Saturday, September 12, 2015

The 24th Hunger Games: Part Two: The Capitol

The 24th Hunger Games: Part Two: The Capitol
By Lauren Price




            They hadn’t gotten far off the train before they were herded into a nearby building, and again separated.  Ashley didn’t seem to care as more Capitol people swarmed them, whispering about all the work that had to be done.  The two that had taken him could only glance at his hand, gasping at its ruined appearance.  One -a female- laid her hand on his shoulder, sympathy clouding her eyes.  “If you win, we could have that fixed,” she smiled reassuringly.
            He had never thought about having his hand fixed; had never had the technology or opportunity to even attempt it.  “Really?”  There was no actual interest in his voice, but the question delighted her, her magenta colored eyebrows almost meeting her similarly colored hair.
            “Of course!  Anything is possible,” she gave a light laugh, leading him into a stall with metal walls, lights flickering on at their presence.  “Sit, sit.”  He was nearly pushed down onto a bedlike table, the woman looking through a row of strange tools that had been laid out.
            “So much to be done.  Deeva will have a lot of work ahead of her,” the man murmured, keeping his voice low. 
            “I believe the better phrase is, “a new canvas”.”  Another woman with dark yellow hair stood in the entrance of the stall, the light reflecting off her almost golden eyes.  They were technically brown, but the flecks of gold mixed in were so bright they cast the brown into shadow.  A smile graced her lips as she studied him, forming plans in her head.  “No, he is perfect.  Just tweak a few things here and there, and he will be ready for the Capitol.” 
He hadn’t expected her to think of him as anything near perfect, no one, not even those of his district, had ever thought that.  “The question is if they will be ready for him.”  Kaede didn’t need to look at the other two in the stall to know they were as caught off guard with that statement.  They had gone rigid, their mouths opened in surprise.  Deeva though didn’t react, instead leaving as quickly as she had appeared, that smile still planted firmly on her face. 
            The man and woman went back to work, trimming, and cleaning every last bit of him, their expressions firm and uncertain.  Kaede could feel the minutes slowly morph into an hour as he sat there being prodded, his body feeling unusually lighter.  When they finally finished, Deeva returned and they left without a word.  “What is the point of all this?”  He could feel the new weightlessness of his hair, now only an inch at most off his head. 
            “The Games have always had an aspect of glamour and pomp to them.  No one wants to see a cast of ragged children going at each other.  It’s unsightly.”  She sat down across from him, still looking more at his body than simply just him.  “I am your stylist, assigned by the Capitol.”
            “And what exactly does that mean?”
            Her smile deepened, those eyes sparkling.  “It means I help you look desirable,” she stated simply.  “You are going to want sponsors, especially with that hand of yours.  I and my abilities will ensure you catch the eye of said sponsors.”
            “Who would want to sponsor me, and why?”  Berkeley had said nothing of this aspect of the games, hadn’t even hinted at it.
            “Citizens of the Capitol sponsor their favorite tributes, and send items that are vital to their survival in the arena.”  The smile faltered into a frown.  “Has your mentor said nothing of this to you?”
            “No.”
            “Then you had better ask him.  I am simply in charge of your time here in the Capitol.”  She patted him on the knee and stood.  “I won’t be able to help you out there.”  A sadness crept into her voice as she walked to the doorway.  “I’ll see you in a while, Kaede.”
            “What do you mean?”
            “Tonight at the chariots,” she said.  “I still need to make a few adjustments to your outfit.  But when it’s done you will be perfect.”  She didn’t give him a chance to respond as she left again.

          
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  She had said perfect, but he felt ridiculous in the outfit.  It had been picked to represent his district, but that meant it had to involve trees.  Trees weren’t exactly the most fashionable, or flattering topic for clothes.  To make it worse, he could see the Careers as they prepared to get in the first two chariots, both pairs looking excruciatingly better than the other ten districts around them.
            One of the taller boys, from district two, he figured, stared back at him, his eyes forming a hard glare.  “I’ve done all I can,” Deeva said, blocking his view of the other boy.  “The rest is up to you.”  She sounded less than hopeful, but the smile on her face made him question that assumption.
            “I would hide that hand to give yourself at least a chance.”  Berkeley walked up to the two, his expression carefully blank.  “Sponsors are less likely to support you if they think you won’t make it,” he said simply.
            Kaede stared down at his hand, but nodded, working out the placement of it already.  “Come on.  They are about to call for the chariots.”  Berkeley helped him up, showing silently where he should hide his hand.  Ashley joined him in the chariot, but without a single word, not even failing to give a look of annoyance to him.
            Ahead of them, the first chariot rattled forward, clearing the large hangar like room they had all been prepared in, and into the night.  From where they were waiting, he couldn’t see anything but the darkness, and a few flashing lights, everything else obstructed by the white walls of the room.
            One by one, the chariots fell into a line, the horses kept at a trot as they each led themselves out of the building.  The white walls were quickly replaced with the night sky, but on either side of the wide road they were on, there were stands filled with Capitol citizens.  A light shone on them as they made their progression to the building at the far end of the road.  It was taller than any of the others that surrounded them, a screen propped up on it showing the sitting figure of a middle aged man.  He was important, maybe the president, but for some unknown reason the man’s expression never changed from a bored frown.
            “Smile, you idiot.  You look like an imbecile,” Ashley snapped beside him, a stretched smile covering the anger she had for him.  Her voice though, was hard to hear over the clamor of cheers from the stands around them.  As an example, she waved at the crowds, smiling like they were her favorite people.  A part of him felt disgusted at the acting, but he realized the point of it enough to know what it meant to winning.  He followed her in waving, but his smile was thin, hardly concealing the uneasiness or bitterness that came with being made a tribute.
            Whatever the Capitol people read from their expressions, it didn’t affect them, each of the stands seeming louder and louder as they progressed down the road.  The roar stilled his hand for that moment, and he felt the fear catch up to him, felt it fully take root.  They were cheering for children that they would soon watch not just die, but kill one another.  It was a thought that sickened him to the core.  He continued to wave, but now the smile wouldn’t even come back, leaving him in between the smile and frown, hopelessly lost in the cheering.
            Once they had made it to the end of the road, all the chariots made a wide crescent formation in front of the building, only then coming to a halt.  The screen showed the man standing and coming to the podium above them, his frown still visible, though there was a small smile forming slowly.  “Welcome tributes!”  He made a motion with his hands, indicating all the chariots below him.  “This is a wonderful and grand occasion for us all.  To witness the strength, honor, courage, and sacrifice that the Hunger Games bring us.”  The smile came to fruition as he continued making his speech.
            “For you, the tributes this is a chance to find out your potential and vie for the chance to be victor!”  He made it sound glorious, nothing like the image of wasteful death that Kaede had formed in his mind.
            “For the citizens of the Capitol, it is our chance to witness the moment when they become all they can be.  To witness the birth of a victor!”  A cheer rose in the crowd, and Kaede could feel the vibration of it in the chariot, the sound turning his blood cold.
            “We acknowledge your sacrifice, tributes!”  The smile was beginning to scare him, and the line itself reminded him of what his parents used to tell him the Romans had declared to the Gladiators, who they had knowingly sent to their deaths.  They were dismissed by that line, the chariots slowly making their way into an area under the building.  He didn’t breathe until the chariot came to a stop in front of Berkeley, Devri, and Deeva, who only appeared to be proud.
            “You did well!  You both looked so splendid out there.  Almost even on par with Districts One and Two.”  Deeva embraced them, a wide grin casting her eyes into a flicker of gold.
            “At least they are making my job easy enough,” Berkeley replied.  He was serious again, the congratulations over for now.  “There are already sponsors interested in the two of you, though they won’t commit until the scoring.”
            Ashley grumbled beside him, letting the air of happiness disappear.  “And why not?”
            Because tributes from District Seven don’t have an outstanding track-record.  No one wants to gamble on an unknown.”
            It made enough sense.  “I take it the Careers already have sponsors.”
            “Of course.”  Berkeley shrugged, and glanced in the direction of the group, casually observing the lethal tributes.  “They are worth the early commitment.  Typically at least.”  He stopped staring at the group, and looked back at them.  “Let’s go.  I have a feeling tomorrow is going to be rough on the two of you.”
            “What about tomorrow?”  Ashley was picking at her outfit, trying to hide the scowl that he was starting to realize might have been a permanent feature.
            “Training tomorrow, Scoring the day after.  Unless one of you knew more about fighting and survival than I thought you did.”  They followed him into an elevator, Deeva and Devri coming as well.
            “I know enough,” Ashley muttered, her ego still being deflated by Berkeley.
            Berkeley looked like he would laugh in that instant, but instead sighed, directing his full attention to her.  “Really?  So tell me when it’s a good idea to set a fire,” he half yelled at her.
            For once, her frown was gone, and she looked genuinely scared.  “At night?”  She nearly whispered back.
            Berkeley shook his head, and kneaded his forehead, calming down a little.  “Never.  Fires are like flashing beacons for other tributes to come slit your throat while it’s easy.”  The elevator door opened, and he walked into a bright, open room.  “These are your living quarters,” he said with one hand motioning at the large space.  “Go ahead and get settled.  I’m going to sleep.”
            “But what about tomorrow?”  Berkeley had said something about training, but the word seemed vague.
            “Learn as much as you can.  I’ll talk to you afterwards about the scoring.”
            “Thank you, Berkeley.”
            All he received for reply at first was a sigh of frustration.  “Don’t thank me yet, kid.  My conscious can’t take that pressure right now.”
            Kaede nodded and let him disappear into a nearby room, making his own way down the hall to another.  The room he stepped in was as large as the home he had grown up in, and though it was sparsely furnished, the bed seemed inviting enough.  He hardly had any energy left after the Reaping, and chariot ride.  The bed didn’t even creak as he splayed himself out on it, basking in its luxurious softness.  It was sad that the cost of such comfort was death, otherwise it could have been worth it.  He stared up at the bare ceiling, trying to form some kind of plan of attack for the next day.  Berkeley wanted him to learn, but what would even help him out in that bloodbath of arena?  For all he could figure out, there were two sides to becoming the victor; those that hid and focused on survival, and those who killed until they were the only ones left.  He didn’t really fit into either group, he wasn’t a straight out killer, and hiding seemed like an even worse concept.  But did that mean that he would have to change in order to simply live?  He fell asleep to those thoughts, letting them churn in his mind as he dozed off, not committing to anything no matter how much he truly thought on it.

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  After only a few, brief instructions, and reminder not to kill each other yet, they had been left to figure out the training room for themselves.  Only a small portion of the tributes made a move to grapple with the weapons that had been laid out on multiple racks.  The Careers had taken over immediately, claiming weapons that made the weaker tributes shrink back, already fearing for their lives.
            Out of the weapons provided, he saw only one axe, which sat right next to where the District one boy had set up his sword practice.  He wouldn’t be practicing with the axe if he had to be near a Career.  Taking a calming breath, he moved on to the next station.  He tried not to flinch as he heard the thud that came from the dummy losing portions of his body at a time, the machete slashing through him like it was butter.  The District Two boy, Mason, was merciless, cutting at the inanimate object.  Fear was the only thing the act could inspire from its viewer.  He paused momentarily from his dismembering to grin at Kaede, his eyes dark with a promise of death.  Kaede continued walking, and picked up a long blade, swinging it a little in the air.
            “And what exactly do you plan to do with that?”  A snide voice questioned from beside him at the station.  He looked up from the blade to see one of the Careers staring back at him, but not with condemnation, but a quizzical expression.  Her blonde hair was tied back in a long braid that hung loosely behind her, but his gaze fell on the spear that she held.
            “Practice.”  She didn’t reply to that, but he could see one of her eyebrows raise before she shrugged, and got into a stance, her concentration on the targets before them.  In one swift motion, the spear was out of her hand, and into the air, hitting the target dead in the center.  She let out a sigh of happiness as she realized where it had hit, and Kaede found himself staring at the blade in his hands, and back at the axe he had walked past before.  Berkeley had said practice, and while he was sure he had meant to prepare himself for the survival part, Kaede couldn’t find any interest in that.  He was already walking before he knew what he was doing; already had the axe in hand before the Careers even took notice of him being so close to them.
            The axe wasn’t like the one he had used at home, but its shape and form were familiar enough.  His hand fell into place on the handle, Kaede walking back over to the Career girl, and stepping up beside her, getting into his own stance.  With a hard stare at the targets, he loosed the large axe, letting it spin in the air and hit another target right where he had aimed.   The room fell silent around him, the Careers still watching him, most likely calculating how much of a threat he was now.  He wanted to gloat, to let them know how much he wanted that to scare them, but he knew that would only make him target number one.   Instead, he pulled the axe out of the target, not with his right hand, but left, letting them see how useless his hand truly was.  It wouldn’t have been able to hold the axe for long, but they didn’t need to know that.  He smiled to himself as they all showed even a little surprise at the action.  He wasn’t out of the standings yet at least.  The gloating clouded his mind of all the suggestions Berkeley had given him, Kaede continuing to focus solely on the familiar axe, throwing it, and swinging it at the dummies the Careers had been using earlier.  It was almost like being back at home, and secretly practicing in the field behind his house.  Free of judgment from others, and free to not have to think for once.  He could lose himself in the naturalness the axe gave to him. 

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   He should have experimented with the survival equipment that had been provided in the training room.  Or at least have had the sense to try out other weapons.  He now regretted that as he waited to be called into the scoring room.  No one stared at him here, all the other tributes thinking about only themselves now, not calculating anything at this point until when the scores would be released.  The Careers were already gone, but the waiting room was still silent, everyone focused on what they would do to gain their scores. 
            “District Seven.  Kaede Johnson.”  Ashley watched him as he stood, and walked through the gate, her own nervousness making her seem caring in that moment.  The room he stepped into was expansive, but only somewhat lit, most of the lights focused on a small area.  Placed in that small area were the racks of weapons that he had seen in the training room, but now there was no pressure from fellow tributes to avoid it.  Above the area was a sitting area where men of all ages sat staring bored already at his entrance.  It was as silent as the waiting area, but now he felt inclined to speak, to announce himself.
            “District Seven.  Kaede Johnson,” he repeated what the speaker from before had said, taking an axe off the rack.  He didn’t fail to notice how their expressions remained unimpressed, already counting him off their lists before he had even started.  He grabbed the single axe off the rack, and tested its weight.  It was just like the one he had used the day before down to the coloring.  He looked back up at the men, feeling their stares on him as he stepped up to the line, eyes on the targets in front of him.  Their disapproval annoyed him, but he merely swung the axe in his hand, letting it cross hands for a second, and then fall back into his right, not even making the stance as he threw the axe.  He didn’t look at them; didn’t look at the target as the axe met the metal dummy, simply turning on his heel, and walking out of the room.  He didn’t need to see if they were impressed, didn’t need to check if he had missed or not.

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   “You just left?”  Devri looked at him like he was an entirely different person, and wasn’t sure how to figure him out.
            “Yeah.  I don’t need their approval.”  Berkeley snorted from beside him, even as Ashley glared at him.
            “You didn’t help me out with your show,” she huffed, sitting on the couch with them.  “They just sat there at first, like they didn’t know how to move or speak.”
            Berkeley laughed instead of sympathizing for her, clapping Kaede on the back.  “You really showed them what a District Seven tribute can do!”
            Ashley didn’t drop it, her eyes on the television screen.  “I just hope my score is decent.”
            “After Days of careful evaluation, our tribute’s scores have been realeased!”  The announcer let out a sound of glee, shuffling the papers before him.  “From District One, Chrome,”  The picture of the tall and skinny career flitted on the screen.  “with a score of ten.”  Berkeley nodded, already having figured that out.
            “They always get high scores,” he said solemnly.  The announcer continued, showing a picture of the girl he had practiced beside in the training room.
            “Lux with a score of eight.”  Her picture passed off screen, and then the boy who had grinned at him replaced her.
            “From District Two, Mason with a score of eleven.”  Berkeley now seemed less certain as he saw the number, and it only made Kaede feel icy inside. 
            “You’re going to have to keep an eye out for him.  He will be trouble.”
            Kaede nodded, his eyes not leaving the television.  “I figured as much.”  Pictures and numbers flitted on and off the screen, but he couldn’t find himself finding much interest when the other tribute’s scores were much lower than the Career’s.  Then the announcer came to his district.  “From District Seven, Kaede,” there was a pause as the man looked at the score, and his eyebrows rose.  “with a score of nine.”  A low whistle issued from Berkeley, and Kaede found that he himself was as surprised as the others.
            “And Ashley with a score of six.”  He felt her anger then, but for some reason didn’t feel the need to fear it, or worry over it.  Her score was her own, and his actions had nothing to do with her’s.  It could have been the high score talking, but she had written him off from the beginning, not the other way around.  If she regretted her words, she would have to be the one to mend the gap, because he was no longer willing to play friend anymore.

            They were supposed to watch the entire sequence of tributes and scores, but when he simply sat there staring blankly, Berkeley had sent him away, and he had ended up on the balcony.  He didn’t leave the small space for another several hours, letting the breeze tousle his hair, and make him feel less doomed.  In the distance, he could still hear the sound of the Capitol parties, but instead of feeling bitter, he found himself relaxing to the sound, losing himself in his thoughts, or rather absence of them.  There would be plenty of time for thinking when he reached the arena, and the idea of that alone stilled his mind, allowing him to sit there and simply get lost in the moment.  Tomorrow would catch up to him anyway.




***I don't own the picture, or concept of the Hunger Games.  The story and characters though are  products of my imagination.***   If interested in the series, this is part two, and part one is also up if you check out the 24th Hunger Games tab on the site.  Happy Reading!  Part 3 will be up in early October at the latest due to school, but it will be here, I promise!

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