it's just a flesh wound | aya
Jan 14, 2014 0:30:02 GMT -5
Post by shrimp on Jan 14, 2014 0:30:02 GMT -5
X A N T I A G O --- C O R R E I A
He feels like shit today.
Then again, he's felt like shit for the past few weeks. A max four to six weeks, to be precise. Fractured jaws are a bitch. He has to drink things from a straw.
Xanti yawns - or well, almost yawns, as yawning will be too painful to bear - and stretches, feeling his shoulder yelp in protest as it's moved a bit too much for the early morning. The sky is overcast and dull and the air is too cold for a boy from 2. He shivers as he dons his uniform, teeth clattering and soft curses muttered under his breath.
The house he's been assigned to live in isn't much, but at least it's got hot water and electricity some of the times. He knows that it's much worse closer to the meadow, where the citizens essentially live in shacks. In 2 nothing was like that; if you were poor your had a roof over your head and just enough to get by. Here, death walked freely through the dirt roads, leaving corpses lying on the side of the road or hidden in alleys.
They put him on corpse collection duty today; there's too many, always too many. He knows that Panem wouldn't be able to support itself without the Capitol but looking at the spreadsheet as he takes his lunch break, Xanti wonders exactly why the Capitol's allowed such poverty to even exist. He supposes that some must sacrifice so that others can live, but shouldn't everyone be able to well, survive?
Admittedly, Xanti forgets that he lives in a world where the Hunger Games are a scare tactic. He's always thought of them as a path to glory, even an honor to be chosen. Almost. There's always that nagging sense of doubt and darkness that lingers in the back of his mind, telling him that the only thing he'd face in the arena is regret. It tends to come out more in force when he's walking down these empty streets at night. People try not to look at him as they walk past; others glare openly (he just raises his eyebrows in response). The beggars always thank him when he gives them food.
It's quiet here, quaint. He gets by; he always has.
His lunch today is slop from the Hob: doctor's orders that he remains on a diet filled with mush, 100% liquid if possible. He smiles at the woman who runs the stand. Her stoic expression doesn't change as she hands him the bowl. He has no idea what's in it. He doesn't ask. I mean it doesn't taste like it's going to kill me - so bottoms up, I guess.
Still, Xanti can't help but yearn for the day where he can finally bite into a nice piece of steak, but it's not likely to happen in the near future. Thanks a lot- Oh speak of the devil there he is.
Xanti hasn't had the privilege to meet a lot of victors; his family wasn't particularly affluent and few victors wanted to speak to Careers after their games. Once he saw the wiry Cricket Antoinette perform in her circus, but otherwise that was about it. Yet here was Arbor Halt, victor of the 54th games, when Xanti was just what, 16? The blind tribute that he had joked about with Xuxa so long ago (had nine years already passed? It feels like he's just blinked and a chunk of his life's already faded away), the one who had punched him in the jaw during a bar fight.
He had just been trying to break it up; why was it always the upstander who got the shit kicked out of him? And since Arbor was a victor he was seemingly immune from all rules whatsoevernot like Xanti would have punished him or anything. It was a good shot after all, but he should have been able to defend it. The blame was his own. He doubted that the victor remembered him - he was pretty trashed that night and Xanti hadn't been in his gear.
But he wanted to know him, he wanted to know the guy who had been able to succeed, prosper, achieve the dream that so many from two had yearned for in their quest for salvation. And he seemed friendly enough too (he was probably fooling himself - Arbor Halt was known for many things but not for his kindness) and there was that feeling that Xanti just couldn't shake. Maybe, just maybe, he was a bit lonely here in 12 with no family to take care of or go home to on the weekends. And he had no friends whatsoever, besides from his fellow peacekeepers; there were only so many whipping jokes one could handle without going insane.
"Oi," he shouted, his face expressionless and his voice booming towards the victor. "I know you."
Shit, I can't keep a straight face. The smallest upward tilt of the mouth and narrowing of his eyes betrays his benign intentions.
"You're the fucker who broke my jaw."
Then again, he's felt like shit for the past few weeks. A max four to six weeks, to be precise. Fractured jaws are a bitch. He has to drink things from a straw.
Xanti yawns - or well, almost yawns, as yawning will be too painful to bear - and stretches, feeling his shoulder yelp in protest as it's moved a bit too much for the early morning. The sky is overcast and dull and the air is too cold for a boy from 2. He shivers as he dons his uniform, teeth clattering and soft curses muttered under his breath.
The house he's been assigned to live in isn't much, but at least it's got hot water and electricity some of the times. He knows that it's much worse closer to the meadow, where the citizens essentially live in shacks. In 2 nothing was like that; if you were poor your had a roof over your head and just enough to get by. Here, death walked freely through the dirt roads, leaving corpses lying on the side of the road or hidden in alleys.
They put him on corpse collection duty today; there's too many, always too many. He knows that Panem wouldn't be able to support itself without the Capitol but looking at the spreadsheet as he takes his lunch break, Xanti wonders exactly why the Capitol's allowed such poverty to even exist. He supposes that some must sacrifice so that others can live, but shouldn't everyone be able to well, survive?
Admittedly, Xanti forgets that he lives in a world where the Hunger Games are a scare tactic. He's always thought of them as a path to glory, even an honor to be chosen. Almost. There's always that nagging sense of doubt and darkness that lingers in the back of his mind, telling him that the only thing he'd face in the arena is regret. It tends to come out more in force when he's walking down these empty streets at night. People try not to look at him as they walk past; others glare openly (he just raises his eyebrows in response). The beggars always thank him when he gives them food.
It's quiet here, quaint. He gets by; he always has.
His lunch today is slop from the Hob: doctor's orders that he remains on a diet filled with mush, 100% liquid if possible. He smiles at the woman who runs the stand. Her stoic expression doesn't change as she hands him the bowl. He has no idea what's in it. He doesn't ask. I mean it doesn't taste like it's going to kill me - so bottoms up, I guess.
Still, Xanti can't help but yearn for the day where he can finally bite into a nice piece of steak, but it's not likely to happen in the near future. Thanks a lot- Oh speak of the devil there he is.
Xanti hasn't had the privilege to meet a lot of victors; his family wasn't particularly affluent and few victors wanted to speak to Careers after their games. Once he saw the wiry Cricket Antoinette perform in her circus, but otherwise that was about it. Yet here was Arbor Halt, victor of the 54th games, when Xanti was just what, 16? The blind tribute that he had joked about with Xuxa so long ago (had nine years already passed? It feels like he's just blinked and a chunk of his life's already faded away), the one who had punched him in the jaw during a bar fight.
He had just been trying to break it up; why was it always the upstander who got the shit kicked out of him? And since Arbor was a victor he was seemingly immune from all rules whatsoever
But he wanted to know him, he wanted to know the guy who had been able to succeed, prosper, achieve the dream that so many from two had yearned for in their quest for salvation. And he seemed friendly enough too (he was probably fooling himself - Arbor Halt was known for many things but not for his kindness) and there was that feeling that Xanti just couldn't shake. Maybe, just maybe, he was a bit lonely here in 12 with no family to take care of or go home to on the weekends. And he had no friends whatsoever, besides from his fellow peacekeepers; there were only so many whipping jokes one could handle without going insane.
"Oi," he shouted, his face expressionless and his voice booming towards the victor. "I know you."
Shit, I can't keep a straight face. The smallest upward tilt of the mouth and narrowing of his eyes betrays his benign intentions.
"You're the fucker who broke my jaw."