river styx | [lalia/dars] blitz
Jun 10, 2018 15:13:58 GMT -5
Post by umber vivuus 12b 🥀 [dars] on Jun 10, 2018 15:13:58 GMT -5
[presto][/presto]
Two days and counting down; the Capitol had a grandfather clock in the center of the training room just to celebrate the fact. Heartbeat thumping within an otherwise hollow chest, Mackenzie hated them all for it. When they waited by the windows, cheering when the tributes walked by, he hated them. When the news casters fabricated origin stories and asked all the wrong questions, he hated them.
To them, he was one piece of an annual puzzle the Capitol considered it a pleasure to solve. Was he a good one? A weak boy they were meant to fall in love with before he died halfway through? Was he one of the fighters, scarred past and scarred flesh, the kind they always thought would do better than they actually do? Was he a monster? A sinner, or a saint?
He was done with it; that's what he was: tired. Less than two days, and he would walk the river styx. Oathkeeper, they called her, sworn to secrecy. He would fall into her waters and she would either send him back stronger than ever, or she would grant him passage to the afterlife.
Pressed lips, folded arms.
He would've preferred going home.
Mackenzie studied the weight of the hatchet in his hand, tossed it up and caught it. In District Seven, being a lumberjack was just mundane, boring, and it was exactly that sense of normalcy and safety which he now so desperately craved. Here, though, he was not sure cutting down a person had the same concept as a tree, but at least the hatchet allowed him to look like something to avoid if at all possible.
The boy to his left was gaunt and fair, spindly limbs, whimsical by birthright. He didn't seem to grasp a firm enough understanding of throwing a hatchet, and ever someone to take the focus off of himself, Mackenzie said, "You could try holding it closer to the bottom, if you want." Fingernails scratching against the handle of his own tomahawk for just a moment, he tossed it at a wooden target, smiling when a satisfying t h u m p echoed through the expansive room.
"The trick is not to throw it too hard."