Periphescence [Frumtum]
Nov 4, 2014 0:11:52 GMT -5
Post by Deleted on Nov 4, 2014 0:11:52 GMT -5
Rum Tum Tugger I wake up as the sunrises. There is a hiss of steam from the radiator at the edge of my bed, and a pale red light of morning nipping at my window. I stretch my limbs underneath the heavy cotton blanket, and breathe in the warmth. Photos of the Hanigs dot my wall, almost as a reminder that they are constantly observing each and every one of my movements. The first few nights here were—what’s the word that Freya used to say about caves? Claustrophobic. I wondered when they shut the door and turned the key if I would breath all of the oxygen in one night. If I was meant to dream between these four walls, I can’t say that was written into the design. My eyelids might have been heavy in the evening, but my head was filled with nothing but black, no matter how hard I would try. I liked to believe that it was the utter exhaustion. For all the good that the Hanigs had done by bringing me into their home, they worked me harder and harder each day. I am not sure if they delighted in seeing the sweat trickle down the side of my face, or the yawns that would escape my lips from the corner of the room. They had hired me to help with Freya. As I came to understand, she hadn’t talked since we lost each other in the woods, not until I’d come back around. A part of me had pride that I’d cracked her into doing so. But then in the same breath I felt a pinch in my stomach. There was a reason why Freya had chosen not to speak, and that was because she had lost me. It’d been my fault for running away and getting hurt. To think that she’d spent a year without uttering so much as a word, because of me? I was sick to my stomach. I felt a sharp jab in my gut every time I caught a spare glance at her. They lived in a different world, the capitolites. It wasn’t strange to me that Freya had decided to run from here. Everything was perfect, right down to the way the pictures would be hung and the clothes were threaded. It screamed sameness in a way that I had never seen out in nature. They got an obsession with making things just so, as though nothing imperfect could ever be the way it was. Take the suit jacket they made me wear. It fits just snug, long enough for my arms and cutting in along my chest and waist. They would never have the patched up piece that I’d worn for so long in the woods. It’s like anything that ever built a memory is taken away and vanishes once it grows too old. Maybe that’s why everyone forgets that you don’t need to be perfect, shiny, and new to be important around here. But—I don’t suppose I know enough to be the best judge of those things. I lived seventeen years in the woods, and I don’t think I ever came across a single piece that fit together so snugly, so perfectly as does in the capitol. When I was out in the wild though, I stopped to look at fallen trees and dead branches. I didn’t shy away from where the moss was overgrown, or the water just a little too muddy. These were things that had come to be, without the hand of anyone else. I think putting your hand into everything well—there’s only so much that we can do. The rest has to be left to do it on its own, whether or not it turns out perfect. Out beyond the fences, my mother used to say, live and let live, because we’re not the ones in charge. And everyone lives, and everyone dies, no matter how much science they might have. We’re destined to become a part of it all again—one way or another. The first duty is to collect Freya’s tray and to serve her breakfast. Mrs. Hanig insisted that I be used to coax more speech out of her, which hasn’t exactly been my specialty. If anything, the two of us must be doing our best not to look at one another, because I haven’t gotten a single word out of Freya Hanig since the day that we ran into one another in the alleyway. It was all so fine then, as though we were starting over. But there’s an itch underneath my skin when I look at Freya now. They’ve gone and done something to her. There’s no smile there, not in when the sun shines on her face. Just a blank stare, as though we’re looking down at a cliff and wondering if we’ll fall off the edge. It hasn’t been easy, of course. I’m not to talk unless Freya talks, at least when we all eat together. Mr. Hanig hasn’t hesitated to remind me of this through the shock collar, and on more than one occasion I wound up steaming on the floor. They had to carry me off and lay me in bed for a day because of how much my muscles cramped up. This morning will be different, however. I’m as certain of it as the sweetness of the pan-cakes sitting on the tray between my arms. I know they’re sweet because I’ve poured on a heap of syrup, which I dip my finger into to test and make sure it’ll be to Freya’s liking, and sprinkled even more sugar on top. That may be my favorite thing about the capitol. Sugar really is the most wonderful creation! It can make anything taste better, whether it’s green or mush or burnt, sugar makes food swallowable. I’ve stolen sugar cubes to keep in my pocket for when I have to lie in bed, so I can have a treat before I slip off to sleep. That’s why I know that Freya will be eating her pan-cakes, even if I’ve secretly taken a bite out of the bottom one. I don’t think she’ll notice, since I’ve hidden the other four on top. If she did, it might have at least given her something to yell at me for. “Rise and shine, rise and shine!” I press my back against Freya’s door and spin around to enter. I grin from ear to ear. I suppose by now that I should be tired of how frequently I’m greeted with silence, but just seeing her sleeping is enough to have me smiling. Freya Hanig was enough to smile about even when she wasn’t the next room over; I don’t think I’ll ever get tired of smiling for it. Better still, each morning I have a fresh chance to bring her back, and to make her see that I’m still here. Because I’m not going anywhere, not now, not ever. “You have avox Marcel’s famous flapjacks, or as he calls them,” I open and close my mouth without saying a word and grin again. “That’s right, he doesn’t say anything does he? Oh, don’t feel too bad for him, I’ve seen him spit in your father’s dinner on more than one occasion,” I wheel closer to the pile of covers that obscure her from view. “You gonna get up? Huh? Gonna get up? Gonna, gonna see if you want to get up today? There’s a lot that needs doing!” It’s like we’re in camp again, back when we first started. The same electricity fills me as I place the tray down on the table next to her bed. “You can’t spend all day in bed, sleepy head!” I let out a laugh as I sit on the end of the bed. I look forward at the doorway, then back to the pile of covers. With a laugh, I start bouncing up and down. “Freya, Freya, Frey-hey, Frey-hey, Frey-aaaaah!” Who says you need to change? |