confessions of the damned {Cass}
Oct 22, 2013 19:26:59 GMT -5
Post by Python on Oct 22, 2013 19:26:59 GMT -5
[/justify][/blockquote]A horrible injustice was upon them. ”The petite cycle,” as it was so aptly named had been announced with the 65th Hunger Games Quell twist: that only ages twelve to fourteen would be entered into this year’s Reaping pool, thus stripping two ill-fated children of their hopes and dreams. Upon listening to the unnerving announcement, Indigo had nearly dropped her cup of milk and slackened her jaw from the initial disbelief. ”Are they serious?” she had muttered, not necessarily to Patch, who had been busying himself in the kitchen with dishes and dusting. The tyrannical cruelty of sending teenagers to their deaths each year (without their consent) was despicable enough, but narrowing it down to the inexperienced, underdeveloped children who had yet to reach their ripest years? She couldn’t believe her ears. ”That’s just…wrong.” Imagining herself at age fourteen, she recalled what it felt like to stand in that unsettling crowd. But with no older candidates to reduce her chances of doom? She had practically shuddered at the thought.
The thought of little kids wielding blades was not the only problem, though, and the longer she had sat there in silence absorbing the idea the sooner she had realized what the real issue was. This time, she had to set her cup down and turn around to stare at Patch with wide eyes. ”My cousins!” Oakley, Elnora, Clarice, Avis - they were all in jeopardy, and although she didn’t know much more than their names and general appearances (they weren’t particularly close, just aware of one another) she couldn’t help feeling protective of them. She didn’t want to see them Reaped, they were just kids! Kids that shared her blood. Everyone knew that in district nine a reaping was a death sentence. Victors in nine were unheard of, and there would be no hope for those whose names were called during the forthcoming Reaping.
Today was that day, and for once Indigo Soren and Patch Grey were standing with the adults rather than with the pack of potential corpses. She squeezed his hand as the children filed in; she could see her cousins among them like miniature cattle lining up to either be slaughtered or stashed away for a few more months. She pitied them and their worried faces as the escort stepped into view with that giddy smile stretched across his plastic face. The bundles of children arranged in front of the stage were smaller than usual, but the crowds forming a crescent around their tiny bodies was thick with relieved teenagers (especially those who were eighteen, and had successfully avoided their very last Reaping). Still, it was evident in their grim faces that what they were anticipating was going to be dreadful no matter what names were chosen. As the escort reached his polished hands into the first jar, Indigo found herself whispering to Patch, unable to seal her lips and be consumed by her racing thoughts. ”I know my cousins and I aren’t close, but I can‘t watch them die. I hope they make it out okay.”
Haven Ryecroft and Storm Jay were the damned ones. No, Storm Jay and Eden Angelis, a volunteer. Indigo exhaled a sigh of relief; the Sorens, for now, were safe. She watched the uproar of the Jays (a large family with plenty of children to lose, and one lost already. The second would be lost soon enough) from afar, and waited for the gathering to disperse. She would congratulate her cousins later - right now, there was something she had to do, somewhere she had to go. Patch should know by now what place that was. She had done the same last Reaping as well. ”Let’s go.”
She walked into the silent graveyard with steeled eyes and pursed lips. She was walking above an underworld of buried skeletons - one of them being her sister - but she neglected that fact and marched to Ivy’s grave with Patch at her tail. Ivy Soren’s name was carved into the granite headstone, where last year’s flowers had slowly wilted until only a few rotted twigs remained, and those had been swept away by winter storms long ago. This year she would not waste any time with flowers or material gifts. Ivy’s spirit didn’t need those things; she knew how much Indigo loved and missed her. Her salty eyes were enough proof that after two years, the pain was still fresh in her memory and resurfacing in front of this unscathed stone. She knelt in front of the patch of green where her casket had been lowered and grazed her hand over the short blades of grass that were flourishing there. She hoped that one day flowers would sprout from this very spot, so that Ivy’s death could bring life unto this cruel world.
”You didn’t deserve this.” The blood gushing from her skull, the hunger that surely set in after the first two days of living in the arena - all of it. They had known misery since the beginning, so why had this curse fallen upon them? Ivy is the one who had saved her life, shouldn’t that mean that Indigo deserved to die in her stead? ”You saved my life,” she continued, and suddenly she was very aware of Patch’s faint presence behind her. Of course, he wouldn’t have any idea what she was talking about; she had never told him the secrets of the warehouse, or the day her father had twisted her spirit with his bare (fists) hands. Perhaps now was the time to confess it all. They have been together for over two years, after all. They were even living together. There should be no more secrets, no more hiding. She would tell him now, or forever would Ripred hold her tongue.
”Patch,” she said, rising to her feet. ”There’s something I need to tell you.” she stared at the boy she had fallen in love with, and pleaded for him to listen and forgive. ”Something that I’ve been keeping a secret.”