there is no light but mine; semper
Sept 17, 2013 16:56:19 GMT -5
Post by Python on Sept 17, 2013 16:56:19 GMT -5
[/justify][/blockquote]There are many forms of art, his mother had said.
There was art that pleased the eyes: paintings of nature, sculptures of objects, statues of people. There was the art of words, her personal favorite, composed of poetry and literature and all of the dusty books he had read over and over again on their rotting bookshelf. Poetry was the very reason he had been named Sonnet. Remnants of his father’s writing was stored away in their tiny cabin, hidden between the pages of mother’s private books and personal journals. He was never allowed to read them because her pain was too great, but whenever he asked she would tell him what and who they were about and why. She said that one day he would master the art of words himself and impress her with his own poetry, because the Preys were not a family of painters or sculptors. They would appreciate what they saw, but use only words to describe it. He had decided at a young age that he really enjoyed the talents of all artists - but there was one form she had never warned him about.
The art of killing.
Bloody knuckles revealed the truth behind his skills; he was a master of murder, and his weapons were stronger than his words. He had never wanted to learn this savage skill, because while it was romanticized for the sake of the Hunger Games there was nothing romantic or beautiful about it. Everything was one color: red. His blood, her blood, their blood, everyone’s blood was all red, hot, sticky, messy, and nothing short of repulsive. Art was supposed to be appealing, it was supposed to make his chest flutter, and it was supposed to bring joy rather than pain. Yet, according to his district and to Altair killing was a form of art despite its ugly face and gruesome consequences. Fellow human beings cheered when his bones crunched those of another. They clapped when he stood above a corpse with hollowed eyes and a frown that did not suit his features. They rewarded him after they dragged the carcass to the graveyard of his victims. He was a notorious artist forced to work for monsters and maniacs. His talents were wasted on death, and now his body was wasting, too. Rotting in a cell ill-suited for human beings.
Somehow he managed to smile through the misery each and every day, even when his insides were infected with guilt. Hope was his only cure, and his only anchor to sanity. Without optimism he would be an empty shell, a robotic killer with no visions or dreams of the outside world he missed most, and that’s why he always tried to smile. Obnoxious or not, he wanted to be the beaming sun in this underworld of darkness. What else did these children have besides the idea of impending doom? They needed friendship and company, a helping hand. Sonnet could be that friend. He would always try to be.
”Pepper?” his best friend’s name tasted sweet on his parched tongue. His voice sounded raspier than usual, his throat sore and rusty from lack of use. After his own recent encounter in the makeshift arena - ending in the artist’s triumph as expected - silence had captured him as its victim and shoved him into the corner of his cell, where he mourned the bodies he could not count and contemplated things he figured the other prisoners would never concern themselves with. They were all worried about death, disease, filth, and he empathized with them. But after three years the same subjects had grown boring. Sometimes he wondered if he was too thoughtful for his own good.
He scooted to the far side of his cell, facing Pepper with his knees pulled to his chest. It was time to banish the silence. ”Do you like poetry?”