if i'm wrong :: [ cricket + ara // day eight, morgue ]
Aug 12, 2019 17:18:39 GMT -5
Post by L△LIA on Aug 12, 2019 17:18:39 GMT -5
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You crave constant approval on the day
That you won’t fail, you won’t fail me
That you won’t fail, you won’t fail me
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Gurney after gurney is lined up against the wall in a neatly spaced row. Blue Smith. Blair Havoc. Roisin Rivero. The echo of her footsteps consumes the silence of the ward whole. Harper Levesque. Kit La Roux. She doesn't pause to look at the faces of the fallen any more than she ever paused to pay them any genuine attention in life. These are the faces of something akin to fiction, strangers whose voices never stood out from the crowd, from the bigger story. Royce Benstaloe. Memories of their laughter won't keep her up at night because memories of their laughter don't exist. Hanaa Darton. Sky Bison. Some of them never even gave her a chance to know them, running from the very idea of a face-to-face encounter with their keepers. Alphabet Werch. Or maybe they simply wrote themselves off to save her the effort. Claudio Markham. Industria Spark. Oblivion Reigns. That's understandable. Cricket Antoinette's controversial perspectives on life have nothing to do with stupidity. She's not ignorant about the monster in the minds of these children and how each one of them must have named it for her. Ike O'Nyle. Orion Starcrest. She knows they all surely spoke of her as a curse, damning her as that traitorous bitch or maybe something worse. Sullivan Plier. Elite Hops. It would have been insane for any of them to have wanted anything to do with her. Fayre Belanger. It would have been insane for them not to hate her.
Cedar Halt.
Stillness seizes her, sudden and complete, the way only a morgue can stop a soul. Holding her breath, her fingers rest against the cold metal footrailing of the mousey haired boy's final bed, holding her up in a way her remarkable balance hasn't required in years. If he could breathe, it would be enough to knock her over. He can't and that too is nearly enough. In slow-motion she places one foot in front of the other, hand sliding along the rail as she moves past toes and ankles, calves and knees, thighs and hips, stomach and ribs, shoulders and neck —
She takes a lurching step back, unprepared, fixing her attention on his hand instead. It's palm up, fingers slightly splayed, as if still waiting for anyone to take it at any time. An open invitation, even now. Minutes tick by and no one moves because no one is particularly alive in this room. Cricket's exhalations are loud and uneven, clouding the frigid air between her face and one of the few people in this world that used to smile when he saw her. Slowly,
slowly,
she touches her fingertips to Cedar's own, counting off the ghosts of the ones gone missing between the ones that remain. It's strange, the way she can put them back right where they belong — as if they aren't gone, just tucked away for safekeeping in her memory. There's still a rash of rope burn across his palm from when she saw him last and beyond that are other scars less visible. An unseeable mark just below his thumb where she pulled a splinter after he slid his hand along an unfinished banister what must be a decade ago. A tiny red dot where he pricked himself while trying to figure out just how sharp the big kitty's claws were. A long-faded bruise from turning a corner too quickly in the District Two suite during a game of hide and seek. It's been years and years since Arbor had willingly entrusted his son to her questionable care, but the sudden distrust of a father hadn't been shared by the child who only ever knew her as a suspiciously tall friend. Now she's the one who's small beside him. Cedar —
Across the room the door creaks open and she pulls her hand back instinctively, secretively, swallowing down her sentimentality as if it had never existed. Perfectly painted lips default to an expression of practiced indifference as she breathes in and lets everything she can't admit to, even if she wanted, out with a sigh. "I thought it had been made very clear that you were not —" Raising her head with an elegant arch of her brow, she comes face-to-face not with one of the guards she dismissed for the evening, but with: Ara. In a rare stumble of composure, the master performer blinks out of time, lashes giving away the smallest flutter of surprise. Without missing another beat, she picks up right where she left off. "— allowed to be here, Aranica."
Cedar Halt.
Stillness seizes her, sudden and complete, the way only a morgue can stop a soul. Holding her breath, her fingers rest against the cold metal footrailing of the mousey haired boy's final bed, holding her up in a way her remarkable balance hasn't required in years. If he could breathe, it would be enough to knock her over. He can't and that too is nearly enough. In slow-motion she places one foot in front of the other, hand sliding along the rail as she moves past toes and ankles, calves and knees, thighs and hips, stomach and ribs, shoulders and neck —
She takes a lurching step back, unprepared, fixing her attention on his hand instead. It's palm up, fingers slightly splayed, as if still waiting for anyone to take it at any time. An open invitation, even now. Minutes tick by and no one moves because no one is particularly alive in this room. Cricket's exhalations are loud and uneven, clouding the frigid air between her face and one of the few people in this world that used to smile when he saw her. Slowly,
slowly,
slowly,
she touches her fingertips to Cedar's own, counting off the ghosts of the ones gone missing between the ones that remain. It's strange, the way she can put them back right where they belong — as if they aren't gone, just tucked away for safekeeping in her memory. There's still a rash of rope burn across his palm from when she saw him last and beyond that are other scars less visible. An unseeable mark just below his thumb where she pulled a splinter after he slid his hand along an unfinished banister what must be a decade ago. A tiny red dot where he pricked himself while trying to figure out just how sharp the big kitty's claws were. A long-faded bruise from turning a corner too quickly in the District Two suite during a game of hide and seek. It's been years and years since Arbor had willingly entrusted his son to her questionable care, but the sudden distrust of a father hadn't been shared by the child who only ever knew her as a suspiciously tall friend. Now she's the one who's small beside him. Cedar —
Across the room the door creaks open and she pulls her hand back instinctively, secretively, swallowing down her sentimentality as if it had never existed. Perfectly painted lips default to an expression of practiced indifference as she breathes in and lets everything she can't admit to, even if she wanted, out with a sigh. "I thought it had been made very clear that you were not —" Raising her head with an elegant arch of her brow, she comes face-to-face not with one of the guards she dismissed for the evening, but with: Ara. In a rare stumble of composure, the master performer blinks out of time, lashes giving away the smallest flutter of surprise. Without missing another beat, she picks up right where she left off. "— allowed to be here, Aranica."
cashmere akine
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