going deep into her leg, sending more of her liquid life raining down to water the ground with crimson teardrops. His daughter is twelve years old. An injury sustained whilst trying to climb over a fence has necessitated several stitches above her knee. I certainly hope that you weren't but up to this by that dreadful Lightwood boy. The one who looks like your cousin? Landsakes, what is his name.... Never mind it. I trust you have learned your lesson about climbing fences? Promise me you aren't going to hurt yourself like this again? Tetanus is a nasty thing to contract." She nods mutely, but the look on her face tells him that he should get used to her not listening to him about things like this.[/i]
On screen his daughter stumbles as a blade clips her arm. She howls in anger and pain, screaming obscenities and phrases that, without the proper context, do not make any sense. The others in the area continue flailing about in a hallucinatory manner while the pit in his stomach continued to grow. Kiera had survived multiple injuries over several days, but it looked liker strength was flagging. As she swiped forward, Ambrose was unprepared for the heart-wrenching crunch of bone and ligaments as she fell away, having severed her own foot, falling to the ground like the Achilles of old. She has just turned five years old. On their way home from the store, Ambrose and Kiera have gotten caught in the rain. He tells her to stop splashing in the puddles.[/color]"You'll catch your death of cold.""Nuh-uh Papa. The water can't hurt me. Its fa getting clean!Shaking his head with a smile, he lifts her off of her feet and spins her around. "There will be plenty of time for that once we get home. I'll fire up the shower and you can get all the clean you wish.""That's not what I meant Papa..."She says as she jumps into another puddle. "But okay!"[/i][/color]
As if in a trance of his own, he came to the realization that one his children was..dying. It was a event he acknowledged, yet ignored to some degree. Ambrose had never been one to dance around the issue, preferring his dealings to honest and true. Real. But this... this was more than he could bear. The click of a door jolted him back to his senses, and a quick scan of the living room revealed the absence of his youngest daughter. "Blair? Blair dear, where are you? Did she step outside? Blair?!I'll not lose another... not now.Opening the door, he frantically searched up and the street, growing more anxious by the second."Letty! Letty, Blair has run off! See to the girls I've got to find her!
The door swung shut for the second time in as many minutes as the father of the house walked off briskly into the rising sun. A hundred sayings about grief rushed through his mind, anecdotes like how It’s not about surviving the storm, its about learning how to dance in the rain. Blair was nowhere to be found, and he stopped himself just a few houses away, catching sight of his reflection as sun continued to rise. How could his daughter get so far away so fast? And Blair had vanished so quickly too. Staring deeper at his reflection he became aware of his adam's apple bobbing feverishly up down. At least, before his eyes began to blur. Stifling the sobs that threatened to erupt out of his throat, he walked back to his front porch and sat upon it heavily. The action causing tears to begin threading down his face to splash on the grimy sidewalk; just before a true sob racked his heaving chest.
He is a sprightly twenty-five year old man standing in a maternity ward, restlessly pacing back and forth and cursing the man that invented something as diabolical as the waiting room. He is holding the small form of his child Cora, who clings to his shoulder as if it were the only thing in the world. Clutching his right hand is his eldest Moira, who gives passerby odd looks while huffing quietly to herself, occasionally fidgeting with a ribbon in her hair. A white clothed nurse peeks out of room 502, calling his name. He speeds towards the lady, a matronly figure that is rather plump. Inside the room, his beloved wife reclines, propped up by numerous overly fluffy pillows, a dreamy look on her face. A pair of small bundles nestled in her arms, One mewling piercingly to the world as if to announce its arrival. “It’s another girl Amby, Two even!" She drawls, her speech patterns slurred slightly by the medication she is on. The mewling bundle is offered to his hands as the other two clamber up next to their mother and the one that was still nursing. “What was that name you had wanted for another daughter Amby? This ones Siberia; but what was the other one...?”
“You don’t recall Letty? You wound me.” he says with an air of mock hurt. The tiny human in the bundle stirs and looks up at him with big doe-like brown eyes. He strokes her face and brings her closer to his; one of her hands fumbling for his index finger. “Welcome to the first district of Panem my little angel.”He says with a small smile. "Your eyes are as dark as the name I have chosen.”The infant girl stares at him for another moment before turning over and hiding her face in the folds of her blanket.“Look at me when I’m talking to you." he says quietly. Humorously.
“Kiera Niamh Dempsey,
I am proud to be your father.”
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