sick of the sun ✾ | suburban moms v. lethal quartet, day 2
Feb 29, 2020 11:12:49 GMT -5
Post by D6f Carmen Cantelou [aza] on Feb 29, 2020 11:12:49 GMT -5
swordWhen night comes, it feels just like the day. The darkness that settled during the day becomes moodier, and the illuminations from the eyes of the other tributes dim with judgement, growing empty with acceptance. I look out to the sky and stare at it, thinking of the weapon that lies above and all around me: the one with the power to choke and kill that thickens with time, threatening to strangle.
But I think I'm managing to get my fingers underneath its grip—slowly loosening it, allowing me to breathe freely again. I don't know if things will ever be like before, before the inescapable nightmares, but if this is my new normal then I have to get used to it. Perseverance would become a painkiller, and that painkiller would lead to power.
Just as I am about to sleep for the night, a small parachute falls from the darkness onto my lap. It's a small lantern, antique in appearance and stature, yet the glass is all cracked and the paint on the metalwork flakes off when I run my fingers over it. It would be useless to anyone else, yet the broken nature of the object seems to mimic my own mind; once able to be the light but now falling at the first hurdle. Something about it seems poetic, but not in a pretty way—instead in a morbid way. I'm not sure I'd want this thing to work even if it could, because the light this world brings seems to only make the darkness more comfortable. And though my suspension in the arms of the worst nightmares was once something that scared me, I know now that it is not a life sentence.
Suspension can be ascension, too. A means for reinvention, which is exactly why I look into the emptiness around me and find content.
In the morning, it isn't the dawn that wakes me up. Instead, it is the sounds that make the air as thick as it is. The constant drip of water rolling from leaves and onto the ground, the wind rustling the trees so their whispers are manipulated into some sort of twisted lullaby, various unknown creatures chirping and cheeping along to add a naive eeriness to the atmosphere. This is when I realise that my body is covered in tiny insect bites, all over—a sorry type of scar that wasn't anything close to that of a battle wound. "I never knew why I didn't like bugs before," I say to the other girls, "but now I do."
Though my eyelids are peeled open by the chorus of sounds, and they are held open by bloodlust. I go over the things I have collected in my bag, counting them up to make sure the darkness hadn't swallowed my means of survival when I was asleep. Thankfully, everything is still in its place—though the broken lantern is even more broken. The cracked glass has caved in on itself, the sharp edges like teeth that could bite to the bone if they tried. It exposes the inner workings of the lantern that look rather intact, not giving a direct explanation for its failure, but still, I do not dare to reach into its mouth so innocently.
Willow seems to have perked up a little, her wounds binding themselves overnight to sprinkle some gentle light into her eyes. The glint makes me cautious, but we stay close together, all four of us, walking to try and find a new place to play destroy. No cannons sounded the first day—the Capitol would surely be eager and thirsty to see bloodshed in its rawest, sickest form. With the darkness tainting my systems, I would try to give it to them.
Our platform shoes guide us over the grasses of the jungle to a new kind of forest with trees that are as tall as the stars. The roots dance together in a violent way, protruding from the ground to show the vegetation's strength from head to toe. The sounds of the jungle continue through to this place, echoes of distant creatures becoming a soundtrack to our suffering and survival. We stay close together, awaiting poison to rain down from above, or for venom to seep from the ground up.
But it comes from the horizon instead—"look," I say gesturing with my sword to the figures in the distance. "Look, it's people, it has to be." Because the figures move too cautiously to have the confidence of a mutt, and there were no materminds pulling the strings on their limbs to make them move in such an unsure way. I edge closer, holding my sword between my eyes so that I can see the serrated side of the blade that would soon have its first taste of blood.
The sword starves in my hands, and I do not want to deny the darkness when it has welcomed me with such open arms.
The day begins to feel darker than the night.title: sick of the sun by poppy
6f annemie yille attacks 9m xavier xayachak; sword
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[ 1081 -- Severed Right Forearm at Elbow -- 9.5 damage ] +1 blades