Slow & Steady //Windy
Jan 19, 2014 3:54:19 GMT -5
Post by gamemaker kelsier on Jan 19, 2014 3:54:19 GMT -5
I have a heart.
It is just there, hidden behind my rib cage. I have lain in the dark and heard it beating. It is steady, bump, bump, thump, it goes. I have listened silently to it, and heard it thud against the head of a boy who lay with his head against my chest in the darkness until the sun rose. It has left me with much to think about.
I did know it was there, I am not stupid. Despite my poor upbringing, I did read and attend school. I understand basic human mechanics. It pumps blood out and takes air in and that keeps the whole thing going. My body is a giant machine, going, going, going. The other night, I heard it. It's just funny, because often times, I sit quietly, straining to hear it, but nothing comes. Other times I can hear it so loudly that I wake up screaming to the pounding in my head and the heat of imaginary flames. It's like my heart is an alarm that only seems to sound when something enormous is happening.
The other night, the avox gave in, and let me take care of him.
The past two weeks, I have been on Avox duty, barely leaving my rooms, which is not anything new, to care for a boy who is just around my age, who came to me on the verge of death. Like any good Avox, he kept attempting to switch it back around, to serve me like he thinks he is meant to. Each time, I was able to switch it back around, to his general annoyance. I do believe I have found myself successful in the care taking of the boy. I can't even see his bones through his skin anymore. Yet, he is still afraid of me. That's alright. I never expected to be loved. I have never sought it out either, I gave up on it ages back.
Currently, I wear an apron and hot mitts. Experimentally, I flex my hands and almost smile when my fist is nothing but a fluffy slab of oven mitt. I stare into the glass of the state of the art oven, willing tiny little square cakes to cook faster. I have almost grown bored of cooking and baking, although it has been over a year since I last did. There's just something about the flame on the gas stoves that puts me on edge. In a basket on the counter behind me, there is already tea, chicken fried in ginger, noodles, and a fruit salad of watermelon, pears, apple and grapes. The Avox lady insisted I bake dessert as well if I was going to make a picnic anyway, and she'd pointed to a recipe for the brownies she always bakes.
I'm thinking after the last hour ended they finally got a bit used to my being here, in the kitchen. The motherly one keeps trying to take over, and every time I glare at her, she isn't put off. She just glares back. Then she breaks into a big grin, and Ripred help me, it's getting harder and harder to stare back. She's getting to me. What is this? A guy goes a good few months of remaining ice cold to everyone, and one Avox boy is enough to get me smiling? Ripred.
The oven makes a ding sound so I pull open the doors and poke the little pans with a fork. It's sort of goopy, but when I look over at the Kitchen Lady (gotta learn her name) she gives an approving nod, so I guess it's alright. I have to wait for it to cool, so I play cards with the Avox that tends the gardens. He's taking his break in the kitchen, and I've seen him around a few times. He gets my no talking thing. He gets my love for the garden, I know because there's no way the person who tended that garden could not love it. We play a game of Presidents and Assholes. He beats me so I give him a brownie after it cools.
I finish packing the basket and heave it off the counter, untying the knot of my apron with one pull of string, and looping it off my head. As I exit the kitchen, I drape the garment on a hook, and give a small salute to the staff. With a twist of my heel, I make my way through the thin corridors back to the main halls of the residency. I love the passageways of the servants. They never look down to avoid my gaze when I travel them. This is their terrain, I am the intruder here. It is like being sixteen years old and nothing better than a drug addict's mistake and a dealer's illegitimate son. I was scum then. Much easier to be scum.
I make my ways out to the gardens, to the space of grass beside the river where the cherry trees and rose bushes encircle it. There is the blanket I laid out this morning, with pillows, and a few extra blankets in case it was cold. Carefully, I unpack the food, and lay it out, moving a plate here, placing a saucer and cup there. Eyeing it, I move them around again before finally deciding that it looks alright.
Suddenly, I am nervous.
This is stupid, it's too much. I just want to show him that it's okay here, that I'm not like all those other masters, that I'm really nothing more than a boy from the slums of The Capitol, who never had his own bathroom, let alone a real bed. Yet, I need to be seen as the powerful son of Mr. Otari, and not as that boy from the slums.
I don't have to for him though. He's not going to tell anyone.
I clap my hands together and bring them up to my lips in one sweeping motion, reaching the decision to move. Long strides take me back to the veranda to my room. I slide the door open, not forcefully, not with a bang, I don't want to spook him, the boy who moonlights as a deer.
"I have a surprise," I announce.
[presto]
WHEN MY BODY ARCHES THE VEIL?
[/presto]