stuck in your head; Katelyn + Cyro
Jun 3, 2020 2:30:20 GMT -5
Post by charade on Jun 3, 2020 2:30:20 GMT -5
k a t e l y n .
You're just like me when I was your age
We all knew better, name it, we've been there
Sixteen years ago, she’d sat in the seat to her right, ignoring Levi, looking out the window while Fintemaelon tried to get her to eat something. Amazing, how a single person could bring events that old back to the forefront of her mind. She was still confused. The only reason she could fathom was that perhaps he lived in poverty and thought that winning the games would set him and his son for life. It that was the case, it was foolishness. Utter foolishness. But she didn’t want to jump to conclusions, she needed to ask him, see what thoughts were banging around in that empty head.
It had been awhile since she’d been this irritated, and it showed. She hadn’t stopped pacing the train car she was in since she’d finished scaring the ever-living fuck out of Arabella. Was Cyro the only other Krane of reaping age? She sure as shit hoped so. Kass was the only other one that had to worry about this happening as there were still a few Fel’s of reaping age. Kirito had been alone, and the sister of Harbinger’s partner had died in the games the year before Kass had won. Katelyn pinched the bridge of her nose with two fingers. She could feel a headache coming on.
There were more than a few regrets in her past, and Levi Izar-Krane was one of them. The door opened and Cyro walked through. A hundred different questions and exclamations swirled around in her head, fighting for control of her tongue. Katelyn stopped pacing and stood behind the table, staring him down. Eleven’s last volunteer, Rex Antilles, had left a bitter taste in her mouth. He’d been the first tribute from eleven in living memory to kill his district partner, and the act had broken him so thoroughly that he’d just sat there afterwards and let a mutt finish him off.
Katelyn was not a fan of volunteers. They got these ideas in their heads that they were making a difference when in reality the only thing they were changing was the name on the coffin she’d be riding back with. Eventually, Katelyn gave up looking for the right words and clasped her hands together, giving him a pointed look; the same look she gave Harbinger whenever he got stuck in his head, the same look she gave her meringue if it deflated during the baking process.
“Cyro,” she said in a clipped tone. “You saved a boy named Leonardo Black. I suppose I should be applauding your courage.” Eleven’s track record for volunteers was—terrible to say the least. They always came to a bad end. “I just have one question.” The squirming toddler in Wilson’s arms came back to her, blurred her vision. Katelyn gripped the edge of the table until her knuckles were white.
“What the hell were you thinking?”