by Sonmi-451 » Tue Jul 31, 2012 5:34 am
More added.
“What do you want to try first?” a voice behind me asks as I purvey the food options at the table in front of me, but I don’t have to turn around to know that it’s Luke. What he looks like, what he sounds like, what he feels like, what he smells like, what he tastes like are all permanently ingrained into my memory now.
I see him come around to my right side and feel him wrap an arm around my waist, and, shrugging my shoulders, murmur, “None of it. But that wouldn’t be very good for damage control, now would it?”
“I know what you mean,” Luke mutters under his breath. I guess we share the feeling that we don’t want anything to do with anything made in El Nieve. In a louder voice, Luke says, “The chicken? That looks good,” then leads me over to a different table, and I smile briefly as I realize how lucky I am – and so is everyone else I love – to have Luke and his incredible gift for knowing exactly what to say and exactly when to say it, because God knows I’m not very charming or persuasive or good with words.
Luke hands me a warm plate and points to various dishes as we along the side of the table together. I take a tiny amount of each one, to be polite, but know that I’m going end up throwing most of it away later. I feel someone nudge me gently and look up to find Luke scanning the small tables around us, where other guests are sitting and eating. “Where do you want to sit?” he questions over the din of the crowd.
I grab silverware for both of us as we reach the end of the line and reply, “Wherever we can sit by ourselves,” then follow Luke as he carves a path through the crowd towards an empty table with four chairs in the southwest corner of the hall.
“Does this work?” He sets his food down, turning around to survey the rest of the chamber, presumably to find another empty table if I find this one dissatisfactory.
“This is perfect,” I tell him, giving him a genuine smile as I squeeze myself into the seat facing away from the wall and facing him.
“I could have sat there!” Luke exclaims, rising to his feet as though to right this awful wrong, but sits back down when he sees the flat look I’m giving him.
“Luke, me sitting in a seat that’s slightly hard to get into isn’t nearly as horrible as you seem to think it is.” I roll my eyes as I think that this is what I get for wearing dresses. “Besides, I want to sit with my back to wall so I can see everyone.” And so I don’t get stabbed in the back. I mean, I doubt anyone from El Nieve’s going to want to ruin the fun by killing me early, but the people in this dimension that I trust I can count on the fingers of one hand.
I see the light of understanding click in Luke’s eyes and I know that he understands my motives now. However, he doesn’t get a chance to say anything in response, because I see Max and Mitchell and call to them, both searching the hall for a place to sit with plates of food in their hands. “Hey!” I gesture for them to come over and smile at them as they sit down.
“Max, Mitchell,” Luke greets, giving them a grin of his own as he scoots over to give them more room. “How are you guys doing?”
“Never better,” Mitchell answers warmly, his gaze glued on me so I get the feeling he’s talking to me. However, I see his eyes running up and down my body and I know that he’s just checking to make sure his dress – this one a beautiful, tight-fitting crimson – fits right.
“I don’t know Mitchell,” Max says dubiously, running one hand nearly as big as the plate in front of him over his shaved, bald head. “I’m having a pretty hard time keeping up with these two, so I’d definitely say I’ve been better.” That brings a smile onto all of our faces, even mine, though I’m carefully studying both Max and Mitchell the whole time, and it concerns me to see that, under careful inspection, they both look worse for the wear.
After a few moments of silence, during which I’m alternating between watching Mitchell and Max and Luke is watching me watch Mitchell and Max, Luke pipes up and says, “Well, let’s eat!” and, as if a spell has been broken, we all start moving.
Like usual, I pick at my food, not really eating it but just giving my fork something to do, and instead amuse myself by scanning the crowd and finding some of the oddest-looking guests. The colors catch my attention almost immediately and I have to hide a snort in my hand as I see them following each other and simpering in a little line. No matter how long I spend around them, I will never be able to think of them as anything besides Broncos colors.
“What’s so funny?” Luke asks me, and I tear my gaze away from them to look at him with a smile still on my face.
“Kate, Theo and Macy,” I reply, and instantly Luke’s mouth twitches slightly and his eyes light up a little.
“Broncos colors, don’t you think?” he murmurs, and I nod my head in agreement, picking them out of the crowd again easily.
“They’re funny all right. If I didn’t know that they don’t even know what football is, I would’ve thought that they had planned it.” Now it’s Luke’s turn to nod, and he turns his head ever so slightly to see them out of the corner of his eye.
When he finally catches sight of them, he shakes his head and mutters, a smile on his face, “Quite the fashion statement, hmm?”
“Thank God they haven’t tried to do that to us yet,” I exclaim in reply, thinking that being monochromatic is definitely not my thing, although, if I did have to choose one color to be, I’d go with gold, because not much would have to change.
Mitchell, who had been completely silent up until this point, now pipes up and tells us, “Oh, trust me, they most certainly wanted to. In fact, they wanted to surgically alter both of you, but I convinced them that you two didn’t need it.”
I sit straight up at the mention of surgery, my fingers tingling as I feel the number thirteen carved into Jackson’s flesh. “Good,” I force myself to say, refusing to let the panic spreading through my body show. “I’m not fond of surgery.” Suddenly feeling claustrophobic in my corner, I look around me to find no way out to the sides, which means that the only way out is over the table. Rising to crouch on my chair, I tense my legs and propel myself, head-first, over the table, barely clearing the edge on the other side. I have just enough time to stick my arms out, catch myself, and roll neatly into a standing position. Feeling an acute pain in my feet as I put my weight gingerly on them, I bend down and rip off my shoes, sighing in relief as I flex my toes and feel the soreness ease.
“They’re too small; sorry Mitchell.” I look up, shoes in hand, to find Max, Luke and Mitchell staring at me with looks of astonishment on their faces. “What?” I stare back at them, starting to become concerned.
“That was… amazing,” Luke murmurs, his tone almost reverent. “How did you land that without hurting yourself?”
I shrug, thinking that leaping over a table definitely doesn’t qualify as amazing but going along with it anyways. “I don’t know. I mean, I just landed it the easiest way possible. I don’t get why that’s so amazing, but…” My gaze moves between them, Luke still amazed but Mitchell and Max amused.
“He’s only saying it’s amazing because he saw a lot of your thighs Lizzie,” Max tells me with a smirk on his face. As if on cue, Luke begins to blush profusely, his face turning a brilliant shade of crimson.
“That’s… that’s… no!” Luke splutters, clearly trying to defend himself but only proving even further Max’s statement.
“Luke, you should quit while you’re ahead.” I pat him on the shoulder and he quiets with a sigh, finally realizing that the cause of defending himself is a pointless one, as Max will believe what Max will believe. Obligingly Luke scoots over to give me room to sit down next to him, but I opt to sit squarely in his lap, which he seems to like better too.
“So, what do you mean, the shoes are too small?” Mitchell leans across the table and takes the black flats from me, examining them with a frown on his face.
“The shoes are too small for my feet. I mean, I don’t know what else I could mean by saying the shoes are too small.” I feel Luke wrap his arms his arms around me and lean back into him momentarily, appreciating for the first time that he was the one to come here with me.
“How can that be? I made measurements based off your height and weight and came up with an exact shoe size, so I don’t know how they can be too small.” Mitchell pulls at the shoes in different directions, the furrows on his forehead becoming more prominent. “Well, they haven’t shrunk at all, so I have no idea as to how they could be too small, as I know my measurements were right the first time.”
Knowing that I might not get another moment to talk before Mitchell launches into another “But they have to fit!” spiel, I open my mouth and hold up my hand when Mitchell tries to speak too, as I will not be interrupted. “That’s the thing, Mitchell. My feet are a lot bigger than they’re supposed to be, if you go off my height and weight.” Turning to Luke, I tell him, “My feet are supposed to be a woman’s size eleven, but they’re a woman’s size thirteen, man’s size eleven-and-a-half instead. The funniest part is that they don’t even make woman’s size thirteen shoes normally, so I have to special-order them through Nike.”
“Your feet are three sizes smaller than mine then. You have awfully big feet Miss Lightning,” Luke teases, smiling at me. Suddenly I realize that our faces are only a few inches apart, and I look away quickly, not in the mood for any more damage control than sitting on Luke’s lap.
“Ah, that explains it then.” Mitchell seems somewhat relieved, now that he knows it’s not his fault that the shoes don’t fit. To be honest, I don’t see why it matters beyond the fact that they don’t fit, but I’m not a stylist and don’t devote my life to clothes and fashion either. “Well, I’ll get right on making you a pair that fit then.” Mitchell gives me a grin and I see the excitement in his eyes, and I’m reminded that he really does love his shoes.
“Hey Lizzie, you going to eat that?” Max asks me, jerking his head in the direction of my abandoned, nearly-full plate of food.
I shake my head, staring at the plate with contempt. No matter how hungry I get, I will not eat anything produced by slave labor. “Have it Max. I don’t want it.” I watch as he extends one large arm, pulls the dish to him and begins to eat.
“You can have mine too,” Luke says, and pushes his plate in Max’s direction as well. Now, turning to me, Luke murmurs, his eyes full of concern, “You’re getting thinner. I can feel your ribs.” I feel him gently tracing the individual ribs and relax a little under his touch, my breathing slowing but still faster than usual.
“You’ve always been able to feel my ribs,” I counter, hoping that Luke will just give up on the matter because the last thing I want is to be force-fed on top of everything else.
“Not like this.” He drops his hand and looks at me with such evident distress that I almost feel like I should eat something, just for his benefit, but I refuse to eat anything made in El Nieve, because it has undoubtedly been grown or manufactured at the expense of the Sections. “You really should eat something Lizzie, because it’s not like we’re going to have a lot of food during Survival.”
“Besides, if you don’t, I can always have Kate, Theo and May surgically alter you,” Mitchell adds, surfacing from his trance of studying the shoes long enough to get on Luke’s side, and I give him a flat look. He’s supposed to be helping me, right?
“I’ll eat something when we get back to the Champions’ Center, alright?” I finally say, hoping to just get everyone off my back.
At last, Luke nods his assent, but, when Mitchell has gone back to his shoes, he whispers in my ear, “You know, this isn’t very good for damage control, refusing to eat the food they’ve made in our honor.”
“I know,” I begin, staring Luke in the eye, “but I don’t care. Not right now, at least, because for once, I’m going to do what I want to do.”
Luke nods his head in understanding and then we just sit, gazing into each other’s eyes, me trying to read him and Luke probably thinking about how I’ve broken his heart, until the shrill, crisp note of a bell breaks the air.
Instantly I rise to my feet to hear a cool – but thankfully human – voice announce that the dance is starting, then turn to Luke to see him taking his shoes off. “What are you doing?” I stare down at him, utterly perplexed. “I thought your shoes fit.”
“They do,” he starts, “but we might as well match. Besides, you don’t need any other distinguishing features; you’ve got too many for your own good already.” We both smile as I breathe an internal sigh of relief at the fact that Luke doesn’t know what I actually am, since it’s one hell of a distinguishing feature in itself. “Now, Miss Lightning, may I have this dance?” He bows respectfully and offers me his hand, which I, of course, accept.
“You don’t even have to ask, Mister Gates.” I then lead him out onto the dance floor as I realize how much we must stand out: me a good six inches taller than the average El Nieve woman, and Luke a good five inches taller than the average El Nieve man, and both of us in our socks to boot.
I sigh inwardly as Luke places one hand on my hip and takes one of mine in the other, since I know that it’s damage control time, that it’s time to break Luke’s heart into a million pieces with my insincerity. For the ninth time.
We begin to twirl slowly, Luke gazing down at me as I stare off into the distance, wishing that I could just run through one of the huge glass windows and fall to my death – the castle is at the top of a cliff to make it harder to infiltrate – when I remember that I can’t, that I won’t die, no matter how much I want to.
I am startled slightly when I feel Luke’s lips on my neck and tear my gaze away from the window to find myself staring into one alarmingly clear ice-blue eye. “‘Concrete girl, don’t fall down/In this broken world around you/Concrete girl, don’t fall down/Don’t fall down, don’t fall down, my concrete girl,’” he whispers in my ear, and my eyes shoot open in surprise. “The only thing is, you’re not completely concrete Lizzie. I know there’s a human and a heart and feeling in you, no matter how much you wish there wasn’t.” He pulls back, searching my face for emotion I refuse to give.
“Don’t you think it’d be more appropriate to quote the part ‘fake your laughter’?” I brush past Luke’s remark about not being concrete; it may be true, but I’m not going to admit to it. I would much rather continue to tell myself that I am concrete, that I cannot be broken, than face the fact that I am not invincible.
Luke shrugs, still scanning my face for any reaction. “Maybe. I don’t know.” He gently raises one hand and caresses my cheek gently, moving his hand down to cup my chin. I feel my heart rate increase dramatically, because the last time this happened, I ended up kissing someone, and I’m not sure I want to do that right now. Leaning closer until our noses are touching, he tells me quietly but with strength, “Actually, no, because I know you don’t fake all of it, Lizzie. I know you don’t fake it with Abby; I know you don’t fake it with Mitchell; I know you don’t fake it with Max. I guess I’m the only one you fake it with.”
I shake my head, tears filling my eyes, but blink them away sternly. Now is not a time to lose it to crying. “Luke, I don’t fake it with you.” I meet his gaze fiercely just before I kiss him, grabbing his collar and pulling him into me as I feel his arms tighten around me. And, for the third time in probably ten times as many kisses, I feel it: that hunger, starting in my chest and spreading through the rest of my body that I’ve come to associate with overwhelming happiness and unbearable sadness. But, for once, I refuse to let myself feel the sadness, and just lose myself in the happiness, in the joy that maybe I love Luke, that maybe, just maybe, I don’t have to act anymore.
When I finally pull away, needing air, I find Luke gazing down at me with a distinctly pleased look of almost confusion on his face. Bending down over me, he whispers in my ear, “Maybe I was wrong about you Miss Lightning. Maybe this isn’t just an act for you anymore.” He then kisses me on the tip of my nose and holds me against him, a genuine smile on his face and his eyes twinkling – for once no hurt apparent in them.
I am nearly overcome with joy when I see that, for once, I’m not causing him pain every second of every day, and I bury my head in his shoulder to stop myself from breaking down and bawling, because there’s still a hole in my heart the size of Jackson Lucas Carter. That hole hurts me every time I kiss Luke because it begins to throb with my betrayal of Jackson and my loneliness and my feeling that I’m a wretched human being, my feeling that I should have never fallen for Jackson because it’s only ended up hurting us both. So I can’t help but hear a song lyric, from To Them These Streets Belong by Rise Against, echo around in my head as Luke and I dance.
“‘It’s not this hate/But the loneliness/That’s left me here into this mess of love.’”

Sonmi-451 wrote:Perhaps those deprived of beauty perceive it most instinctively.
Sonmi-451 wrote:To be is to be perceived. And so to know thyself is only possible through the eyes of the other. The nature of our immortal lives is in the consequences of our words and deeds, that go on and are pushing themselves throughout all time. Our lives are not our own. From womb to to tomb we are bound to others, past and present, and by each crime, and every kindness, we birth our future.
My couples thread and my books
Kodiak and
Triple CrownNote for mods: Llover is my friend in real life that uses my computers.
Currently trading Growing White July, Nonballoon, Sunjewel Bun and various Advents
Sonmi-451 wrote:I believe death is only a door; when it closes, another opens. If I care to imagine heaven, I would imagine a door opening. And behind it, I would find him there, waiting for me.
Sonmi-451 wrote:Knowledge is a mirror, and for the first time in my life, I was allowed to see who I was, and who I might become.