Through the Looking Glass [Tea--open]
Sept 4, 2010 15:10:42 GMT -5
Post by [Ella] -- gone until 10/25 D= on Sept 4, 2010 15:10:42 GMT -5
I've been looking in my mirror for so long
that I've come to believe my soul's on the other side
[/blockquote][/blockquote]When September came, my sister found me perched near the lake by our house, my knees pressed tightly against my chest.
If she thought I was crying, she didn't mention it. Then again, I wasn't crying. I was rubbing my eyes to see that, if I pulled away my fists, my green eye would turn to blue.
"Nyrah," she had said, her voice patient and cheery and happy. Nothing ever upsetted my sister. She was the girl who had everything, after all. "You have nothing to be sad about." And she had wrapped her cold, cold arms around me, possibly believing that she would comfort me. Her, the Golden Child, could actually comfort someone like me was pathetic. There was no possible way.
I'd turned to regard Janette Bartrone, then, with a cold expression. An expression that was carved out of ice and nothing more. "Stop pretending," I'd muttered. "Stop pretending you're better than me."
And then I'd gotten up and stuffed my hands in my pockets, walking away from my house, my neighborhood, and to the farthest pond I could find in District One.
I had picked a lousy time to roam. The sun was starting to set, and the fallen leaves that crunched beneath my feet were slowly swirling around in the lazy breeze. This was early autumn, where the temperature was still starting to climb. I sat down on the grass, still warm from the sun and laid back with my arms behind my neck. The sky was purplish and pink; I smiled bitterly at that. Another color balance gone wrong.
My hands fell over my face, brushing away the banes that hid my blue eye. Under normal circumstances, I could be considered a simple ex-Career with lush auburn hair and bright green eyes that were slightly too narrow. But if I tucked those banes behind, I could be considered someone with eyes that were inproportional. Ugly. A disgrace for any District 1 inhabitant.
"But I don't care," I reminded myself. Firm, as ever. "I've never cared."
It even sounded like a lie to my ears.