Fragments. [Xuxa]
Dec 11, 2019 1:59:11 GMT -5
Post by marguerite harvard d2a (zori) on Dec 11, 2019 1:59:11 GMT -5
Xuxa Izar
December – Year 791
She sat at the edge of the bed, hands in her lap, nightgown still on. Ayena Taft sat, knees folded on the mattress behind her, fingers weaving the long strands of Xuxa’s gray mane into a plait. Sunlight stirred through the window and cast a glare across the mirror. She saw the lines underneath her eyes, the well-worn miles traveled and sleepless nights burrowed into the lines across her brow.
Xuxa smiled.
She liked the feeling of Ayena’s hands working so steadily, carefully pulling strands together. There was something so intimate about the graceful motion, as though it was something just for the two of them.
“Eh, how do you like it?” Ayena put her hands atop Xuxa’s shoulders and peered past toward the mirror. She felt her shoulders tense, Xuxa turning her head to inspect the way her hair falls. She moved to rest her head against Ayena’s neck, her skin warm and smelling of the crushed rose perfume she loved to wear.
“Glorious,” Xuxa whispered. She held tight against Ayena’s little frame and wrapped the woman in a hug. Her heartbeat was steady, and Xuxa closed her eyes to listen. “You’re all the stars,” She whispered out.
“And you my moon,” Ayena finished. Today was tougher than yesterday, and the day before. The walk up the stairs from the foyer has become a journey for Xuxa, short of breath and tired when she reaches the top. Walks to the town square were few and far between. They turned back visitors – too many – Izars come to call to see their great Aunt, whispering well wishes and leaving all manner of pies, cakes, and treats.
Xuxa said she didn’t have the sweet tooth she used to, but Ayena saw the missing edges in the bars of chocolate, or cookies gone missing.
“We can spend the afternoon on the porch, if you’d like.” Ayena mused. The old two-story brick house sat on a hill set out from the road, with a little gravel path leading up the drive. They’d swing back and forth in the afternoons, reading poetry to one another, or the newspaper (to critique for what the district passed as news). “I’ll make some warm cider, and we can wrap up in a blanket. Keep the chill out.”
There was silence, and Xuxa shifted back to hang over the edge of the bed. She put her palms back against the mattress, and let her little feet swing over, too short to touch the floor.
“I want to visit her today,” She says, eyes drawn down and staring at a patch of shag carpet that’d gone from white to gray over the years.
“Oh,” Ayena managed, forming the word with her lips. She lay across the bed, arms crossed over her chest. “That’s an hour walk from here, unless you want me to call for a cart to take us.”
“I don’t want it to be a production.”
“Xuxa Izar – not wanting to be a production!” Ayena grinned and pulled herself up into a crouch. “I suppose there’s a first time for everything.”
“I’m serious.” Xuxa’s voice was cooler then, not the honey she’d laid out before. “I just want to see them, see – pay a visit. I don’t want to have to do it with all of them around.”
“I understand,” Ayena rested a hand on Xuxa’s shoulder. “Now – let me help, por favor?”
Xuxa stood, hand tracing along the edge of the wall to keep her balance. Ayena drew up the soft pink nightgown over Xuxa’s head. She set about opening the dresser drawers, pulling out a pair of black undergarments. The closet door creaked open to reveal various shades of black – pantsuits, blouses, dresses – Xuxa having determined that black was not just the color of grief, but power. That, and she found living in one color kept her free to focus on the form, rather than the necessity of coordination.
They settled on a beaded black number, one she’d had made for her seventy-fifth birthday almost nine years prior. She liked the way it caught the winter sunlight. All statement, over-the-top, emphatic. If she were going to leave the house and be seen, then they would see her.
Ayena countered with a black turtleneck and black overalls, and a pair of steel toed boots. Xuxa contemplated asking her if that was truly what she was going to wear, but fifty-some years had taught her indeed, it was.
When they reached the gates of the graveyard, arm in arm, Xuxa slowed. She lowered the big, circular black sunglasses sitting at the tip of her nose and stared at the lettering in the wrought iron. She whispered something that a lifetime before Ayena might’ve been able to hear, but now was lost to the wind.
She stepped across the gravel path, the two of them leaning against one another, heavy.
Ayena stared at the ivy that had crept atop Benat’s grave. She saw the little black flags that’d been left for Iago. A solemn rose for Levi. Salome’s decorated in prayer beads and candles. Raquel’s with little bouquets, and a teddy bear. Gabriel’s still fresh, with a set of dice on a silver plate.
They kept walking further in, past names of those she’d known, friends and classmates. Boys that’d told them they always seemed such good friends, inseparable. The ones who’d said Xuxa was too absorbed in herself, and Ayena too distant. Her parents, and –
They stopped short of the plain set of headstones. Xuxa unwrapped her arm and turned to put a hand on Ayena’s cheek. She gave a nod to Xuxa and stepped back, hands at her sides.
She sank into the grass with each step. Each step felt heavy, purposeful. She stopped to stare at the old white headstone, Uxue’s name faded but clear enough to see.
She knelt, her head bowed.
“Hola Uxue,” She moved her hands, shaking – not from cold but that they did all the time, then – and placed them on the top edge of the stone. “How are we today? I’ve been thinking of you.”
She ached in her chest. It all felt too long ago, too much forgotten.
“I’ve been thinking too much about the past, I think.” She’d been infected with nostalgia, but she figured it was better than forgetting.
“Can we remember it together? I’d like to, just a little bit.”
1Set the year of Xuxa Izar's death, the following are a collection of memories recollecting the years between the 1st hunger games and the 79th