Spinning Onward {Axel}
Jan 20, 2013 21:33:34 GMT -5
Post by Morgana on Jan 20, 2013 21:33:34 GMT -5
In ceremonies of the horsemen
Even the pawn must hold a grudge
He sat on the sagging couch, guitar propped up against the wall beside him. This house, filled with strange people, was safe. He'd known these people - or known of them, at least - for a while, and he knew they wouldn't turn him in. Not that it much mattered. If Peacekeepers caught him here, they couldn't punish him for leaving his home district. They had no proof that he'd even left. He'd been born in District One, raised here. It was risky, his coming here. He might run into his parents, and they'd beg him to come home. Or that ask questions about Mira, questions he'd been trying to answer himself for too long now.
The people didn't bother him. This was a safe place, the owners of the small house always welcoming to wanderers - Gusty supposed they'd have some message for him to deliver, or they'd ask him to play some songs. He didn't mind either way. The songs would give him an excuse not to think, and the message would give him a purpose, a reason to keep moving forward. He put his head into his arm and sat like that, one eye staring out at the world. He was tired from travel. He wanted rest. But when didn't he? Everything these days was so exhausting. Even rolling out of bed in the morning took effort. A good night's sleep wouldn't cure him, because a good night's sleep didn't exist to him anymore.
People were talking. He wasn't paying attention to the words, he just watched lips move, waited for his cue to take the impromptu stage. All he wanted was to move on. He didn't like District One - it stirred up too many memories. The only reason he was here was because he'd had a message to send to one of the owners of this house, a plea for money from a poor woman with five young children in District Eleven. He did that sometimes, carried packages of food or clothing to and from the Districts. Anything that could help, really, though he wished he were doing something that felt more like bringing down the Capitol. He needed to scream at a Peacekeeper, to feel that rage, heavy as iron in his chest. A feeling, an emotion. It was something, anyway, and it felt more real than the adrenaline pumping through his veins as he made a getaway. Anger was something he could hold on to. Terror always faded.
He'd stay here a night. Not two, because he couldn't fathom that. Two was far too long. With any luck, the people he was staying with would send him off with some food or a little bit of money. If not, he'd steal some food from a store before he left. Why not? It wasn't as if the Capitol wasn't stealing from people already. Another meal or two stolen wouldn't hurt. But once the Capitol was gone, the government destroyed, he'd stop stealing. He'd make an honest living. Or maybe he'd just kill himself, since he wouldn't have much of a purpose anymore.