i was a king :: jb :: zori
Jun 9, 2016 13:06:00 GMT -5
Post by ghosty on Jun 9, 2016 13:06:00 GMT -5
Asa Benyon
claw our way up their systemDoes, Says, Thinks
You felt the anger which you felt towards the kid slowly surge into nothingness; you did not hate him. Bewildered wonderment is what you felt instead, and towards this kid, barely even at your shoulder height volunteered at an age where everyone else is just starting their career-hood. Not when they enter an arena to fight to the death, where people like you should be.
The slowly emptying town square felt like an openness which you could no longer face - you never know what people would do with a fallen king, while the new one is treated like a precious china on a unique line which is worth all the gold in the world. You could be worth no more than the trash which overflowed the can you walked past on the way to the town square.
You didn't feel like a failure, no; you felt the need to kneel in front of the new young king and pledge to him, lest he calls you on treason. You always knew the collapse is more painful than the struggle, and you don't have time to hang, not now. It's better to be a failure than dead, and at least you are still alive, yet failed.
You know that your father would never accept that, or even let you be a Benyon now; you didn't reach the games, and you are a failure. No matter how he would look at it, you failed the Benyon name. And you don't care.
You'd rather be Asa than a corpse under a stone with no name for treason.
The justice building towered above you; it was a castle you were never meant to sit your throne in. You never deserved it, but obviously, this kid does. No more did the peacekeepers follow the capitol, they follow thing king. You know this; they walked you to the door, and knocked twice. And a wait.
Not filled with nothingness, but with judgement; to enter or deny. You wished for the former. What use is a king who dies in the first moments of battle? If you could enter, you'd fight for him. Let him walk away unscathed. Yet you cannot, and nothing but advice can enter and not leave that room and remain with the boy.
It dawned on you that you did not hear his name. He was going to fight in your place, his voice called out seconds before yours. It was a respect.
The call came through. "You know that you have more guts than I ever did. But now is not the time to be strong, it's the time to listen good."
You just want him to live.