by Sonmi-451 » Wed Oct 03, 2012 1:59 pm
More added.
“I don’t like it,” he finally murmurs as he takes one of the packs out of my arms to sling it on his back, “but he’s right, we do have a better chance of survival if we stick together.”
I nod my head and give him a genuine smile as I sigh inwardly in relief. Luke’s cooperation as far as working with Marcus goes will make everything a lot easier. We then both turn to the cave entrance, and Luke gestures silently for me to exit first. I am about to climb out of the cave when I stop and turn around, realizing that I really need to tell Luke that there’s nothing going on between Marcus and me.
“Luke,” I begin, staring into his eyes and willing him to understand, “there’s nothing happening between Marcus and me. You are my one and only-” – I swallow, painfully aware of the blatant lie for Max’s and the audience’s sakes – “-and nothing can change that, alright?” I reach up a hand to touch the side of his face gently, and give him a short, sweet kiss, thinking that Max better be jumping up and down with joy at my performance.
“Alright,” he echoes, gazing down at me as a small smile curves his lips. He gives me a kiss of his own, and then motions for me to leave again, though he seems relieved and much happier now.
It takes a few moments and a couple muttered curse words for my eyes to adjust to the incredibly bright sun, as apparently the Triple Crown committee has decided to stop the rain for now. I mean, I’m not complaining, since in general it’s a good thing that it’s not raining, but I’m not a big fan of the amazingly intense sunlight. When my eyes have finally adjusted enough for me to see properly, my gaze falls on Marcus and a girl standing next to him that must be Adelaide.
My memory’s right – she’s the fix-six, slightly-built but obvious crafty girl I remembered her to be, but the one thing that strikes me as odd about her is that she’s clearly the dominant one in her partnership with Marcus, despite the fact that Marcus has a foot and probably one hundred and ninety pounds on her. Of course, Marcus, even though he’s bigger than everyone else, is not a leader, and in that aspect he and Terrell are similar, although Marcus isn’t a leader because he’s too timid and Terrell wasn’t a leader because he was too stupid.
“Lightning,” she greets tersely, jerking her head at me in recognition as she watches me with a wary gaze, as though she expects me to lash out and try to kill her and Marcus here and now. I can’t blame her for having such suspicions though, since things like that happened all the time on the Triple Crown footage I watched.
“Reynolds,” I reply in the same manner, eying her cautiously myself. Even though Marcus is on my side, I know very well that she isn’t, and I wouldn’t put it past her to try to kill me here and now herself.
“Let’s get moving,” she commands when Luke and Winston have come out of the cave, and immediately starts walking off in the opposite direction without another word. Turning back to Luke to see him shrug at me, clearly not knowing what to do, I think that, if we’re going to stick together, I guess we have to follow Adelaide’s orders. At first I hang back with Luke, neither one of us talking much, but it then occurs to me that Marcus probably knows more about what’s happened in the Triple Crown than either one of us do, so I catch up with him.
“Oh, hey Lizzie,” he greets when I step into stride with him, giving me a beaming white smile as he looks down at me. “What’s up?”
“What else do you know about what’s happened so far?” I ask him bluntly. There’s no point in trying to be subtle about it, since I might not get the information I wanted if I did, and I’m not in the mood for being subtle anyways.
“Well, what do you want to know?” he questions in reply, meeting my gaze with his own incredible dark brown one.
“Well, for one, do you know who died earlier?” When I realize that I might have falsely assumed and he might not know, I quickly add, to explain my assumption, “I mean, I presume you and Adelaide are the killers, since the kill happened so close to here and you guys were the only ones in the vicinity.”
“Yeah, we were,” Marcus confirms, then clarifies, “Well, I was. Adelaide isn’t strong enough or, to be perfectly honest, skilled enough to kill anyone unless she surprises them or somehow manages to hit them from a distance with a bow.” Upon remembering that he hasn’t actually answered my question yet, he quickly says, “It was Danica Roberts, the career girl from One.”
Despite the fact that I know it’s incredibly mean-spirited, I can’t help but smile at the fact that Danica finally got what she deserves. “Good,” I murmur, dropping my gaze to the ground when I feel Marcus staring at me intently. Feeling obligated to explain my comment, I add, “I never liked Danica much. She always was a jerk to me and the other champions, and I never really tolerated her to begin with.”
I see Marcus nod his head out of the corner of my eye, but I keep my stare locked forward. All of a sudden something seems to have changed in the look in Marcus’s eyes, and I don’t like it, because this newfound intensity of his makes me incredibly uncomfortable.
After a few long seconds have passed in silence between us, Marcus opens his mouth and breaks the quiet. “Lizzie,” he begins, and reaches out a hand to touch my arm gently, forcing me with the pleading tone of his voice to look up at him, “All I want is to help you, and do anything you need me to do, so I’m sorry if I’m making you uncomfortable. It’s just...” He pauses, and suddenly his demeanor changes; all of a sudden, he seems embarrassed and almost shy. However, he keeps on talking after a moment’s delay, and continues, “It’s just, I can’t keep my eyes off you.” With the sheer force of his tone, he draws my gaze to his unwillingly, and I look up at him in wonder for a millisecond before what he’s said truly sets in.
“Oh God, not you too,” I groan as I turn away from him, shaking my head. I’ve had enough of lovestruck boys for now, considering I’m surrounded by them. I thought that, by talking to Marcus, I might be able to get away from them for a moment, but apparently I was wrong. Suddenly all of my exasperation to annoyance, and I whip my head around to face him again. “Marcus, what is this about?” I ask him sharply, meeting his bashful, surprised brown gaze with my own cold, steely golden one. When he doesn’t seem to understand what I’m talking about, I elaborate, which I probably would have done out of anger anyways, “What is this ‘Oh, Danica’s dead, and, hey Lizzie, I’m in love with you’ stuff about? What on earth possessed you to suddenly announce this to me right before I’m getting married? Well, whatever it is, I don’t appreciate it Marcus, I don’t appreciate it at all.”
I then storm ahead so I don’t have to walk by him anymore and ignore his pained cries of “Lizzie, please let me explain!” I don’t want to have to talk to anyone right now, much less the boy who just told me he loved me and made everything so much more difficult.
However, I am torn away from my thoughts of Marcus and his stupidity by someone clearing their throat up in front of me, and I look up in alarm to find Adelaide pausing for a moment to fall into stride with me.
“You know, you’re all he’s been talking about since we met up last night,” Adelaide tells me quietly as she stares over at me and meets my gaze with her own incredibly intelligent piercing steel-gray one. “Even though he’s just made it harder on you – trust me, I know that he has, though I can’t imagine how much harder – he really does care about you, you know. If things don’t work out between you and Gates, Marcus will always be there.” After a moment’s pause, she adds, “Well, unless he gets killed off in Team Survival.” An awkward silence falls between us as I think about her words and how much she must actually believe them for her to say something like that. It doesn’t last long though, because she soon pipes up and speaks again. “By the way, you know about the rule that says your partner for Team Survival can’t be from the same Section as you, right?”
I nod my head in reply and eye her carefully as I vaguely remember Max mentioning something about that once and curse myself for actually thinking that Luke and I could both return home. I know exactly where she’s going with this but don’t really want to hear it, even though I realize now that it would have inevitably come up sometime anyways.
“Well, what are you going to do about you and Gates then?” she questions, and I’m exactly right about where I thought she was going with this. “I mean, I presume that he would be your first choice in a partner, but since he can’t be your partner, who are you going to choose, presuming that you get to pick?”
I know I can’t tell her about my plan to save Abby by choosing her as my partner, since I’m sure the Triple Crown committee would hate that idea, so I just shrug my shoulders and answer as I drop my eyes to the ground, “I don’t know. I guess I’ll just see what happens.” I don’t want to think about that rule and the fact that Luke and I both can’t return home, which means that our only option is dying together in Team Survival. I don’t want to think about my life falling to pieces around me, with its imminent end fast approaching, and I certainly don’t want to think about Luke and Jackson and Marshall and Marcus and all of the rest of the lovestruck boys in my life.
However, Adelaide seems insistent on making me think about all of those things, because, after a few silent seconds, she murmurs, her gaze locked on mine, “Do you love him?” and I feel my heart drop through my body.
I know exactly what she’s talking about, and I have no intention of replying. I have to though, for the sake of the audience and for Max’s sake, so, finding no relief in the fact that I’m not lying, I respond, “Yes, I do.” Pausing and realizing that I need to talk about it truthfully with someone, even if that someone might kill me in the end, I continue, “I don’t know how much though. I know I don’t love him as much as he loves me – to be perfectly honest, I think that might be impossible – but I do love him, and I fully intend to marry him.”
Adelaide nods her head wordlessly in understanding, and drops her gaze to the ground in front of her like I did, and I can tell that she actually understands, that she actually believes and knows now that I do love Luke. Hopefully my reply had the same effect on the audience, especially Rush, since he’s the one I really have to convince.
A much longer silence passes between us now, the only sounds the sounds of us walking, which is finally broken by Adelaide piping up again. “Well, I guess Marcus is out of the picture then,” she mutters, and it surprises me greatly when I hear a sympathetic and disappointed tone to her voice. I didn’t realize she actually thought Marcus had a chance with me, and I’m not happy that she did, because that means I didn’t act like I was in love with Luke well enough.
“Adelaide,” I begin, looking her in the eye, “Marcus never was in the picture. He knows that, and I’m pretty sure you know that too.”
She bows her head slightly in affirmation, and I wonder why she was let down upon finding that I love Luke. “I just...” she starts, and abruptly pauses, not knowing what to say. Clearly it’s a new experience for her, because she seems to get angry at her lack of eloquence and quickly, in an almost annoyed manner, repeats, “I just... I saw the way his face lit up when he talked about you, and I saw the pain in his eyes when he talked about Gates being the luckiest guy on the planet, and, even if his love for you is just an infatuation brought on by desperation, I can tell how powerful it was, and I can’t help but wish that Marcus, an incredibly sweet, kind, handsome, deserving guy, would actually get the girl for once.” She lowers her gaze to the ground again as her words tug at my heartstrings, and, yet again, I’m wishing that I loved a guy as much he deserves. However, even in my wishing and self-loathing, I can’t help but wonder about Adelaide’s praise for Marcus. She definitely isn’t the kind of person to give out that praise, even if someone deserved it, so I think she might feel more for Marcus than she’s letting on.
“Adelaide, no matter how nice and sweet Marcus is, Luke will always be the nicest, sweetest guy I’ve ever met.” When she doesn’t seem convinced, I embellish, “Adelaide, this is the guy who told me that, if we were to have marriage vows, his would be always. I know I’m not going to do better than that, so I’m not even going to try.”
Even as I turn my head away and look ahead, I shoot her a glance underneath my eyelids, reading her face for a reaction. Fitting with my theory that she considers Marcus as more than a friend, I see a small amount of relief flash across her face before she controls her appearance and makes herself look disappointed.
“Well, I think Marcus would do that and more, but you’re engaged to Gates, so I guess that doesn’t matter now.” She shrugs and slumps her shoulders like she really feels bad, but she can’t stop a small amount of excitement from creeping into her voice.
Another silence passes in between us, and I note with a small air of amusement that, considering all of the times our conversation has fallen away, neither one of us really have the best small-talk or even basic communication skills. During those long seconds, I can’t help but wonder if I’m right, if Adelaide does care for Marcus in more than a friendly way, and finally my curiosity gets the best of me.
“Adelaide, why do you care about Marcus so much?” I burst out, and, when I realize that I didn’t phrase my question correctly at all, I immediately backtrack. “Well, what I mean is, in what way do you care about Marcus? I could care less about why you care about him, but what’s been bugging me is that you clearly care for him a lot, but I can’t tell in what way.”
Adelaide regards me cautiously, her sharp gray gaze locked on mine as she tries and undoubtedly fails to read me. “What are you getting at?” she finally questions in reply, and I notice that her hands have balled into fists and her voice has taken on a defensive, angry tone. She knows I’m onto her, but she doesn’t want to admit her feelings or the fact that she allowed herself to be read by me.
“Adelaide, I think you’re infatuated with or in love with or whatever the hell you want to call wanting to be more than friends with Marcus,” I tell her bluntly, not taking any pains to lower my voice or even caring if Marcus hears our conversation. If that actually is how Adelaide feels, Marcus would find out in the end anyways.
Sure enough, Adelaide shoots a look over her shoulder in Marcus’s direction, and, when she sees that he’s not paying any attention to anything around him and is just hanging his head low with a pained look on his face, her gaze immediately darts back to me. “Lizzie,” she begins, and I hear the pleading tone her voice that tells me my suspicions are right without her saying any other words. “Please don’t tell Marcus, or anyone else, alright?” I see the desperation in her eyes, and I feel myself nodding my head in agreement before I can even think.
“Alright.” Even though Adelaide is clearly almost hopeless in her love for Marcus, I can’t help but smile at the fact that my predictions were right, yet again. So far I’ve proven Luke’s statement that I won’t always be able to read people correctly wrong – except for in the case of Luke himself, since, for nearly four years, I was completely oblivious to the fact that he loved me until he told me that he loved me. Knowing that what I’m about to say is probably quite stupid but that I’m going to say it anyways, I turn back to Adelaide and murmur, actually being careful about the volume of my voice this time, “I can talk to him and tell him how you feel and see if he’s interested too.” When I see the horrified look on Adelaide’s face, I quickly elaborate frankly, “Look, Marcus knows he has no chance with me, but he has a lot more than a chance with you, and any guy finds desire attractive, trust me.” I’m probably making myself sound like a slut, but I don’t care and it doesn’t matter. If it does anything at all, it will make the audience more interested in Luke’s and my relationship by making it seem like there’s a possibility I could cheat on him.
“You sure?” Adelaide questions skeptically, clearly doubting my level of expertise in talking to guys. I find that ironic, since earlier she essentially accused me of manipulating and using Luke, and, if that’s what she thinks, then I must be pretty damn good at talking to boys in her eyes.
“Adelaide, I’m sure,” I repeat, trying to reassure her with my tone. Apparently I succeed, since, while she still seems a little cautious about the whole idea, she has visibly become less tense and wary. Even though I know I’m testing my relatively good luck, I dare to add, “Besides, even if I’m screw it up somehow, I have a lot more experience talking to guys than you do, so I think I might be able to do less damage than you would if you screwed up.”
Instead of Adelaide being offended by my comment, like she very well could have, she just nods her head and mutters shyly, “Yeah, I have no clue how to talk to guys. I’ve never really liked one before, and I’ve never had one like me, so I don’t have any experience on the matter.” As I look over at her, all of a sudden I am struck by the fact that, despite her authoratative manner, she’s probably one or two years younger than I am. She’s at least that much younger than Marcus then, because there’s no way he’s younger than I am.
I manage to keep my suspicions quiet for a little bit, but in the end I can’t help myself from blurting out the question, “Adelaide, how old are you?”
“I turn fifteen today,” she replies quietly, and my eyes shoot open in surprise. She’s even younger than I thought she was.
“Well, happy birthday,” I congratulate her as I give her a smile. However, I know this isn’t a happy birthday for her, because it’s most likely her last. Seized by a sudden inspiration, I look over at her, capture her gaze with mine, and tell her, dead serious, “Adelaide, for your fifteenth birthday, I’m going to get you a date with Marcus.”
“Are you serious Lizzie?” She stares at me blankly, clearly in shock and, probably for the first time in her life, not knowing how to react or what to say.
“Adelaide, I’m completely serious,” I confirm as I give her a kind grin. “Besides,” I say, “I think it’s the least I can do to repay you for not killing Luke and I on sight. Trust me, I really appreciate that.”
Adelaide doesn’t say anything in reply, because she’s too busy grinning from ear to ear. I have to stifle back a laugh at her reaction, and, when she looks over at me curiously, I can’t help but giggle a little.
“What?” she asks me, staring over at me as though she worries about my mental health. To be honest, my mental health should be at the bottom of her worries.
“Oh, nothing,” I reply dismissively, waving my hand and instantly freezing my features into an emotionless expression. It’s a very useful skill that I learned to do almost instinctively during my three years as an assassin, and, with all the acting and deceiving I’ve already had to do and will have to do in the future, it has and will come in handy.
After Adelaide gives me one last calculating look and turns away, I allow myself to smile again as I think that it’s interesting how different people handle different situations. Adelaide’s handling the situation of being forced to fight in the Triple Crown by taking control and leading and caring for people, which is most likely what she did at home. However, this same girl – who happens to have more than a three and eighth percent chance of surviving the Triple Crown – has no idea how to talk to boys and is, for once in her life, asking me, of all people, for help on something.
Marcus is handling the situation of the Triple Crown by treating it as a way to die and leave this life that he didn’t choose behind, like I am. Unfortunately, he seems determined to make me feel like an awful person on the way by falling in love with me and telling me about it after I get engaged, so I can’t exactly approve of his plan.
Luke is handling the Triple Crown by simply trying to survive. While he’d like to think that he would rather die than be broken, I know the truth: that he will do whatever it takes to keep us, especially me, alive, and that includes being broken. After all, he’s already lied and manipulated and killed and done things that I couldn’t have ever imagined him doing, so I don’t know what his boundaries are, if he has any.
But how am I handling all of this? How am I dealing with being cherrypicked to win something I’d rather lose and being told to act when I really don’t want to? By rebelling, of course. Even though I’m supposed to be stopping a rebellion and putting out the fire I started and convincing people that I’ve done everything I have out of love for Luke, my actions speak for my motives. I am rebellious to the core, and I am determined to help the people of the Sections rise up and fight back and at least have a chance at living on their feet. I know, after looking out across their faces and seeing the desperate determination in their expressions during the Victory Tour, that they have had enough of living on their knees, and would much rather die on their feet after having just a taste of freedom. Since Mitchell has chosen to make me the spark, and since I won’t deny the people of the Sections their chance at liberation, I will be their martyr, and I will fan the flames that I have started in the hopes that I can help someone by doing so. I will die on my feet rather than live on my knees, like the Triple Crown would have me do, and I die with rebellious thoughts in my mind the whole time. I will not let myself become like Winston Smith: I will not let El Nieve get inside of me and break me. I will not let them change me and twist me and alter my mind to think the thoughts they want me to. When I die, I will die as myself, with my thoughts and feelings and identity, not as the brainwashed, broken excuse for a person that El Nieve would have me be.

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.