hold your mistake up {patricia/rose} {homecoming}
Jan 3, 2015 12:40:25 GMT -5
Post by rook on Jan 3, 2015 12:40:25 GMT -5
♕ { p a t r i c i a v a l f i e r n o} ♕
victor of the 68th annual hunger gamessomething filled up my heart with nothing
someone told me not to cry
but now that i'm older, my heart's colder
and I can see that it's a lie"Get that out of my fucking face." I snap, waving away an unnaturally pasty cube that is offered to me on the end of a fork. My appetite has been inconsistent over the past few days. It varies from waves of nausea to sharp pangs of hunger. They tell me it's normal, that my body is behaving as is expected of someone who has spent nine days in extreme conditions. Somehow I struggle to believe that any of this is normal.
The last time I was on this train, I was on my way to the Capitol. I was scared and alone. I'm still alone now, but I'm working on the whole scared thing, at least. Back then, the train seemed so smooth and sleek. It was hard to tell that the train was moving at all. Now I feel every bump and judder, every brake and turn. I wouldn't say that is because I'm anxious or tense, quite the opposite. I would just say that I'm much more attentive to detail now. Living in the darkness does that to you, I guess. This train is taking me home, and I feel happier than I have in months. I get to see my little sister again. I get my reward.
("Everything's gotta be about you.")
I take a sip of water and wander to the window, gazing out at the blur of scenery. Trees and hills shoot by at a hundred miles an hour. My eyes focus on the built up area of houses on the horizon. Home. We passed many Districts on our way back from the Capitol, stopping in none. They all looked so unique and cultured. I suppose I will get to see them in a few weeks. Don't have a choice in that. I know my own District when I see it though. Five's towering power plants, it's large bodies of water, lakelands, the huge dam. And it's one hundred and thirty thousand population waiting for me, too. I swallow and move away from the window.
The medics accompanying me check up on my again, making sure my wounds are clean and my vitals are normal, before taking another look at the stump where my right hand used to be. Like most Victors, I was given a prosthetic limb. The technology involved is fascinating. Sensors that stimulate the nerves in the arm with the slightest of electric pulses, giving the illusion of touch. Such technology is centuries ahead of anything we have in Five. When they are satisfied that my stump is healing well, they reattach the hand, make me swallow some tablets and try to force food down my throat. I refuse the food, but ask for a higher dose of tablets instead, to combat the stinging in my chest from where Galaxy stabbed me. They tell me they can't give me too high a dosage, and make me sit back down in the corner like a child who has misbehaved. I sulk, sinking into a comfortable recliner chair and waiting out the rest of the journey. Figures.
It has been two weeks since I left the Arena, and started my recovery in the Capitol. It's been nothing short of surreal. Medics coming and going, treating my injuries. Capitol officials refusing to answer when I ask to call my sister. Screaming Capitolites waiting outside the hospital, hoping for a glance of me. I'm a celebrity now. I'm not sure I like that. I watched the Games back, on the television in my ward. I watched my every move, listened to Claudius Templesmith analyse me. He called me ruthless, aggressive, dangerous. I'm not any of those things. I'm just-... I just tried to survive and-...
"Passengers please prepare for arrival."
I am those things. I can't hide behind excuses, not if I'm going to survive this homecoming, and the tour that follows.
"Let's go, Patricia." Someone tugs at my arm, but I shrug it off and stand on my own. I'm not weak. I don't need medics carrying me everywhere and feeding me my food. I killed four people and was responsible for the deaths of many more. I'm not a porcelain doll that they need to tip-toe around. I grind my teeth, waiting at the sleek, steel door of the train. Waiting for it to open and release me back into the wild. I'll be on a leash now, though. I rub the back of my neck and sigh. This is harder than I thought it would be. Am I ready?
The door slides open. I'm gonna have to be. Trumpets blare, people cheer, I do not flinch. Someone pushes me in the back gently, making me step off the train. I bite the inside of my cheek, agitated. If they don't stop treating me like an animal, I'm going to bite back like one. The noise is overwhelming. A stark contrast to the deathly silence from the crowd on my departure. Only cheer when you're winning, huh? Tch, if they can't support me at my lowest then they sure as hell don't deserve me at my highest. I begrudgingly raise a hand and wave to the masses, struggling to give an accompanying smile.
District Five feels so much more alive than usual. Maybe it's because I've been away so long that I forgot what home was really like. Maybe I forgot what life was really like. I walk through the crowd, seeming less and less like the ruthless girl who just won the Hunger Games. I assure myself that I'm still in shock, especially being reintergrated into society. It will all be okay soon.
I am guided up onto the same stage that I was just over a month ago, but this time I'm not being sent to my death. I get to speak, I get to live. The rapturous applause quietens down, and I say the words I was told to say.
"Thank you, everyone," I gaze out at the thousands. The last time I was physically in front of this many people was with Caesar Flickerman. I am not nervous, nor afraid. I am impatient and short, my words snappy.
"I'm so glad to be standing in front of you as your Victor," I look for Rose, but how can I spot her in the sea of faces? She is likely in the Justice Building, waiting for me.
"But this victory does not spell the end. Every year we have to send sacrifices to the Capitol, I am just one of the lucky few to survive. Many more will die, as a reminder of our-..." I stop, grinding my teeth, forcing out these words that are not mine, "...Our treason."
I want to say my thoughts, tell them what the Games was really like, not the selected snippets that they saw. I want to tell them the hell I went through, but I know what's at risk. Not for these people, but for me. I may have won, but I can still lose everything. After the ceremony, Snow left me a rose, to remind me of my sister. A threat. I don't like being threatened, but I know when to back down. When they say jump, I ask how high. That's how it works now. That's the price of my victory.
"Panem today,"
I grind my teeth again. Galaxy is probably laughing at the puppet I have become.
"Panem tomorrow,"
Like I care, at least I get to live. At least I get to see my sister again.
"Panem forever."
I turn and head inside the Justice Building, my heart racing.if the children don't grow up
our bodies get bigger but our hearts get torn up
we're just a million little god's causing rain storms
turning every good thing to rust
i guess we'll just have to adjustword count:, graphics: rook
theme: wake up by arcade fire