by Sonmi-451 » Tue Nov 06, 2012 4:04 pm
More added.
“I can’t believe that this is really happening, that this is it,” I murmur as I stand completely still to let Mitchell play with my hair to his liking.
“Lizzie, it will be fine,” he replies reassuringly as he gently slides a bobby pin into my hair, and I can’t help but be reminded of Jackson’s and my conversation earlier. Hopefully this one doesn’t end with sadness and pain like that one did.
Suddenly it occurs to me that I don’t want my hair up, and, breaking Mitchell’s rule of not moving, I reach back and pull the complicated mess of seven bobby pins out of my hair.
“Why did you do that?” Mitchell exclaims in surprise and anger. “You just ruined an hour of work!”
“I don’t want my hair up for the wedding, since I might as well be me, right?” I see Mitchell nod his head grudgingly behind me, and can’t help but add, “Besides, if that’s all you got done in an hour, you really need to work on your efficiency.”
Mitchell smiles at my joke, then helps me silently into my wedding dress. After ten minutes of zipping up zippers and tying up laces and fluffing out certain parts of the gown, I’m finally looking to his satisfaction, and he takes a step back to admire his work.
“It’s perfect,” he replies, not seeming to notice that he actually forgot to design and make a veil to match the dress.
I am about to ask about the veil when I remember that veils aren’t used at weddings in El Nieve. I guess that’s just another of the traditions that have been lost to time and war.
A low and conspicous cough outside the door – obviously Max is getting impatient – stirs both Mitchell and me to action again.
“Lizzie,” he begins, “you look as radiant as the sun, so please show your dress – which happens to be helping greatly with your appearance – some love and respect and don’t trip on purpose, light it on fire on purpose, or do anything other purposeful act of destruction, since you’re not going to fool me with the excuse of an accident, alright?” He captures my gaze with his own chocolate brown one, then continues in a milder tone, “I know you don’t want to be here, and I know you don’t want to be doing this, but please don’t take it out on your dress, alright? I spent too much time designing and making it for you to ruin after wearing it for five minutes, so I expect that you won’t.”
“Ah Mitchell, you’re taking all of the fun out of my wedding,” I reply, forcing a smile onto my face while internally cursing the fact that one of my ideas of crashing my own wedding just got flushed down the drain. ‘Accidentally’ destroying the dress on national television would be the perfect way to tell Rush that I’m going to play along with his plans of a happy ending for Luke and I.
“Lizzie, I’m sure there are many other ways for you to ruin this for everyone else,” Mitchell tells me as he tugs at my dress to get it fit right, “so please don’t choose to do so by destroying your dress. After all, you promised you’d wear all ten of the dresses I made after Team Survival, so I need this dress to still be around in a month.”
“Mitchell, I think the biggest variable in that equation is whether I’m going to be alive in a month,” I reply. I don’t know why everyone is so confident that I’m going to come out alive, especially when they know that I don’t want to come out alive.
“From the way I’ve seen you treat clothes, I beg to differ,” Mitchell responds, tugging at the area around my ribs and frowning. “Damn it Lizzie, I might have to put a little bit of padding around your ribs for the dress to fit right, because you’re too skinny for it!”
“Mitchell, you know I’m not going to start eating more anytime soon,” I tell him, and he bows his head slightly in capitulation.
“I know, but Lizzie, you’re ruining the whole look!” He gestures to the small amount of extra fabric gathered around my ribs and shakes his head. “If only you were five or ten pounds heavier…”
Sighing in exasperation, I place my hands on my hips and shift all of my weight onto my back foot to have Mitchell stop fooling with the dress and look up at me in surprise. “You in a hurry to go somewhere?”
“Yeah, I’m in a hurry to get this wedding over with,” I answer, and a small, sad smile comes onto his face.
“Lizzie, you could do a lot worse than Luke,” he tells me quietly, his eyes locked on mine. “That boy would do anything for you, anything in the world, and, from what I’ve seen, you do care for him some.”
“I know, Mitchell,” I begin, “but I don’t know if he’s what I want. I certainly know, no matter how much I care about him, that I don’t want to be marrying him today.”
“Lizzie, nothing about this situation has been defined by what you want,” Mitchell responds with a bitter chuckle, “So I think you should get used to not having a say in your life anymore. After all, the people that are controlling your life now have no intention of letting you have even the slightest bit of choice or freedom.”
“That’s the thing, Mitchell,” I start, “they can control every aspect of my life, including what I eat, what I wear and what I do ever second of every day, but they can’t control my thoughts, and that’s where my real power lies. They can’t tell me what think – even if they could, I sure as hell wouldn’t listen to them – and, as long as I have that five inches of freedom from one ear to the other, I am just as dangerous, if not more, than if they didn’t control my life at all.”
“I guess you’re right,” Mitchell agrees with a tiny smile. “When you have nothing else left, and all control of outside events is stripped away from you, your real power lies in your mind, and in your inability to be broken.” After a moment’s pause, during which time Mitchell captures my gaze with his own, “I think that, in your heart, you will never stop being a spark, no matter what happens to you or how hard they try to break you. I guess you could say that you’re kind of concrete,” he finishes, and immediately a small smile flits across my face.
“Well, I don’t know if I’m concrete, Mitchell,” I begin, “but I do know that I won’t go down without a fight and that I will try as hard as I can to not be broken. They might own everyone and everything else in this Triple Crown, but, so help me God, when it’s all said and done, they will not own Elizabeth Eleanor Marie Lightning.”
With that, I turn away from Mitchell and slip out of the dressing room we’re in to find Max waiting for me outside with a bored look on his face. When he sees me approaching him, his expression brightens considerably, and he asks, “What took you so long?”
“I just had a conversation with Mitchell about the state of things in my life,” I answer truthfully as I step to Max’s side to have him grab my arm. As I don’t have any male relatives or friends at the wedding – well, Jackson’s a male friend, but it’s only because Mitchell pulled a few strings that he’s even here as himself and not Max – Max will be giving me away to Luke, like he first did that fateful night almost three months ago.
“Must have been a pretty depressing conversation,” he says as he takes a deep breath and begins to walk down the curving red aisle that eventually leads into the main chapel.
“Yeah, it kind of was,” I reply with a sigh of my own, and find that I have to walk exceptionally fast to keep up with his huge strides. Max soon notices this and slows down his pace some, which makes him seem even more large and ungainly. I guess he’s just one of those people that has to walk fast.
“Ah, it’ll get better Lizzie,” Mitchell says, clearly trying to sound encouraging but only sounding awkward. “Once you win Team Survival with Luke-”
“Wait, with Luke?” I interject, wondering if Max has momentarily forgotten about the rule that doesn’t allow Luke and me to be on the same team. “We can’t be on the same team, remember?”
“Oh, you didn’t hear?” Max says, his tone just as confused as mine. When I shake my head, he continues, “The Triple Crown committee changed the rules so that you and Luke can be on the same team for Team Survival, which means we succeeded in making the idea of you and Luke as star-crossed lovers popular enough with the public for the Triple Crown committee to be forced to bend.”
“You sure they aren’t going to bend and snap right back like they did last time?” I ask him warily. I don’t trust the Triple Crown committee at all, and I wouldn’t put it past them to try to make us kill each other again.
“Nah,” Max replies dismissively. “The public reaction to them changing and then unchanging the rules during One-Person was horrible, so they’re not going to try something like that again.”
“Oh,” I respond lamely, rather surprised that the public didn’t like the changing and then unchanging of the rules. Perhaps they’ve become more attached to Luke and I than I thought was possible. “Well, that’s good,” I force myself to lie and say, since this rule change is going to completely mess with my plan to save Abby by choosing her to be my team mate. After all, everyone’s going to expect me to choose Luke now, and I can’t imagine that they’ll be very happy when I choose an unknown little girl who can’t fight to save her life.
“It’s very good.” Max looks over at me quizzically, and I can tell that he’s surprised by my lack of a positive response. He probably thought that I would be jumping up and down with joy, since this rule change means both Luke and I can go home, which is all he thought I ever wanted.
Unfortunately, I want more than I can have, so it looks like I’m going to have to make some very difficult decisions. One thing I know for sure though: I will not change my mind and turn my back on Abby, because that would be the same thing as leaving her to die, and I have already promised to save her. I will figure out what I’m going to do about Luke later.
“Well, this is it,” Max says as we stop outside of the huge double doors, beyond which the wedding lies. Instead of motioning to the men standing outside of the doors to open them, like I thought he would, he turns to me and tells me, “You know, you don’t technically have to do this, if you really don’t want to. The Triple Crown committee isn’t going to change the rules back if you don’t marry Luke, so you don’t have to marry him for you to both survive this.”
“Max,” I begin, gesturing at myself with a small, sad smile, “what choice do I have now?”
“Hmm,” Max grunts, and I can tell from the tone of his voice that he agrees with me but doesn’t want to vocalize that. Apparently even Max thinks this is a bit much by the Triple Crown committee’s standards.
Max then motions for the men to open the doors, and, as the huge slabs of stained brown wood slowly open with much creaking, he gives me a smile and tells me sincerely, “You know, Lizzie, I’m honored to be the one walking you down the aisle today.” Just as the doors open wide enough for everyone in the main chapel to see us, Max turns back to face the preacher at the end of the aisle, his face now a solemn mask.
“Here Comes the Bride” immediately begins playing, and everyone in the chapel rises to their feet as Max and I march in perfect unison to the beat down the aisle. I see Luke standing there next to the preacher, not even attempting to hide his shock at my appearance as he looks me up and down. I hope that means Mitchell did a good job and not a bad one.
Once we reach the end of the aisle and I am standing next to Luke, Max lets go of me and backs away, and everyone in the chapel sits back down. I turn and face Luke to find his expression still completely stunned, and sneak a glance at him to be completely amazed myself.
The tuxedo Mitchell designed for him fits him perfectly and accentuates his long, lean, muscular frame so amazingly that I wonder how it had taken me so long to realize that Luke is incredibly attractive. There also happens to be a tiny splash of light blue around the collar that really brings out Luke’s eyes, and I find myself getting lost in their ice-blue depths as the preacher drones on about God knows what.
I snap to attention when I hear the preacher asking Luke solemnly, “Lucas William Gates, do you take Elizabeth Eleanor Marie Lightning to be your lawful wedded wife, to love her, comfort her, honor and keep her, in sickness and in health, for richer, for poorer, for better, for worse, in sadness and in joy, to cherish and continually bestow upon her your heart’s deepest devotion, forsaking all others, to keep yourself only unto her as long as you both shall live?”
“I do,” Luke says, and I hear his breath catch in his throat as he looks back down at me. I guess that means Mitchell did a good job.
Suddenly I see the preacher turn to me, and I realize that it’s my turn. Oh. Great. “Elizabeth Eleanor Marie Lightning, do you take Lucas William Gates to be your lawful wedded husband, to love him, comfort him, honor and keep him, in sickness and in health, for richer, for poorer, for better, for worse, in sadness and in joy, to cherish and continually bestow upon him your heart’s deepest devotion, forsaking all others, to keep yourself only unto him as long as you both shall live?”
‘As long as you both shall live’ doesn’t sound too bad, I think idly, because odds are that neither one of us is going to live very long. “I do.” I meet Luke’s gaze again and smile slightly as I admire the beauty of his eyes. That blue really is my favorite color now.
Suddenly I see someone – a very large someone – move towards the preacher and whisper in his ear, and my eyes lock on Max’s for a single moment. However, that moment is long enough for me to read his mind, and my eyes shoot open slightly in surprise as I find that Max is telling the preacher we have our own wedding vows to say. Immediately I begin to panic, because no one told me about this, and I sure as hell don’t have a wedding vow prepared! My gaze then darts back to Luke’s face, and, as I see the calm determination that has taken over his expression, I realize that this is all his idea. I guess he wants to make good on his promise of his wedding vow being ‘always.’
“It has been brought to my attention that the couple would like to make their own additional wedding vows,” the preacher announces, seeming almost taken aback. He then turns his gaze on us and motions for us to start.
I’ve prepared myself to crap it and am about to open my mouth when Luke, staring down at me with a small smile on his face, begins, “Lizzie, I think you already know what mine’s going to be, since I told you in One-Person, but I feel compelled to say it anyways: always. Just always.” He raises a hand to gently touch the side of my face, and suddenly it seems like everyone else in the room disappears and it’s just he and I talking.
“Luke, I don’t have any vows written out or anything, because apparently you forgot to mention this to me,” I start, and Luke gets a sheepish and guilty look at my last words, “but there’s one thing that I think you really need to know: I can’t promise you always, Luke – hell, I can’t even promise you tomorrow – but for today, I’m yours.” I pause and give him a smile, and feel the people around me stir. However, before the peace and sincerity of this moment I’m sharing with Luke can be shattered, I add, “And there’s one more thing that really I don’t say enough: I love you, Lucas William Gates.”
Without waiting for the preacher to say anything else, I fling myself onto him and kiss him passionately, that hunger having overtaken me again, to have his arms lock around my back and hold me against him for a long few moments. When I pull back, I’m vaguely aware of the cheering mob of people around us, but still am completely focused on Luke and Luke alone.
Gently he wraps his arm around my waist and guides me towards the incredibly large ballroom next door, where the reception is to take place. The rest of the crowd follows us, and soon the live orchestra on the stage at the end of the room starts playing and the room fills with music and the sound of people eating and talking.
As Luke and I make our way around the numerous tables of food, we given many greetings and congratulations, half of them from people I’ve never met before who must be important El Nieve socialites. Neither one of us eat very much, as we both just want the wedding to end so we can have some alone time to talk, so we’re both very happy when Max gets up onto the stage in front of the orchestra and steals a small microphone from one of the violinists.
“Ladies and gentlemen,” he begins in his huge voice, and I think idly that he probably doesn’t need a microphone to be heard by everyone in the room, “it’s time for the dance.” He then leaps surprisingly nimby off the stage and walks towards me, and suddenly I remember that the father-daughter dance comes first, and that Max is my surrogate father.
Max nods his head respectfully at Luke before taking me by the arm and walking me out to the center of the ballroom, at which point the orchestra begins playing again and we start twirling in a small circle.
“How are you doing, Lizzie?” Max asks telepathically, his concerned, flame-filled eyes locked on mine. It’s not like we can talk out loud, with every eye in the ballroom on us, so we have to communicate mentally. Of course, I would probably communicate mentally even if we weren’t under the spotlight, since it’s almost impossible to detect and decode telepathic communication.
“Fine,” I answer, not taking my gaze away from his eyes. I wonder why he’s so concerned about me; maybe he thinks that the stress of the wedding is going to get to me and I’m going to snap.
“I’m sorry about the wedding vows surprise,” he tells me apologetically. “Luke made me promise that I wouldn’t tell you, and I wasn’t going to deny him that.”
“Oh, don’t worry about it,” I reply reassuringly. “It gave me an excellent opportunity to work on my improvisational skills.”
Max’s mouth twitches slightly as he sends back, “Good. By the way, you did a damn good of improvising if you ask me.”
Now it’s my turn to respond, “Good,” and my own mouth twitches slightly. Suddenly it occurs to me that the rest of the public may not share Max’s opinion, and I ask him, “Did the rest of the people here like my improv as well as you did?”
His face falls slightly, and I realize that I’ve hit the cause of his concern. “Well, Rush didn’t like it too much, but, like I said, they’re not going to change the rules back, with the reception their last rule change and unchange got.” After a moment’s pause, he sends, “Don’t worry Lizzie; you don’t have anything to worry about besides the normal will-I-be-alive-in-a-month stuff.” His mouth twitches again at his own joke, and I roll my eyes.
“That’s really encouraging, thank you,” I reply dryly, idly thinking that this is a hell of a time for Max to be humorous. I guess it’s better than being all doom-and-gloom, like there’s much reason for him to be.
Suddenly the orchestra stops playing, and I realize that it must be time for me to dance with Luke now. However, before I leave, Max looks me in the eyes one last time and says with a small smile, “It was kind of nice being your surrogate father; call me if you need a fake dad again.”
“Thanks Max,” I tell him genuinely, giving him a smile of my own and a hug – which he clearly wasn’t expecting – before turning away from him to find Luke waiting for me with a smile on his face.
“Shall we?” he asks me solemnly, his eyes locked on mine as he offers me his hand palm-up, a gesture he has done so many times before.
“We shall,” I reply, making no attempt to pull my gaze away from his and just allowing him to guide me out onto the dance floor.
The orchestra then begins playing again, and Luke and I twirl in a small circle silently, at least as many eyes on us as when I danced with Max, even though there are other couples on the floor this time. I don’t have any urge to speak, since everything I want to say to him needs to be said privately, and he seems to feel the same way, so the air around us is completely silent for quite a while.
However, after about five minutes of us just staring into each other’s eyes, both of us completely peaceful and actually enjoying ourselves, I feel a presence come up behind me and hear a very familiar voice ask, “May I have this dance, Mister Gates?”

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.