Stay by my side {Nyte}
May 19, 2014 2:31:54 GMT -5
Post by Python on May 19, 2014 2:31:54 GMT -5
And if I made a promise
Could I stay by your side?
Would you guarantee my safety?
And say that I'd be alright?
E Z A B E L
DISTRICT5 | SIXTEEN
Could I stay by your side?
Would you guarantee my safety?
And say that I'd be alright?
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E Z A B E L
DISTRICT5 | SIXTEEN
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When a booth sprouted in the middle of the District Square a curious pair of blue eyes found their way to the very front. ”What is this for?” he had asked plainly, prompting an unblinking Peacekeeper to glance up at him through a pair of spectacles. ”Volunteers to help with the drought crisis in Districts Ten and Eleven,” he replied. He was one of two Peacekeepers manning the booth, and the second was busy advertising to crowds with a thunderous voice and a cardboard sign that Ezabel couldn’t read. ”Am I able to volunteer?” Was his immediate response, because an opportunity to leave the district was not something one should simply pass up. If they were taking volunteers then said volunteers would be provided with food and shelter, right? How else would they maintain the population? To a runaway making a living on soup kitchens and rare gestures of hospitality, this would be a safe haven. He would take it in a heartbeat.
”Yeah, just sign your name here. And hurry up, you’re holding up the line.” He handed the scrawny boy a black pen, and he used it to scrawl his name sloppily across the first empty block he spotted on the page. He may not have learned how to read, but during the time he dwelled in Ms. Bo’s tidy abode (all thanks to him completing every chore she assigned) he had been forced to practice signing his own name because it was “necessary in the real world.” The letters were huge, bold and ugly, but the Peacekeeper didn’t seem to mind. He merely wrinkled his nose and gestured him to step aside.
Ezabel waited all afternoon and evening on an empty stomach for them to make the final announcement. Hunger pangs scratching the pits of his shriveled stomach were as common as bug bites nowadays, so he didn’t mind the absence of food while he waited for the sun to climb and the Peacekeepers to emerge. When the announcement bounced off of every stone wall in the Square he scrambled to his feet and raced to the very front of the line so he could be first to board the train. It felt surreal when they escorted him past a large metal doorway and into a carpeted corridor with booths and tables, as if he were stepping into a new world. A new world with luxurious cushions and velvet curtains by the windows. There was even a tray of food waiting on one of the long tables, and he gorged himself until a stomach cramp begged him to quit.
He felt lethargic until the train left the station. By then every seat had nearly been occupied by volunteers of all ages. We’re going to District Ten, he reminded himself, and he could hardly believe it. He tried to recall all of the facts his Ma had read to him about the separate districts. A higher number meant less money and more labor, so he wouldn’t exactly be walking into a paradise, especially since they were suffering a drought. Still, if they were offering free shelter and food to volunteers then it was practically a vacation for him. It would require work on his part, but he was used to following orders anyway. He did it at Ma’s, he did it at Ms. Bo’s. Why not do it here?
When he arrived at the sun-bathed, desert district they assigned him to the ranches. His tasks would be to inspect and care for the animals. He was to check for symptoms of illness and starvation, then feed and bathe the ones that needed it. They put him to work in a barn of cows immediately after the orders were given and the strict rules explained. According to his overseers, when a day’s work was complete he would be staying in house “six” with a group of other boy volunteers. As he shuffled his way into one of the pens, he wondered if he would make any friends in this place, or if they would all think he was stupid because he was illiterate.
At least the cows don’t care if I can read, he thought, and as it turned out he wasn’t granted much company besides the silent presence of miserable cows. Once the alarm that signaled a day’s end sounded and made his eardrums ring, he sauntered out of the barn, wandered to the nearest spicket of water – where a line was forming of thirsty children craving hydration – and stood at the back of the line, wiping sweat away from his brow with his sleeve. He couldn’t help but take a whiff and scrunch up his nose. I smell like cow. He chuckled. He hadn’t smelled this good in a long time.
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