the {irony} of choking on a lifesaver :: kolt
Nov 11, 2012 3:50:03 GMT -5
Post by Deleted on Nov 11, 2012 3:50:03 GMT -5
you saw my pain, washed out in the rain
broken glass, saw the blood run from my veins
but you saw no fault, no crack in my heart
and you kneel beside my hope torn apart
but the ghosts that we knew will flicker from youKaelen's house is always cold.and we'll love a long life, so give me hope in the darkness
Being here is surreal in a way that's not really pleasant; it feels like I'm peeking at the pages of a history he never wanted me to read. There are dusty photos on all the shelves, most of them of a pretty, young woman with bright-bright blue eyes. In one she's in a white dress standing next to a man that could be Kae if not for the broadness of his shoulders and the sturdiness of his frame. In another she's holding a sleeping baby, in another her arms are wrapped around a smiling, laughing little boy with a mop of messy brown hair. That's the one I look at the most when I go through the day with the cold, creaky house to myself. At first I thought that the child in the picture must have been Kaelen's brother because even I've never seen him smile like that, completely carefree and without the slightest hint of heaviness that always seems to linger in the corners of his lips. But with closer inspection, it was a little easier to see - the sharpness of the cheekbones, the strange amber shade of eyes rimmed in feathery lashes, the way his hair curled at the base of his neck. It still does that when he first gets up in the morning, I've come to notice after almost a year, just another one of a million little intricacies that have etched themselves into my head and heart more solidly than any words ever seemed to. No one would know by looking at the hair he always flat-irons into submission that he wakes up with a nest of tangled ringlets, just like no one would know that he wakes up with a soft, almost-sad smile that's mine and no one else's.
He'll never say it aloud, but he hates it here. I can see it in the way he looks into every shadow like some ghost from his past is going to come jumping out at him, in how there's always a shaky sort of tension beneath his skin that doesn't calm beneath my touch. There are so many things he hasn't told me (and so many things I haven't told him, I think briefly, violent splashes of crimson and the echoes of screams and terror flickering just beneath the surface of my memory before they're swept away again), and it's only recently that I've begun to wonder whether or not I want to know. He wakes up screaming sometimes. It happened once or twice back in Thirteen, a quick yelp next to my ear pulling me out of sleep followed by a fear-pale face and pursed lips telling me that it was nothing, go back to bed. It's different now, those once-rare flashes of nightmares giving way to full-blown subconscious panic attacks, thrashing and fighting against the sheets tangled around our legs that's thrown me out of bed more than once, followed by wide, frightened eyes that look like they should belong to a scared child more than the steely determination I know (knew?) so well, nothing but silence and quiet tremors he tries to hide until sleep pulls one or both of us back under.
Kaelen Dempsey has always been my beautiful enigma, but I've finally realized that he's hiding secrets that are tearing him down from the inside out.
I don't go with him when he sneaks off to his family's house. I've never been good with people, at least in the way of knowing what to say when they need comfort (or knowing what to say ever), and I don't want to intrude on their spider-silk web of support. I don't know Kiera Dempsey from a hole in the ground, and it's not my right to interrupt her family standing vigil as she marches slowly to her death. All I know of her is what I learn from my stolen glances at the glass-and-film puzzle pieces of Kaelen's life before me, a pretty girl with a lion's eyes that always seemed to hover close to her cousin's center of gravity - he has a way of doing that to people, I've noticed, pulling them back in no matter how hard they try to get away. They all know something I don't, these dead echoes in the picture frames, something dark and terrible, and that hidden knowledge sinks into my bones right alongside the horrible cold in a house that's never had heat.
My fingers creak in protest against the oncoming winter chill even as I wrap them around a hot styrofoam cup of coffee. Kae seems afraid to go out in the daylight but no one here knows my face, and I get bored being cooped up inside all day. District One is massive and bright and utterly different from what I can remember of the drab dullness of Three; I found a crumpled up bill floating across the street as I walked this morning and used it to pay for some fancy coffee whose name I couldn't pronounce at a little corner shop near the square. It's like everything's for sale here. I stumbled (literally) into a huge store filled to the brim with every type of musical instrument anyone could ever imagine, and it took all my willpower to pull myself away from the window and walk back to the creaky little house with the red shutters on the other side of town. No matter how much spare change I could find blowing across the alleys, it probably wouldn't be enough to afford a brand new guitar.
The cold of the wind still clings to my sweater when I edge through the door, sipping slowly at the coffee that tastes like pumpkin and cinnamon and everything wonderful in the world. There's an air of emptiness that hovers in the oppressive, chilly silence, and I sigh, kicking my shoes off and going back to my usual activity of trying to find something hidden in the depths of those dusty pictures that in all reality I probably don't want to find out.
"Wh-what do you know that I... I d-don't?" I whisper to the pretty lady with blue eyes and familiar honey-brown curls, to Kiera Dempsey with her eyes like the wisdom of the ancients and her smile like the blade of a knife, the pads of my clumsy fingers skating with surprising gentleness over the delicate features of the sleeping baby, the laughing little boy, the awkward, gangly middle schooler. "What... that word, that... what ha-happened to him? What... what isn't he... when you don't, oh, dammit... what isn't he telling me?"
The door swings open behind me with a creak and a hollow bang, and the sudden noise makes me twitch with surprise, the coffee cup tumbling from my hands and spattering all over the floor. Stuttering out a string of curses, I finally look up in time to watch Kaelen shrugging off his jacket and locking the door behind him. It's odd for him to show up in the middle of the day, the past few days he's left before dawn and come back after dark, but I don't really think about it as I leave the coffee to spread its way across the splintering hardwood floor and walk over to wrap my arms around his waist (slowly, carefully. No matter how much I try to tell him to eat he loses more weight every day, and I'm so afraid I'll go to touch him and he'll shatter). The cold from outside still clings to his clothes, his hands with their long fingers tangled in a knot with my own, his lips when they press against mine, and I try to smile for his sake even though there's the same knowledge behind his eyes that the photographs have been mocking me with for days.
What are you hiding from me what are you hiding from me WHAT ARE YOU HIDING FROM ME -
"A-are you... um, are you... you... okay. Are you okay?" I ask, knowing that he'll lie and say he is because he's Kaelen Dempsey and he doesn't think he's allowed to be anything besides okay. "You're... home? You're back, I guess, you're back... that word, um, you're back before... early. Back early. I went and got this pumpkin coffee stuff and it was really good but I spilled it."
I laugh stiffly at my own clumsiness, disentangling myself from Kae's arms and grabbing an old towel off the back of one of the sunken living room chairs, dropping it on the spreading puddle of coffee until it absorbs the liguid and the whole room smells like pumpkin and vanilla and secrets. Again, my eyes go to the pictures, hiding behind their curtain of dust and smiling at me in a way that I could almost swear was mocking me. We were here before you, they laugh silently, voices nothing but long-gone echoes. We know everything that he will never tell you. We know, we know, we know...
I shake my head hard to clear the imagined sound, but the momentum only sends me careening towards the floor, breathing out shakily when a spindly hand wraps around my bicep before I can hit and pulls me back up. No matter what he may hide and what those pictures know, at least he can still catch me. That much hasn't changed. I try to smile again but it feels wrong, stilted, a hand scratching absently at the back of my head as I nod toward the pictures and their mocking wisdom. "Your mom, um... she's, uh... she was really pretty. She looks nice. What was she like?"
Maybe Kaelen will never tell me what the ghosts of his past know, but I'm smart enough to put the puzzle together myself if he'll only give me the pieces.
that i will see the light
'cause oh, it gave me such a fright
but i will hold as long as you like
just promise me we'll be all rightword count: 1617 words
song: ghosts that we knew - mumford & sons
outfit: click me
notes: character swap!