a heart like yours // chelsey
Jun 22, 2016 1:02:21 GMT -5
Post by Stare on Jun 22, 2016 1:02:21 GMT -5
[googlefont="Sanchez:400"]
Summer brought the heat back to Five, carrying dust over barren fields on the back of hot winds that felt as if they came directly from the sun. Lilith would sometimes hear people in the market speak of the sweltering temperatures, so thick that it sometimes seemed to weigh upon their shoulders. Some would say it felt as if all of District Five had been set on fire. Lilith would say nothing, carefully selecting the last good apples preserved from the previous harvest and moving away before she did something stupid and spoke her mind.
You know nothing of fire.
When the rain came she could practically feel the earth give a sigh of relief. She'd been washing dishes when she first noticed the storm clouds blotting out the sun, and for the first time in what felt like months a smile ghosted over her lips. She was just laying Ara down for bed when she heard the whispering of it against the walls, hushing the child to sleep better than any lullaby Lilith could have come up with. The rain stole the heat from the air, leaving a distinct chill that raised goosebumps on her arms. It started off as a misting, the kind that was sweet and kind and gentle, but it didn't last. (Sweet, kind, gentle things never do.) Soon enough the patter of big raindrops fell like tears upon the roof of Sycamore house.
Stepping into the kitchen again, she hummed softly, closing her eyes for a moment and counting the kids off in her head. There was only one who was unaccounted for, and even though she felt a tug of worry in her stomach, she knew it was unjustified. Edgar was nineteen and more than able to take care of himself. He had the right to come and go as he pleased.
(He didn't go, though, not even when he had the chance. She had long ago accepted her fate of being shackled to Sycamore, but Edgar? He was to her like a bird that chose to stay in its cage even after the door had been opened. There was nothing left for him here - their family was a burden, and the little girl he'd cared so much about was gone. What possible incentive could he have to stay?)
As she moved toward the window she caught sight of a tall figure standing outside, a fair distance from the house. As darkness descended it should have been difficult to tell who it was, but Lilith knew that frame anywhere. Everyone was accounted for, then. She sighed and moved toward the door, pulling a worn blanket from their dusty linen closet as she went. The door clattered shut behind her and suddenly she was out in the rain, letting it soak into her hair, plastering the skirt of Miss Aggie's old floral dress to her knees. (They couldn't afford new clothes. Lilith had learned to make do with what they had.)
The grass was damp and cold beneath her bare toes. She made her way toward him slowly, almost as if afraid to scare him off. But they had never been afraid of each other, had they? They'd been angry at each other, sad for each other, distant from each other, but never afraid. That was probably supposed to mean something, but Lilith didn't bother trying to figure it out. Instead she unfolded the blanket and approached him from behind, draping it over his shoulders. For a moment she wished she could stay that way, hands pressed against the sides of his arms, keeping him close and safe and warm. He'd long since outgrown her mothering, though, and had never bothered to wonder if it had ever been anything more. Come to think of it, neither had she.
Pulling her hands away, she stepped in front of him and pressed her damp hair out of her forehead to get a better look at his soaked state. "What are you doing out here? You'll catch a cold."
Mothering again. (Or something more.)
L I L I T H
you are the avalanche
one world away
my make believing
while i'm wide awake
you are the avalanche
one world away
my make believing
while i'm wide awake
Summer brought the heat back to Five, carrying dust over barren fields on the back of hot winds that felt as if they came directly from the sun. Lilith would sometimes hear people in the market speak of the sweltering temperatures, so thick that it sometimes seemed to weigh upon their shoulders. Some would say it felt as if all of District Five had been set on fire. Lilith would say nothing, carefully selecting the last good apples preserved from the previous harvest and moving away before she did something stupid and spoke her mind.
You know nothing of fire.
When the rain came she could practically feel the earth give a sigh of relief. She'd been washing dishes when she first noticed the storm clouds blotting out the sun, and for the first time in what felt like months a smile ghosted over her lips. She was just laying Ara down for bed when she heard the whispering of it against the walls, hushing the child to sleep better than any lullaby Lilith could have come up with. The rain stole the heat from the air, leaving a distinct chill that raised goosebumps on her arms. It started off as a misting, the kind that was sweet and kind and gentle, but it didn't last. (Sweet, kind, gentle things never do.) Soon enough the patter of big raindrops fell like tears upon the roof of Sycamore house.
Stepping into the kitchen again, she hummed softly, closing her eyes for a moment and counting the kids off in her head. There was only one who was unaccounted for, and even though she felt a tug of worry in her stomach, she knew it was unjustified. Edgar was nineteen and more than able to take care of himself. He had the right to come and go as he pleased.
(He didn't go, though, not even when he had the chance. She had long ago accepted her fate of being shackled to Sycamore, but Edgar? He was to her like a bird that chose to stay in its cage even after the door had been opened. There was nothing left for him here - their family was a burden, and the little girl he'd cared so much about was gone. What possible incentive could he have to stay?)
As she moved toward the window she caught sight of a tall figure standing outside, a fair distance from the house. As darkness descended it should have been difficult to tell who it was, but Lilith knew that frame anywhere. Everyone was accounted for, then. She sighed and moved toward the door, pulling a worn blanket from their dusty linen closet as she went. The door clattered shut behind her and suddenly she was out in the rain, letting it soak into her hair, plastering the skirt of Miss Aggie's old floral dress to her knees. (They couldn't afford new clothes. Lilith had learned to make do with what they had.)
The grass was damp and cold beneath her bare toes. She made her way toward him slowly, almost as if afraid to scare him off. But they had never been afraid of each other, had they? They'd been angry at each other, sad for each other, distant from each other, but never afraid. That was probably supposed to mean something, but Lilith didn't bother trying to figure it out. Instead she unfolded the blanket and approached him from behind, draping it over his shoulders. For a moment she wished she could stay that way, hands pressed against the sides of his arms, keeping him close and safe and warm. He'd long since outgrown her mothering, though, and had never bothered to wonder if it had ever been anything more. Come to think of it, neither had she.
Pulling her hands away, she stepped in front of him and pressed her damp hair out of her forehead to get a better look at his soaked state. "What are you doing out here? You'll catch a cold."
Mothering again. (Or something more.)
i never meant to fall for you but i
was buried underneath and
all that i could see was white
my salvation
was buried underneath and
all that i could see was white
my salvation