you painted me golden [little bill v tamarin, day2]
Feb 29, 2020 10:45:20 GMT -5
Post by cameron on Feb 29, 2020 10:45:20 GMT -5
little bill cubs
day two fight threadooc: little bill does not attack
He doesn’t mind the termites.
Laying on his back in the heart of a mound more spacious than his house in eight, Little Bill lets the tiny, nonstop legs of the insects scamper over him, crawling across recently sewn wounds and neon boots, up the angle of his nose and through curls of hair. Minutes pass like that, his eye closed and chest heavy, pulling him into the earth. Drifting. Floating.
His head is full of fluff, noiseless and airy, soft as a lamb. He doesn’t feel the termites crawling, doesn’t hear their constant crunching; he just wafts in the nothing, lets the dark and the damp sink in.
For the second time in the first day of the hunger games, Little Bill falls fast asleep.ooo
He’s woken by the sound of static. It fries his fluff and clears his head; his eye shoots open as the words cut through. “I’m like, very positive I did not approve this sector.” Little Bill doesn’t believe what he’s hearing. “My aesthetic is sleek and chic, you guys. Can we - ?” He stays still as a dead horse. “What? My mic is hot? Oh my god, you guys!” He blinks, slowly inching his hand to his face, and quickly cups it around his ear. Sliding his other hand up, he transfers the termite he’s caught into his grasp and sits up, slightly parting his hands to marvel at the bizarre talking bug. It scurries around in his palms, up and down his fingers, but he holds them together tightly, the only gap for his eye.
A minute rolls by. “Go on, say something!” He waits, and waits, but the termite stays silent. Little Bill pulls his hands to his ear, hoping it will tell him its secrets or just say hi, but the insect remains stoic. “Fine then,” he stands, keeping the bug captive, two can play that game. With his bag slung around his shoulder and his canteen dangling from his hip, he walks straight out of the mound and out into the arena.ooo
It’s hours before he stops walking, taking a seat on a tiny wooden bench outside an abandoned hut. The swaying bridges have him dizzy, winds threatening to topple him over rails most definitely not made with his height in mind; he holds his head with his hands, still cradling his talking termite passenger, still giving each other a mutual silent treatment. Leaning back and resting his head on the wall, he breathes in deep. “At least the mosquitos aren’t as bad now, yeah?” He says, then bites his lip to shush himself. He gives up. “Dammit, Helen, you were supposed to break first.” She says nothing. “C’mon, Helen. Don’t make me eat you.” He wouldn’t, but she doesn’t know that.
She still says nothing.
After a few more minutes, he stands and continues on, down the spiraling bridges and up rickety platforms, sweating and panting and silent.
The winds plow him back and forth, his footing unsteady. Creaking boards crack beneath his neon boots. He wishes he never left the termite mound, but he’s far too deep to turn back now. Whether it’s bravery or stupidity that led him that deep he isn’t sure; all he knows is he regrets it. “I’m sorry Helen,” he whispers, glancing down at his hands just as his boot breaks through a board, his leg rushing downyard, his other bending as knee smacks an adjacent board. Splintering wood pierces his thigh, tearing bright orange open, and he groans as he pushes himself up, both palms flat on the bridge, and it’s not until he’s laying curled beside the now-missing plank that he realizes what he’s done. He stares slack-jawed at his hands, at the tiny black smatter in the center of one, Absalom’s bracelet hanging limply beside it. Little Bill doesn’t move his eye for a while, letting it water as he looks at Helen’s crushed body.
“I’m so sorry,” he says, sniffling. Standing up, he walks briskly to the edge of the bridge and dry heaves the moment he’s on unmoving ground.ooo
He stops again when he sees a golden-bushed vine swinging from the treetops by another hut. He’s wondered how the gamemakers hadn’t sent a predator his way; he is after all easy pickings, a perfect candidate for an early, gruesome death to up ratings. He thinks this could be just that.
But the vine just sways.
Walking closer, Helen still flat in his palm, he looks up into the trees. The vine extends up, into the backside of an even more golden mutt - he can’t quite tell what - with bright red frills ringing its neck and sprouts and leaves growing from its body. He’s never paid too close of attention to the games, but he can’t imagine something so pretty could be sent there to kill him.
One step closer and a twig snaps beneath platform boot; the muttation’s head snaps his way, and leaps down from the limb it was perched on. Little Bill thinks it’s gorgeous, brightly colored and overgrown, and it looks at him curiously. He wants to give it something, so it knows he isn’t an enemy.
All he has to offer is Helen.
He holds out his hand.
little bill accidentally kills his friend helen the talking termite
little bill doesn't realize the termite is capricious king
title from dancing with our hands tied by taylor swift