sever us from our disguises. [caitlin + kai]
Oct 23, 2018 17:48:36 GMT -5
Post by Lyn𝛿is on Oct 23, 2018 17:48:36 GMT -5
Caitlin Samuels
🐦
some of us fall by the wayside
and some of us soar to the stars
some of us sail through our troubles
and some have to live with the scars
🐦
Sweetie -🐦
some of us fall by the wayside
and some of us soar to the stars
some of us sail through our troubles
and some have to live with the scars
🐦
It hurts, the way her sharp red nails dig into my wrist like claws, and I have to fight the instinct to snatch my hand away. But I'm already in trouble, and I need to be extra careful about not making her think I'm being disobedient.
I didn't break it, Mrs. Russell. It's all I can say, because it's the truth, and I don't know what else I'm supposed to explain, what else I even can explain, except that the whole reason I'm in trouble is false in the first place. I didn't even touch it!
Okay, but - and there she pauses, her face so close to mine that that I can see the pores on her nose and sunspots on her cheeks. Mercifully, just when I feel like I can't stand her fingers across my skin any longer, she releases my arm. The way you're saying that makes you seem upset, Caitlin. Let's calm down and -
Well, do you believe me, or not?
But she doesn't even bother to respond to my question.
If you stayed with your other classmates, she tells me, we wouldn't need to have this conversation at all, would we? You really make it hard for me to be able to trust you, when you go off on your own like that.
All of a sudden I feel very small as she peers at me; I think her trusting me not to break the art teacher's things shouldn't have anything to do with whether I spent class time sitting around gossiping with people, or out in the alcove working on the painting we were all supposed to do anyway. But if the teacher doesn't care about doing his job, then I wonder if maybe I oughtn't care too much either that he's not teaching us anything. That's what everybody else in the class wanted, he'd said to me. Weren't they all so happy, that they didn't have to do any work all period?
Well, Bea was making fun of me, I say instead, since that's the other reason I didn't like being around those classmates. And then she told me to go away. So I did.
Oh, honey, she shakes her head. Running off is not an acceptable way to deal with your frustrations, Caitlin. What should you do next time?
There's one answer people always look for, when they ask this question. Tell the teacher. I've memorized that answer, the words like ash in my mouth because I know it's not true, I've tried too many times to even believe it might be true. And yet it made her smile and nod, like she's proud of me and I should be happy about giving her the right answer, when all I want to do is curl up into a little ball and cry about the whole thing.
I think I'd even be less upset if she blamed me for lying on purpose to try and get out of having a detention. Because, she never did give me a response. And worse than those accusations, was the thought -
- that rather than right or wrong, people could think of the truth as irrelevant.
🐦
When I awake in the morning, I can already hear Mother in the kitchen, cooking breakfast. Eat up quickly, darling, she says, spooning a generous portion of scrambled eggs next to the toast on my plate. You don't want to be disrespectful by being late.
Mom, are you disappointed in me? I ought to feel bad, that she got up so early on a Saturday to cook on account of me, when I could have just made myself a bowl of cereal. Bryan will be sleeping in, after all, and Father is taking a well-deserved rest after a hard week at work.
It's not that I'm disappointed, dear, she answers. Just, you know how I worry about you sometimes -
She'd tell me that years and years ago, when she was sixteen, she'd learned all sorts of hard lessons she didn't want me to have to go through. Once, I asked her how come when we're kids, people kept telling us we ought to always follow the rules, when we end up spending the rest of our lives figuring out that most of the time they can just decide it doesn't matter.
The strong swallow the weak. That's the only rule the universe obeys, she'd said, shaking her head. I remember those words, whenever I pass by the natural sciences building with its stately pillars and arched windows; we'd learned that some guy called Darwin discovered that hundreds of years ago, before even Panem existed. He didn't have any mockingjays to study back then, so he'd looked at a bunch of finches instead.
I'm still thinking about him, when I arrive in the room we are to spend the day in. I find a seat in the back, next to the window and away from everybody else in the room. The detention part itself isn't so bad I suppose, given that we mostly get to do what we want, and people aren't allowed to be loud in here.
That doesn't mean I like being here, because it just reminds me that people like the principal don't believe me, or care whether I'm telling the truth.
I start tracing the outline of a jagged rock, a point along perhaps some shore of an island; and I imagine Darwin there, crouched on top of that rock with a sketchbook of his own. Watching, while the finches and tanagers fluttered around him, until he figured out all their secrets.
There would be all sorts of colorful birds, some picking at fruit, others cracking open nuts with their beaks; and other animals, too, that -
I'm so absorbed in my sketch that I don't notice the boy who's decided to sit next to me, until his chair scrapes against the linoleum with an ear-splitting screech. What does he want? I wonder, wincing at the noise and glancing around at the other empty seats in the room. After all, I don't recognize him - or at least, I don't think I do - and I hope he's not just here to bother me or stir up trouble.