Stuck Out In That Same Old Storm Again [Abs/Bill]
Feb 27, 2020 9:09:39 GMT -5
Post by marguerite harvard d2a (zori) on Feb 27, 2020 9:09:39 GMT -5
Blood drips down through the tear across his chest and abdomen. The hot pink and neon blue camo fades to a deeper red. He hisses at the touch of his own hand, smarting on his cheek and his flank.
Absalom’s not so worse for wear. He hadn’t thought he’d fall in the bloodbath, but then, he’d also not imagined he’d be one of the last few to remain. The rest of the boys and girls had scattered to the winds while Absalom was still searching – for what, he never found – and by the time it was too late, had faced the girl from four and boy from five head on. He couldn’t hold his own, not when he’d turned to using his fists and they their weapons.
Sarkine would’ve been proud that he’d cut and run. His sister would’ve stayed quiet through the fuss and sat, fists clenched and teeth digging deep into her lips. Absalom was all that mattered, and as much as she hated watching the games, she’d keep constant vigil over how many days he’d stay alive. He wondered if she’d be wearing her friendship bracelet, or hold it tight, the last piece of Absalom still hers.
The edges of the cornucopia hide the footholds downward. Absalom is careful to crouch and edge along, half-forgetting the shouts and clash of metal behind him. Steady, he tells himself, butt scooching along the wooden planks and downward, fighting to find a way down to the rocky outcropping. He wants to call out to his allies but fears he’ll give his position away.
He wishes he hadn’t waited, or that he’d followed Eloise when he had the chance. Worse than being in the chaos of the bloodbath was the silence that followed. The eerie loneliness that reminded him in an arena of twenty-three others, he was quite alone.
Would that he could be back home, watching another movie with Sarkine and eating terribly flavored popcorn.
“I miss you, Sarkine,” He says, and he hopes the cameras catch him, as unexciting as it is. They’d be too busy fascinated by the children standing over a treasure chest, or the girl who’d nearly bled out across the floorboards still standing.
He’s unremarkable, but he can’t find a fault in it. He would have traded for a thousand years of the unremarkable than another minute of this.
It’s when he trudges further down that he finds him, the beaten body and broken spirit.
“B-bill?” He spots the trail of blood first. Then he sees him: the twist of limbs, the way death lingers, a body angled across a fresh patch of earth. He finds his stomach turning, and his cheeks flush. It feels wrong, seeing anyone so vulnerable. Anyone else might’ve killed this boy then and there – there hadn’t been a single cannon fire – but little Bill may have found the one person who’d thought the furthest thing from it.
Absalom crouches alongside his one-time movie companion and moves to place a hand in his.
“Who… who did this to you?” Should he have tried to clean his wounds? But there was so much blood, and there had to be others not far behind him. He couldn’t stop the tears that fell, even as he wrestled with the anger filling his chest. At least if Bill were strong enough, he could know who needed to pay.
Absalom’s not so worse for wear. He hadn’t thought he’d fall in the bloodbath, but then, he’d also not imagined he’d be one of the last few to remain. The rest of the boys and girls had scattered to the winds while Absalom was still searching – for what, he never found – and by the time it was too late, had faced the girl from four and boy from five head on. He couldn’t hold his own, not when he’d turned to using his fists and they their weapons.
Sarkine would’ve been proud that he’d cut and run. His sister would’ve stayed quiet through the fuss and sat, fists clenched and teeth digging deep into her lips. Absalom was all that mattered, and as much as she hated watching the games, she’d keep constant vigil over how many days he’d stay alive. He wondered if she’d be wearing her friendship bracelet, or hold it tight, the last piece of Absalom still hers.
The edges of the cornucopia hide the footholds downward. Absalom is careful to crouch and edge along, half-forgetting the shouts and clash of metal behind him. Steady, he tells himself, butt scooching along the wooden planks and downward, fighting to find a way down to the rocky outcropping. He wants to call out to his allies but fears he’ll give his position away.
He wishes he hadn’t waited, or that he’d followed Eloise when he had the chance. Worse than being in the chaos of the bloodbath was the silence that followed. The eerie loneliness that reminded him in an arena of twenty-three others, he was quite alone.
Would that he could be back home, watching another movie with Sarkine and eating terribly flavored popcorn.
“I miss you, Sarkine,” He says, and he hopes the cameras catch him, as unexciting as it is. They’d be too busy fascinated by the children standing over a treasure chest, or the girl who’d nearly bled out across the floorboards still standing.
He’s unremarkable, but he can’t find a fault in it. He would have traded for a thousand years of the unremarkable than another minute of this.
It’s when he trudges further down that he finds him, the beaten body and broken spirit.
“B-bill?” He spots the trail of blood first. Then he sees him: the twist of limbs, the way death lingers, a body angled across a fresh patch of earth. He finds his stomach turning, and his cheeks flush. It feels wrong, seeing anyone so vulnerable. Anyone else might’ve killed this boy then and there – there hadn’t been a single cannon fire – but little Bill may have found the one person who’d thought the furthest thing from it.
Absalom crouches alongside his one-time movie companion and moves to place a hand in his.
“Who… who did this to you?” Should he have tried to clean his wounds? But there was so much blood, and there had to be others not far behind him. He couldn’t stop the tears that fell, even as he wrestled with the anger filling his chest. At least if Bill were strong enough, he could know who needed to pay.