my beast isn't yours to kill {train!blitz}
Feb 8, 2015 21:49:49 GMT -5
Post by Deleted on Feb 8, 2015 21:49:49 GMT -5
margaret
It’s almost a relief to leave the ruins of seven behind, to leave my father, who only shook my hand, and to leave my sister, who had cried a tear or two before leaving, and though she had expressed emotion in its rawest form she had never said goodbye.
So I said it myself.
And maybe it was directed to the shamble of a house I called home or to the soul of a girl I was leaving behind, but as seven faded like the sunset I felt no remorse. Death could not touch those who were already gone, and so in turn I had nothing to fear, for over and over my father had told stories that involved the loss of one and the new life of another, and Ella had never once been the one stamped with a broken soul.
The shards of a spirit those fables left behind cut deeper than dagger or sword, and he knew that each word he spoke drove its point further and further into tender flesh.
And yet every night after his tale had come to a conclusion he had the audacity to tell us he loved us.
He loved Ella; he did not for one moment love me as well.
I wished for that reason that he’d come clean and say it directly, for then we could both scrub the dried blood from our fingers and start with clean skin, for it was one thing to have a mutual dislike established by communications, but he dealt in passive aggressiveness, and I did not care for it in the same way I did not care for his stories.
In the same way I did not have an ear for his stories, I did not have an eye for the boy sat across from me on the train, for he gave off an air of snark and sneer, and truth be told I only had a liking for either when it was falling from my own lips.
Only now I was mourning a kingdom in ruins, at a loss for anger or guilt or some mix of the two, and what would be a bite or seer comes out simply as, “Wyatt, right?”