home is where the heart is {silent} // frumtum
Oct 13, 2014 13:51:17 GMT -5
Post by cici on Oct 13, 2014 13:51:17 GMT -5
everything was beautiful
freya hanig
Here, it is easy to forget. It is easy to forget that there are people starving in District Eleven and Twelve, that any of kids all over television may be lying dead in only a matter of moments, or that the speechless creatures who serve us are human too. The gowns, the jewelry, the wealth, the entertainment – it’s all so difficult to look past. Is there even a reason to look past it? This is now. The Capitol is my home. Why should I go back to worrying myself with what’s beyond? Life can be simple if I want it to be.
Besides, when I was in the woods, it was easy to forget too – about my family, my friends, the people who were devastated over my disappearance. I guess we’re all ignorant in some way, whether we’re living in the Capitol bubble or roaming the wilderness. There are things to be sacrificed for a simple life, for a happy life.
Either way, I can’t seem to forget Rum Tum no matter how hard I try. I was so close too – so close to speaking again, so close to pushing that part of my life to the backside of my memory and starting over in the Capitol. I’ve been working hard to rebuild the life I tore down when I left. I’ve been attending secondary school, trying to catch up on the years I missed, and when I’m not studying or working, I’m attending therapy sessions and swallowing down pill after pill just as I have for the last year and a half. I do everything asked of me. I do a lot of it out of shame, out of repayment for leaving these people – these people who genuinely care for. Sometimes I wonder just how different my life is from that of an Avox. People love me; I suppose that’s the difference. Maybe I’d be happier if they didn’t.
I put my hands in my jacket pockets and pull my arms tighter to my body, shivering slightly amidst the chilly October air. I keep imagining the warm sensation of Rum Tum’s arms around me, as they were only days ago, but immediately frown at the thought and drive it away from my mind. We are safer apart. The past is past.
I’ve been spending a lot of time with Malcolm in the past few days. He’s nice enough: very polite, gentlemanly, kind, and also, well…he’s rich. We’ve had a few laughs. My parents like him. But it’s difficult to be open to him when the only person I can think of while we are together is Rum Tum: the trapped young servant who’s still a free-spirited seventeen-year old boy in my mind, the person I love and can’t love and have to stop loving. I know my mother would be overjoyed to see her daughter wed to a man like Malcolm Henderson in the future, but she is also the one who always promoted love. “It’s not about money or class,” she always told me during her long lectures. “If you don’t love him, don’t bother sharing a lifetime with him.” If she knew who my heart belonged to, would she be telling me the same?
My mother has attended more weddings than I can count, and being that she has chosen to pursue a career as a wedding planner, she likes to bring up the subject of my own future wedding every chance she can get. I can’t help but roll my eyes at those frequent confrontations, refusing to even ponder the subject. Either way, she asked me to meet her today down on one of the busiest avenues in the Capitol to go shopping for my cousin, Celeste’s, wedding. I have more cousins than I can accurately name, and yet the fact that I have no siblings makes our family seem a lot smaller.
I stride down the sidewalk in my heels, moving towards the shop my mother directed me to. I look back to make sure I didn’t pass it. That’s when my eyes meet those of Rum Tum Tugger, distanced only by the several people walking behind me. Somehow, the Capitol just isn’t big enough, is it? I quickly turn around and keep walking, faster now, although my heels aren’t helping much with that. I pray that he didn’t see me. Even if he did, there’s still a good chance he didn’t recognize me beneath the clothes, the make-up, and the highlights. I feel different now than I did in the woods. I feel beautiful, elegant, mature, and appealing as I sport this outer image of perfection. On one hand, I enjoy the external confidence that comes along with it, but on the other, I feel guilty and dishonest every time Malcolm or another man leans over to tell me that I’m beautiful. Because they can’t see. They can’t see the ugly monster within me: the one who burned down a building and the one who left Rum Tum blinded. But Rum Tum still cared for me when I was weak and ugly. He knew me, because I let him know me – most of me, at least.
Considering Rum Tum recognized me only a few days ago, I can’t bank on the fact that he didn’t recognize me this time around. If he saw me, he probably did. My heels continue clicking across the pavement. I need to gain as much distance from him as I can, both mentally and physically. I need to forget. But my heart is beating faster now, and all I want to do is look back again.
Besides, when I was in the woods, it was easy to forget too – about my family, my friends, the people who were devastated over my disappearance. I guess we’re all ignorant in some way, whether we’re living in the Capitol bubble or roaming the wilderness. There are things to be sacrificed for a simple life, for a happy life.
Either way, I can’t seem to forget Rum Tum no matter how hard I try. I was so close too – so close to speaking again, so close to pushing that part of my life to the backside of my memory and starting over in the Capitol. I’ve been working hard to rebuild the life I tore down when I left. I’ve been attending secondary school, trying to catch up on the years I missed, and when I’m not studying or working, I’m attending therapy sessions and swallowing down pill after pill just as I have for the last year and a half. I do everything asked of me. I do a lot of it out of shame, out of repayment for leaving these people – these people who genuinely care for. Sometimes I wonder just how different my life is from that of an Avox. People love me; I suppose that’s the difference. Maybe I’d be happier if they didn’t.
I put my hands in my jacket pockets and pull my arms tighter to my body, shivering slightly amidst the chilly October air. I keep imagining the warm sensation of Rum Tum’s arms around me, as they were only days ago, but immediately frown at the thought and drive it away from my mind. We are safer apart. The past is past.
I’ve been spending a lot of time with Malcolm in the past few days. He’s nice enough: very polite, gentlemanly, kind, and also, well…he’s rich. We’ve had a few laughs. My parents like him. But it’s difficult to be open to him when the only person I can think of while we are together is Rum Tum: the trapped young servant who’s still a free-spirited seventeen-year old boy in my mind, the person I love and can’t love and have to stop loving. I know my mother would be overjoyed to see her daughter wed to a man like Malcolm Henderson in the future, but she is also the one who always promoted love. “It’s not about money or class,” she always told me during her long lectures. “If you don’t love him, don’t bother sharing a lifetime with him.” If she knew who my heart belonged to, would she be telling me the same?
My mother has attended more weddings than I can count, and being that she has chosen to pursue a career as a wedding planner, she likes to bring up the subject of my own future wedding every chance she can get. I can’t help but roll my eyes at those frequent confrontations, refusing to even ponder the subject. Either way, she asked me to meet her today down on one of the busiest avenues in the Capitol to go shopping for my cousin, Celeste’s, wedding. I have more cousins than I can accurately name, and yet the fact that I have no siblings makes our family seem a lot smaller.
I stride down the sidewalk in my heels, moving towards the shop my mother directed me to. I look back to make sure I didn’t pass it. That’s when my eyes meet those of Rum Tum Tugger, distanced only by the several people walking behind me. Somehow, the Capitol just isn’t big enough, is it? I quickly turn around and keep walking, faster now, although my heels aren’t helping much with that. I pray that he didn’t see me. Even if he did, there’s still a good chance he didn’t recognize me beneath the clothes, the make-up, and the highlights. I feel different now than I did in the woods. I feel beautiful, elegant, mature, and appealing as I sport this outer image of perfection. On one hand, I enjoy the external confidence that comes along with it, but on the other, I feel guilty and dishonest every time Malcolm or another man leans over to tell me that I’m beautiful. Because they can’t see. They can’t see the ugly monster within me: the one who burned down a building and the one who left Rum Tum blinded. But Rum Tum still cared for me when I was weak and ugly. He knew me, because I let him know me – most of me, at least.
Considering Rum Tum recognized me only a few days ago, I can’t bank on the fact that he didn’t recognize me this time around. If he saw me, he probably did. My heels continue clicking across the pavement. I need to gain as much distance from him as I can, both mentally and physically. I need to forget. But my heart is beating faster now, and all I want to do is look back again.
and nothing hurt