â¶ PETRA. amateur writer. ENGLISH IS NOT MY FIRST LANGUAGE. athenian. angst connoisseur. a24 film obsessed. MULTIFANDOM. horror fiend. FLEETWOOD MAC. big feelings girl. james patrick march lover.
MY BOOKSHELF â¶ new arrivals / nothing to see here!
â¶ IN WHICH â Haymitch Abernathy wakes up on his 16th birthday, dreading the upcoming Quarter Quell with twice as many tributes. In an effort to protect a friend, Haymitch is chosen to compete in the 50th Hunger Games as a replacement for a boy who was cruelly killed.
During his journey to the Capitol, he is met with a victor from the previous Hunger Games. A mysterious and strangely endearing mentor-in-training who is just as cunning and rebellious as he is. Haymitch knows that the moment he was chosen, he was set up to fail, but maybe not with a little help.
â ă THE INDEX âź I'm back between villages.
PART ONE â â¶
Prologue ( OOO. ) + Familiar Feeling.
Chapter One ( OO1. ) + You Look Like Trouble.
â¶ HAYMITCH: The lights, the speeches, the interviews. It doesn't make anything safer or easier. It just makes it louder...
â¶ UNKNOWN: You may find that nothing about this will make you feel safer.
â¶ HAYMITCH: No, nothing on this train makes me feel safer.
â¶ UNKNOWN: Then why mention it?
â¶ HAYMITCH: Well, that's the point, isn't it? That's what they want. If Iâm afraid, they get a show. If Iâm brave, they get a story. They don't want us to feel safer.
â¶ I WILL WRITE â I am more experienced in writing angst topics and am pretty capable of writing really fluffy scenarios.
As I grow my account, I will write for anyone who is included in my masterlist. Currently, I only have Haymitch Abernathy since Iâm beginning a series, so feel free to request a drabble or one-shot! I appreciate requests and would love to make your scenario a piece of work!
â¶ I WILL NOT WRITE â I do not write smut. Unfortunately, I lack the experience to write sexual scenarios even poetically. I will however likely have implied or suggestive themes. Iâm not apposed to writing smut, I just currently cannot (may add it later đ).
â¶ PLEASE DO NOT INTERACT IF â If you are homophobic, racist, or discriminatory in general. My account is meant to be a comfort zone. It is what my writing was made for. Negativity is unacceptable.
Thereâs an absence where your warmth was minutes ago. Haymitch springs upright, nearly tilting over the hammock and falling the thirty feet itâd take to reach the ground. Where are you, where are you, where are you? His head swerves from side to side, treetop to dirt floor, any and everywhere as far as his eyes can see in the dark.Â
It hasnât been that longâthe sky still littered with stars, the howling wind quieted to a murmur, the blanket splayed over his legs, doing nothing to shield him from the cold the way only you can. Haymitch wouldâve woken up to a cannon if youâ
Where are you?
You couldnât have gone far. You were just here. In his arms, breath tickling his neck, heartbeats in sync. Now, his gives an uneven patter. It stalls, then quickens, then stops altogether while he rushes to begin his descent.Â
The blanket slips off his body, off the hammock, and lands on its target with a hmph. An exceptionally loud target for a stagnant one.Â
âWatch it.â
Haymitch peers down. Past the spindly branches and crops of leaves obscuring you from direct view, your head pops out from the blanket. You stare up at him, your eyes, heavy as they are with grief and exhaustion, rivaling the starlight above. He blows out a puff of air and scampers down the trunk.Â
You meet Haymitch where he lands, oddly calm despite nearly sending him to an early grave. Down here, out of the branches and on even footing, Haymitch sees clearly how little hours have passed since you climbed up together. He tightens the blanket around your shoulders when you shiver, and searches for meaning across the slightest spasm of your expression. Your cheeks are silver-streaked and the tip of your nose is pale, but you havenât been crying again. His own face feels sticky with dried tears.Â
âI couldnât sleep,â you say before he can ask properly, wringing your fingers so roughly he has to take them within his own to get you to stop. You let him and sigh. âThought Iâd get a head start on finding Wellie.âÂ
Haymitch frowns. âYou were going off without telling me?âÂ
You knit your brows together, hands freezing up. âI wouldnât do that.âÂ
His heart gives a guilty pang. No, you wouldnât. He would. He runs his hands down your arms in apology. Your goosebumps, as stubborn as the rest of you, donât yield to his touch. âI know. I shouldnâtâveââ
âItâs okay,â you brush him off, pointing to a patch of dirt by the tree trunk opposite you. âI was making a map.âÂ
The blanket droops down your shoulders. Haymitch fixes it again. âWhat for?âÂ
âTo rule out everywhere weâve been so far.â You squat in front of your sketch.Â
He crouches beside you, squinting down at the dirt. âYou think the arenaâs a diamond?âÂ
âJust a guess.â You shrug and pick up a stick. âIf the north and south come to a point, I figured so would the east and west.â You tap the stick against the tipped edges of the diamond map. âWellie wouldnât back herself into a corner. Maysilee was right about that.â Â
He doesnât miss the way your voice catches saying her name. Doesnât miss the pit in his stomach when he looks over your head and expects Maysilee on the other side. Even more chilling than the gap sheâs left is how deeply he misses her. Never before would Haymitch have guessed Maysilee Donner, of all people, to wind up someone he loved this much.Â
You sniffle but donât linger on your sadness. You draw an oval above the sketched treeline, just below a large dot, which he assumes to be the cornucopia. Itâs hard to tell with the limited light. âThatâs the meadow.â Another oval encompasses the space below the treeline, closer north. âThatâs around where we were yesterday. If Wellie made it to the woods before the rain and mudslide, this is where sheâd be.âÂ
âWe wouldâve found her then if she were there,â Haymitch reasons, shuffling when his thighs start to burn.Â
You shake your head. âNot if she kept west or east. We only walked straight down the middle. And sheâs just as likely to have found a hiding spot high up as she is to have found one in the meadow.âÂ
He considers your logic and consults the map one more time. âYou really think thatâs where she is?âÂ
âWeâll have to cross it anyway to get to the meadow,â you say, dragging the stick left to right. âMight as well take a look around. Only, I canât decide if sheâd be east or west.âÂ
âEast.â When you look over at him, he expands, âSheâd want to head towards the sun.âÂ
âEast it is then.âÂ
Haymitch stands and, with laced fingers, pulls you up with him. His hands travel back up your arms, all the way to your cheekbones, where he rubs away the tear stains. If the dried drool on his shirt collar is any evidence, you at least slept some. But clearly, youâve been on edge for longer than youâve been down here. âYou couldâve woken me sooner.âÂ
âIt was only a few minutes,â you say dismissively. âYou looked comfortable.âÂ
He traces your jawline. âSunshine, thatâs âcause you were there.âÂ
Your skin finally warms a little. âBesides, you were fast asleep. Chatting up a storm this time.âÂ
Ah, right. You ungraciously informed him of his murmuring habits back in the apartment. Feels like years ago now. Haymitch is lucky not to be a snorer like Wyatt, but he drew the short end in other ways. âWhat was I saying?âÂ
You shrug, biting down on your lip. âI couldnât make it out.âÂ
By the way you duck your head, a strange combination of flustered and smug, he doubts thatâs true.Â
âCâmon.â You step out of his grasp. âWe need to get a move on.âÂ
Youâre a quick climberâand one dead set on your current missionâso you reach your end of the hammock before Haymitch slinks up the parallel tree. Once untied, you meet each other back on the ground. You take to folding it, along with the blanket, despite the chill still visibly coursing through your body. He condenses the materials from each pack into one, and rifles through Maysileeâs in search for anything that might prove helpful for the journey.Â
A jingle sounds from the bottom of the bag, under a tarp and the now empty bottle of ointment. Haymitch pulls out the potato battery kit. Huh. He figured she already made use of it at some point. Â
You, on the other hand, donât seem surprised to see it. Maysilee mustâve clued you in on her possession of the kit. âMight be good to have some light to guide us.âÂ
âIt might. But itâll cost a potato,â he says, looking up at you with an arched brow.Â
âWell,â you suck your teeth, âIâm willing to pay the price if you are, peach.âÂ
His lips twitch into a near smile.Â
You kneel in front of him, close enough to nearly bump your foreheads together when he reaches for the sliced potato in your hand. He lays out the pieces of the kit on the floor. Copper coins, metal wires, a single lightbulb. He has to squint real hard to get a good look at the inventory. Funny thing, needing light to make it.Â
âYou remember how to assemble it?â you ask patiently, forming the cuts where Beetee taught you.Â
Haymitch nods. âMore or less.âÂ
He hands you the supplies while you work nimbly to forge the battery. When he loses a coin among the dirt and sticks, he supplements it with Maysileeâs copper flower. Just as easy to use your bluebird, but itâs already melded itself into his skin. Heâd rather not sully your gift in front of you, either. Even if youâd be willing to sacrifice it, heâs not. And this way, it feels like Maysileeâs still part of the fight.Â
Together, you manage to replicate Beeteeâs instructions in the darkness. Haymitch attaches the final wire to a tiny lightbulb, and a dim glow flickers across your faces. Hardly anything, but itâs enough to get him to hope.Â
You readjust the woven cord, now detached from Maysileeâs medallion, back around his neck. Your hands linger there, and Haymitch uses the proximity and the light to take stock of your well-being. You wince slightly when he cups the back of your head. He presses his forehead to yours and murmurs, âStill hurting?âÂ
You nod, swallowing down the threat of fresh tears. Your head, your knee, your heartâtheyâre bruised and battered in more ways than one. You donât have time to wallow in your grief, to slip through the cracks Maysilee left behind. Not yet. But you allow yourself to lean into Haymitchâs comfort for just a second. Or two. Or three. Definitely more than that.Â
Slowly, the pressure pushing against your skull whittles down to a mere throb. You stay put a second longer. One hand travels from the back of his neck to your bluebird, which reflects the faint flicker of the lightbulb. You rub the charm between your thumb and forefinger, feeling the difference in its weight and its eyes. Its time in the arena has taken a tollâyou donât know to credit the change to anything else.Â
âTake it back, if you want to,â says Haymitch.Â
âI donât. It suits you.â Plutarchâs request for the charm, Ampertâs reasoning behind passing it along, are long forgotten. You want him to keep it. He could take every last bit of you for all you care. Do whatever he wants, and you wouldnât bat an eye. Heâs already made himself the most precious piece of you. âAnd I still owe you your birthday present anyway.âÂ
âI donât know,â he whispers, leaning back a bit. âI think youâve given me plenty.âÂ
You havenât. No amount of presents, no amount of perfect words sitting right on the tip of your tongue, will ever be enough to express everything he is to you. Or how deeply you wish you were in one of those better worlds with him right now. But you can try. You give the bluebird a light tug, beckoning Haymitch to you.Â
A shiver sparks down your spine when your lips collide, but you arenât very cold anymore. You canât be, with Haymitch heating you up from the inside out. Your fingers find stability in his hair. Familiar curls tangled between calloused skin. His hands glide up your back, pulling you so close that youâre surprised you havenât heard the crack of a broken lightbulb yet. You doubt youâd hear it anyway over the thumping of his heartbeat against yours.Â
There is no space between you, no room to question, even for a second, what a world without him might feel like. When his tongue swipes your bottom lip, your body tingles from the top of your head to the tip of your toes. All your senses narrow down to this. Haymitch, and his devotion, and everything he elicits from you in turn. Was there ever a time where you felt anything but love for Haymitch Abernathy? Youâre hard pressed to remember. Â
You part briefly before he chases after you again. Your resulting gasp spurs him on. Haymitch sighs into your mouth; it reverberates inside your chest. He kisses you with the certainty of all youâd give him if he asked, if he didnât. You kiss him with the intent to ease his desperation, only to make your own worse. In the end, neither of you knows how to let the other go.Â
âHaymitch,â you pant against his lips, intertwining your hand with his where it rests against your cheek. When he tries to close the distance, you place the other on his chest. âWe donât have time to waste.â Â
He blinks, drawing your attention to those pretty blue-gray eyes of his. In the dark, pupils blown out, his irises lean navy. âRight,â he breathes out. âWouldnât call this a complete waste, though.âÂ
You snort. Unable to resist yourself, you run a finger down the bridge of his nose just to hear his breath hitch again. âIâm sure you wouldnât.âÂ
Your knee lets out a bitter crackle as you stand. Every inch of you is still buzzing, but the wind creeps back up your skin, snuffing out your need. Â
He passes you the light before following you to your feet. âYou ever gonna tell me what you got me?âÂ
âIt was supposed to be a surprise.âÂ
âSupposed to be. But you might as well let me know now.âÂ
Might as well. Thereâd be no harm in telling him. No jinxes or spoilers. ButâŠÂ
If you donât tell him, then you can pretend thereâs still the hope of giving it to him yourself. You can live frozen in time. In the moment before the Games, before the reaping, when everything you loved was within reach. Not back home, or dead, lost to you in either case.Â
You sling your bow onto your shoulder, wanting one hand free to hold onto Haymitch in the dark. Because he is within reach. âMaybe once we find Wellie.âÂ
He leans into your side. âIâll wait then.âÂ
Itâs tricky retracing your steps in the dead of night. Sidâs stars are helpful as can be at first, until you remind yourself of the fact that they arenât Sidâs. These arenât the real thing, no matter how much you want them to be. Youâve long since shed the ability to be lulled by the arenaâs faux beauty. Plutarch did say the arenaâs sky would be synced with yours, all but swore it. A lotâs changed since then. Itâs likely the Gamemakers have switched things up to throw you off course. Rile you up like a caged bird.Â
So, you fall back on your papaâs methods and your familiarity with the plants along the walkway. Must be past midnight by the time you reach yesterdayâs terrain. You recognize the tiger lilies and alder trees, the latter eliciting the memory of Maysileeâs curiosity. Your eyes begin to sting. You wonderâfleetingly, because there is no time to wallowâhow things may have turned out had you become friends sooner, instead of playing enemies.Â
Enemy, ally, friend.Â
None are the right words to encompass all she meant to you, and continues to mean. Against all odds, Maysilee Donner wove herself into the fabric of your soul. No one can take that from you, or her. Knowing that doesnât make you miss her any less, but it wonât be long now until you see her.Â
Haymitch squeezes your hand, grounding you, like he can sense your mind skirting the edge of a spiral. âOnce we pass the bee balm weâve hit the eastern woods.âÂ
âOkay.â You let him lead you from that point on. Heâs covered most of the woodsâ expanse, and youâve mostly avoided that neck since the jabberjays. You pick up the pace. âDo you think Silka and Maritte made it over the mud by now?âÂ
âMaybe one of them,â he whispers back. âI doubt theyâre allies anymore.âÂ
Silka did seem upset with Maritte the last you saw of them, which is putting it lightly. Thereâs been no cannon, meaning theyâre both still alive. So, either Maritte escaped Silkaâs vengeance, or Silka took it easy on her. Regardless, their alliance isnât looking too bright. âProbably best that way. For us, and them.âÂ
âI see how it works in our favor. Not sure how it helps them.âÂ
You shrug and glance at him. âIt wouldnât be any easier for them to kill their allies. Careers or not.â
Under the dim lighting, you catch the confusion across Haymitchâs expression. âIâm pretty sure they plan for that kind of thing.âÂ
âMaybe, yeah. I justââ You exhale slowly. âI donât know. Forget it.â When he opens his mouth to press on the subject, you point ahead. âThereâs your bee balm.âÂ
That gets you both on track to what matters most again. Haymitch stops, tilting his head up towards the sky. âWhatâs the plan now?â
You chew on the skin of your cheek. If Wellie is high above, as you suspect, then thereâs only one way to narrow down which tree to climb. âWellie!âÂ
âShitââ
âWellie!â you call out louder, Haymitchâs hand clamming in yours. You let go of him and scurry through the trees. âWellie, where are you?âÂ
His footsteps arenât far behind yours, echoing your hollers. âWellie! Itâs Haymitch!â He supplies your name, too.Â
âWeâre here to help, Wellie!â You take in your surroundings: the speckled stars and jagged oak trees and Haymitch calling for her. No sign of Wellie, though. You can keep traveling east, until you hit the corner sheâs unlikely to be in. Or you can pivot to the meadow where, as Maysilee assumed, she probably is.Â
Haymitch throws off your mounting concerns. âDid you hear that?âÂ
You shake your head. One more time, you shout pitifully, âWellie!âÂ
âThere it is again!â he exclaims, pointing north. âItâs coming from that way.âÂ
You seal your lips and listen for the sound. Faintly, hardly audible over the whistling wind and rustling branches and miles of distance, you hear it.Â
Ring, ring!Â
âIs that aâŠ?â
âA bicycle bell.â Haymitch pauses like heâs waiting to see if it was a fluke of the imagination. Â
Ring, ring!
Thatâs a bell, all right. Credited to human hands, not nature. Just like the kind attached to the bicycle you and your group of friends found by the road once in Twelve. Or the matching pink bikes Maysilee and Merrilee rode around the square to show off their wealth. The very kind of bell Wellie brought as her token from home.Â
You yank Haymitch in the direction of the bell. The ringing leads you back through where you came, forces you to retrace your steps north. Nearly all the way to where Maysilee died. Â
The two of you reach a simultaneous halt beneath a large sweetgum tree. What appears to be a sweetgum tree, at least. From the red veins along the trunk, you figure itâs another Capitol concoction. The bell rings louder. Even with the lightbulb catching shadows of the branches above, Wellie is too high up to make out. Â
âItâs okay, Wellie,â promises Haymitch, voice lowered back to a whisper. âWeâre right here. You can come down.âÂ
You wait until the lack of response kickstarts the alarms in your head. All of ten seconds. You pass the light Haymitchâs way and begin the climb.Â
The height of the tree is of little concern to youâyouâve scaled taller back home, ones as spindly and sinewy as this one. But between the distance from the ground, much larger than where you slept in the hammock earlier, and the delicacy of the branches, it seems an impossible feat for someone as small and frail as Wellie.Â
Even smaller and paler than you remember her to be by the time you reach her hiding spot.Â
âHi, little bird.â
She squeaks out a breath. You donât feel any relief seeing her now, just the guilt of not finding her sooner. Wellieâs cheeks are hollow and gaunt, her entire body shivering like the last leaf on a twig. You try to steady yourself on her branch and immediately retract when it creaks like itâs about to snap. Across from you, the lightbulb pops up. Haymitchâs head follows.Â
Wellie fixates on the light. A hint of life flashes across her face, which is next to nothing in her state. Haymitch sets the light in front of her. She chases it with her eyes like a cat would a ball of string. You liked playing those kinds of games with Calla. Sometimes youâd use yarn, others youâd tie a tiny bell that jingled, not rang, to a twig. Sid liked to play with her, too, while Haymitch watched from your kitchen table on the days they were invited over.Â
He remembers the first time he ever met Calla, within a week of you finding her. Haggard little thing wouldnât stop hissing at him, even in her good-as-dead condition. Not so different from Wellieâs appearance. Belly down, crack-lipped, and glassy-eyed, her bell tucked under her chin and a child-sized knife clutched in one hand. If she was scrawny before, sheâs practically skeletal now. Too fragile to be moved, too scared to do much else but stare at the bulb.Â
Haymitch wedges himself between a branch and the trunk. Youâve found purchase on a sturdier spot. As he searches for the remaining water jug in his pack, he can feel your worry sticking to him. Reaching over Wellieâs branch, you lend a hand when he tries to unscrew the jug with only one of his. He pours some water into the cap. Â
âTry to drink a little, Wellie,â you whisper gently as you bring the cap to her lips. âJust a little.âÂ
Over the next few minutes, Haymitch pours, you coax, and Wellie swallows no more than a handful of droplets. Most of the water spills out the side of her mouth and down her chin. Thereâs no chance of getting some potato in her right now.Â
She manages one mouthful of water, then two. Haymitch brushes her hair back while you get her to drink some more. âThere you go, Wellie.âÂ
She drifts off, but sleep doesnât erase the fear etched all over her. Haymitch sticks the water jug back into his pack and hugs the trunk when he feels the branch beneath him tremble. You shoot him a wary look.Â
Clouds move in across the sky, hiding the moon from view. The air grows heavy, and it smells like the early tell of rain.Â
âWe canât let her sleep up here like this,â you murmur. âWe should at least set up the hammock.â
âThe branches on this thing arenât steady enough,â says Haymitch, planting his boots firmer against the bark to make his point. The thought of a rainstorm making things slippery doesnât help.Â
You motion to the tree opposite your left. âI can get to that side and tie one end to the trunk.âÂ
You could, theoretically. If the branches from either tree formed a nice, ideal bridge. If they werenât one wrong move away from snapping off entirely. If the likelihood of you falling and hurting more than just your ankle werenât very, very high.Â
Haymitch doesnât like your plan. He doesnât like it one bit.Â
But, to absolutely no oneâs surprise and least of all his, youâre off before he can stop you. Crawling on your hands and knees without a care of slipping off. Haymitch doesnât relax until you make it across and settle on a thicker branch, near parallel to his own spot. Even then, he isnât in a relaxing mood.Â
Thereâs about six feet, give or take, between the trunks. It takes three tries of tossing before you catch one of the hammock strings. Haymitch copies your movements, tying his own end around the tree. The first raindrops begin to patter on the leaves by the time you finish adjusting the hammock. âPass one of the tarps.â
Carefully, Haymitch does as you command. This time, you catch the corner on the first try.Â
The rain does little to slow you as you slink another two feet up the tree. Haymitch watches with bated breath. Your hair grows damp, and some pieces stick to your neck and bare arms. His own curls feel flat and weighted against his head, the tips poking at his eyes. He doesnât think to wipe them back, too focused on your movementsâon your swollen lips, a mirror to his ownâto be bothered by anything. Too consumed by the intensity of your earlier kiss, by the older memory of you bathed in sunlight, the brightest thing heâs ever seenâ
âPeach.âÂ
Not the time. âRight, sorry,â he mutters, and climbs up to fasten the other edge of the tarp.Â
The two of you make something of a roof to ward off the rain. A few drops still manage to sneak into your shelter, courtesy of the wind, but itâs as good a cover as youâre going to get.Â
Haymitch perches back on his branch, a smidge below Wellieâs. You crawl across the hammock this time, and he pretends his heart isnât two seconds from giving out when it wobbles like it intends to throw you over.Â
You stop right next to Wellie, propping up on your knees. âOkay, little bird,â you whisper, rubbing her shoulder. Her eyes blink open, once again drawn to the light. âWeâre gonna move you somewhere more comfortable now.âÂ
As cautiously as the lack of space and the threat of falling to your deaths will allow, you pry Wellie off the branch. Haymitch holds up the potato light while you guide her onto the hammock. He has to bite down on his tongue to keep from flinching when she lies on her back and reveals her ribs protruding through the dove gray uniform. From the sunken look on your face, he can tell youâre feeling no less nauseated with guilt.Â
You wring the knife out of her grip and trade it with Haymitch for the light. Wellie, weak as she is, manages to hold it in one hand, and latches onto you with the other. When the hammock wobbles again from the movement of her squirming into your arms, you lie back too, effectively stilling her.Â
You look over at Haymitch and motion to the pack. âThe second hammockââÂ
âItâs okay,â he says over the uptick in rainfall, which grows so heavy he worries the tarp will collapse in on itself. And the three of you. âIâm fine right here.âÂ
When your lips press into a thin, unconvinced line, he makes a show of cutting up pieces of tarp and tying himself to the branch. Heâs screwed if it breaks off the tree, but at least he wonât have to worry about rolling over. While heâs at it, he hands you the blanket, which you immediately try to pass back to him.Â
âFor Wellie,â Haymitch urges, knowing thatâs the best way to get you to do anything that might benefit yourself too.Â
Without further argument, you accept the blanket and drape it over the both of you. Wellieâs eyes begin to flutter shut again. Her head comes right up to your chin, and Haymitch lingers on the sight of you resting a cheek against her.Â
You glance his way, the tears on the cusp of your lashes passing on a clear message: keep Wellie alive, thatâs the plan now. The only one that matters, thatâs anywhere near attainable. Her condition poses a difficulty, but the task of saving her isnât as much of a longshot as Haymitchâs hopes of bringing down the Capitol.Â
Twice now, heâs failed. The second time wasnât as catastrophic as the first, but it led to a loss all the same. Maybe if Haymitch had been less fixated on the hedge, less taken by his hopeless intent to end the Games, Maysilee would be here. Or maybe not. Those birds were a pointed attack, one the Gamemakers probably had in their arsenal for days beforehand.Â
StillâŠHaymitch has wasted so much time playing rebel with no real success.Â
He fiddles with the bluebird, moistened by the rain, and drags it across the cord with a rhythm that soothes his thoughts. Youâre already fading into sleep alongside Wellie. A familiar chime reels him back before he can fully succumb himself.Â
The rain has shifted into a light mist. Haymitch reaches for the parachute and pulls out its contents. A cup of warm vanilla pudding and a packet of chocolate balls wrapped in crinkly festive paper.Â
Someone in the Capitol has a heart, after all.Â
Haymitch takes up the effort of feeding Wellie. You sit her up in your arms, keeping the blanket secure on her. With patience, he coaxes bits of pudding into Wellie. Sheâs able to take more pudding than she did the water. A lot of it still falls down her chin. He catches what he can with the spoon and scoops it back into her mouth.Â
Save for the after effects of the rain and Wellieâs wheezing, itâs mostly quiet. Haymitch shifts slightly on the branch when he feels himself going sore from the position. Getting another bit of pudding into Wellie, he takes notice of the leaves dangling behind you. Same as the ones on his branch, of course, except theyâre a darker shade of green. Not maple leaves, but close in size and shape. More star-like, though. He tugs at a vague memory of you gifting Sid a leaf like these once. He kept it on the windowsill of their kitchen even after it shriveled into a brown clump.Â
âRemind me, sunshine,â he whispers as he points to the leaves, âwhat kinda trees are these again?âÂ
âSweetgum. They seem different though,â you say, brows knitted as you stroke Wellieâs hair.Â
âHm. No surprise there.â He scrapes the last of the pudding around the cup rim. Wellie parts her lips. âSid, my brother,â he tells her, âwould like âem. He loves anything remotely related to the stars.âÂ
She swallows the entire spoonful this time. You clean the dribble that sticks to the corner of her mouth. Haymitch breaks a chocolate ball in two with his teeth.Â
Suddenly, in a broken croak that reminds him of a frog, Wellie mutters, âI like the stars.âÂ
Haymitch smiles slowly, sliding a chocolate piece into her mouth. âYouâd get along with Sid then.âÂ
He doesnât miss the way your lips curve upwards, too. To his relief, you donât deny yourself the chocolate when he slips two pieces your way.Â
Wellie smacks her lips lightly after he feeds her another bit of chocolate. You unwrap your pieces and savor them. It isnât much longer before the two of you are fast asleep. Haymitch stays awake a few more minutes, chewing on his own ball of chocolate. Usually reserved for birthdays or special occasions, itâs rare to splurge on it in the Seam. And this stuffâs top-of-the-line, melting in his mouth and warming his empty stomach with its sweetness.Â
He leans back against the bark and reaches for the second tarp. Repurposed as a blanket, it saves him from the worst of the cold. Heâs halfway to mind-numbing sleep when another interruption snaps his head up. A sob this time. Sounds nothing like yours, and you and Wellie are still lost to the conscious world. Besides, the cry is coming from below.Â
Glancing down, Haymitch notices what he assumes to be a tuft of yellow hair. Silka? Heâs too blurry-eyed to fully tell. Sheâs not attempting to scale the tree or attack, despite the fact that she more than likely knows the three of you are up here. You may be far up, but if he can hear her, she can most certainly hear you.
And yet, sheâs just there. Sobbing and shaking all over. Haymitch never took her as a crier. Then again, what does she have to be happy about? He thinks back to your comments on Silkaâs alliance with Maritte. Thereâs no deep-sea uniform anywhere near now, so he was right about them splitting up. As Silkaâs sobs rack up, your own point dawns on him.Â
Silka is entirely alone, and for all her bite, sheâs probably scared, too. Alone, scared, grieving whatever losses sheâs had in here. Because Haymitch doesnât have a monopoly on that, does he? Every one of you, Career or not, have lost enough allies, friends, kids, to last a lifetime.Â
Silka isnât his ally, but she isnât his enemy right now either.Â
Haymitch digs into his pocket. He rolls the chocolate ball in his hand before he drops it Silkaâs way. Her sobs putter into confused hiccups. Briefly, he worries that he dropped it in the wrong direction, but then he hears the crinkle of the wrapper. The hiccups turn to sniffles until theyâre nothing at all.Â
The Capitol would have every last person in the districts believe otherwise, but for whatâs left of the night, youâre united in your struggle. Haymitch closes his eyes and finally falls asleep with a strange sense of pride.Â
Not a bad poster at all.Â
His next comes unexpectedly, at the turn of sunrise when the morning light momentarily blinds him. Once Haymitch gathers his bearings, he checks on you and Wellie. Sheâs curled into your side, and youâyou look strangely peaceful. The most youâve been in the last weeks, since long before the reaping. No need to wake either of you yet.
Silkaâs gone, which isnât shocking. Her vulnerability was a one-offâHaymitch guesses District One frowns upon their Careers exhibiting any trace of humanity. She mightâve gone to the Cornucopia for supplies or set off to hunt Maritte. But sheâll be back to kill you soon enough.Â
He steals another glance at you. Still cold to the touch when he reaches over to brush your hair back. Haymitch tucks the blanket firmer around you and Wellie. One of your arms is wrapped around her; the other tucked beneath your chin, which is smudged with black ink instead of drool.Â
Huh.Â
Haymitch touches your wrist, tries to unfurl your arm to find the trail of ink, and is instantly thrown off track when he notices the smudges on his fingers. They didnât really register in the dark, and they canât be credited to the tree bark. Or the tarp. What else did you both work with last night? The potato battery, sure. Maybe thatâs it, butâŠ
Absentmindedly, Haymitch holds the bluebird between his fingers. Its beak indents the skin of his thumb, reminding him of how you held it, held him. The way you pulled him in for that kiss. That brain-fogging, breathtaking, one-of-a-kind kiss. The bluebirdâs dry now, but the cord still feels slippery from the rain.Â
A whole bunch of light bulbs flicker inside his head. Ampertâs possession of the bird to begin with, the residue on his hands after he rigged the fuse at the tank, and Beeteeâs final advice at the buffetâ
âIn the event a backup is needed, or if Ampert fails to show at all, weâve planned for two failsafesââÂ
Peeling his hand back, he pretends to fiddle with the water jug lid. Sure enough, his index finger and thumb are both covered in black residue. Did you know their intent with your charm? You mustâve, and thatâs why you gave it away. The timing of when is still an issue, but thatâs the least of his concerns now. Haymitch wonders what other pieces of the plan you know that he doesnât. He figures heâs privy to some that you arenât.Â
Maybe the two of you can fill in each otherâs blanks. Maybe you can make something of this parting gift. One last chance to blow the Capitol sky high. Thereâs one sunflower left, after all.Â
He canât be one hundred percent sure until he can unwind the cord and check for the blasting cap. Until he ensures you are on the same page. Until he figures a way to keep Wellie from the fallback, because there is no longer a world in which you and Haymitch arenât doing this together.Â
He unravels the charm out of the cord, then himself from the branch. Quietly, so as to not wake Wellie, he murmurs your name.Â
Your eyes adjust to Haymitch before they do to the sun. Heâs got a tight grip on the trunk, boots dug into the bark.Â
You frown, too hazy from sleep to fully register much else but the sight of him readying to leave. âWhereâre you going?âÂ
âTo get firewood,â he answers softly. âThe only way weâre getting some potato into Wellie is if we boil it. Couldnât hurt to warm her up, too. And you.âÂ
As if responding to his words, goosebumps prick the skin of your neck. Not like they ever left anyway. Youâve been freezing all night. âYeah, okay. Donât go too far.âÂ
Haymitch nods and slides something into your free hand. âI need you to hold onto it again for me.â
âAnd whyâs that?âÂ
He taps his collarbone, where all his cords rest. Except the one previously attached to the bluebird. âTheyâre starting to tangle together. Donât know how Miss Donner managed hers, but the cord fell when I was trying to detangle it.âÂ
Thatâs about the lamest excuse he could give. You tighten your hold on your bluebird anyway, a little more awake now. âAll right.âÂ
âIâll be real quick.â He presses a quick kiss to your temple and scales down the tree.Â
You try your hardest not to spiral when he disappears from view. Especially when Wellie wakes minutes later and asks, âDid Haymitch leave us again?âÂ
âHe went to get firewood,â you tell her quietly. âHeâll be right back.âÂ
Panic flashes in her eyes. âAre you sure?âÂ
âPositive,â you promise, rubbing her arms to generate more heat on her skin.Â
She doesnât seem very convinced, but she leans closer to you without another anxious word. Her joints poke your abdomen, and it takes even more effort to not recoil from the shame of ever letting her get this bad.Â
You pinch the bluebird between your fingers and listen to the sound of Wellieâs halfhearted breaths. No way did Haymitch lose that cord. You look around for something long enough to be used as a substitute. A vine, ideally. You wind up picking three leaves from a branch within armâs reach, and scrape them until all thatâs left is the stem. Itâs no different from making wildflower crowns, the very kind youâd weave with Lenore Dove and Burdock on the days it was just the three of you cousins in your meadow. Perfect days, you used to call them.Â
Once theyâre tied together to form a makeshift necklace, you loop them through the ring atop your bluebirdâs head. Momentarily, youâre thrown off by the black smudges on your fingers. You look closer, seeing that theyâre splotched around the copper. Itâs not dirt. This is thicker, more fluid, like mud but not exactly. Nothing close to the dried splotches from yesterdayâs mud bath. Closer to pen ink, or oil. But even thenâŠneither is quite the right texture.Â
Youâve dirtied your hands plenty. In the woods, in class. Digging roots from the ground, or drawing with charcoal, or breathing in the soot that covers just about everything in Twelve.
You remember when you were little, after the mine explosion that took Haymitchâs papa and others with him, how much you hated watching your own go out that door. Youâd wait on the porch all evening for his return, only moving when prompted by your mama to eat or bathe. If it got real late, the promise of her lullaby was all thatâd get you to bed. Burdock would wait with you, both because he shared your concern and because he never really left you alone in those days. Except when it was time for his own bath. Sometimes, Lenore Dove would wander over, and sheâd soothe your nerves with an exchange of poems.Â
Whenever you spotted your papa heading down the walkway to your home, tall and mighty, it was like catching the first rays of light after a storm. Heâd laugh as you threw yourself into his arms. âIâm getting coal dust all over you, maple leaf.âÂ
âI donât care,â you always said in return. As if you werenât already perpetually covered in dust by living in the Seam. You were just happy to have him home. To be lucky enough to still have your papa.Â
Your heart gives a heavy pang, weighed less so by the familiar longing for your family and more by the grief you realize theyâre in for. Theyâll carry on without you, keep you with them in whatever ways they can, youâre certain of it. You justâŠdonât want to be a smudge on their lives.Â
âThatâs pretty,â mutters Wellie, a weak finger lifting to point at the bird.Â
âMy uncle made it,â you tell her. âWhereâd you get your bell from?âÂ
âMy mom,â she whispers sadly. âIt was a defect from the factory, so they didnât want it. But I like it.âÂ
âI like it, too.â You get the feeling itâd bring her more discomfort to talk about it, so you donât pry about her family or District Six.Â
You run your thumb over the bluebirdâs face, attempting to clean the mysterious residue. It only winds up smeared across the wings. As stubborn as soot, sullying Tam Amberâs craftsmanship. Youâll need water to wash it off. Howâd Haymitch manage this anyway? There hasnât been another volcano or cloud of ash. Not a person or inch of land wouldâve been spared if it there were. Instead, the residue is isolated to the bluebird and your fingers.Â
The bluebird and your fingers.Â
You jolt upwards, rumbling the hammock and Wellie, who lets out an eek.
âSorry,â you say immediately. âSorry.â But your mind is moving too fast to catch up with whatever comes out of your mouth.Â
Your thoughts come in flashes, in images and memories: the coal dust on your papaâs face, those field trips to the mines, your teacherâs brief lessons on explosives. Above all, Plutarch dangling a free world like a ripe carrot right in front of you.Â
Youâve been north, youâve cut through the hedge in search of some missing piece to some secretive rebel plan, and youâve come up empty. Until now.Â
So, this is how you blow up the arena. This is how you end the Games. With your bluebird, which doesnât look anything like an explosive. There wouldâve been no time to rig it into one in a single night, either. Then again, you donât have Beeteeâs mind for tinkering. But you highly doubt thatâs the case. So then whatâsâ
The cord! It has to be. How, you have no idea. You only know Haymitch made a show of âlosingâ it for a reason.Â
You chew on your bottom lip. Haymitch hasnât gone off to complete this taskâthrough whatever means, you still arenât completely sureâon his own. Not this time. You made a deal, one you trust him not to back out of. And he wouldnât have clued you in like this if he didnât intend to see the plan through together.Â
YetâŠthe longer he takes, the worse your head hurts. And the louder Wellieâs stomach growls. Your own isnât exactly quiet. It grumbles and collapses into itself with an ache so familiar you have to shut your eyes to wish it away.Â
âAnyone in the mood for a baked potato?âÂ
You look over at Haymitch, grateful to whatever angel has answered at least one of your wishes. âIf thatâs the best youâve got.âÂ
He grins. Slowly, he hoists Wellie off the hammock with your help. She stares at him wordlessly, like sheâs surprised he came back at all. He gives her a reassuring pat on the head before maneuvering her over his shoulder. Itâs not the most ideal carrying position, but itâs the only way youâre getting her down the tree.Â
You stretch your limbs as soon as youâre back on solid ground, shaking away the stiffness in your bones.Â
Haymitch sets Wellie down against the trunk and gets to work on the fire. You take a seat beside her, lifting the blanket over her each time it slides off her shoulders.Â
The potato is nice and baked within minutes, soft enough that it melts with ease when Haymitch uses a fork to mash it into easier pieces for Wellie. To your relief, sheâs responsive to every bite. And though she requires a break halfway through eating, what sheâs managed to keep down does her wonders.Â
You watch Haymitch nurse the fire as you chew on the chocolate ball he forced into your hand. Itâs all youâre willing to take. Wellie needs the fuel more than you do. He pokes at the fire with a twig and bounces back when a spark flies near his feet. You stifle a snicker.Â
âBreakfast and a show,â you muse, leaning over to Wellie. âArenât we spoiled?â
âVery,â deadpans Haymitch, dropping the twig into the flames.Â
Wellie, whose color is slowly returning to her, giggles. The sound lightens both of your shoulders. Taking a deep breath, you reach into your right pocket. Nowâs as good a time as any to broach the subject.Â
You tilt your head, staring straight at Haymitch. âYou got dirt all over the bird, you know.â
All he does for a second is blink your way, caught between the relief that youâve picked up on what he has, and the dread of realizing there really is no way to keep you out of this. âIâll take better care of it from here on out.âÂ
âYou better.âÂ
âI found the cord though.âÂ
âDid you?â You hold out a necklace made of stems and your bluebird. âI already made you a new one.âÂ
âI like it.â He takes it from you and loops it over his head.Â
You shrug. âNo point letting the other one go to waste.âÂ
Agreed. He pats his pocket where the unfurled cord and blasting cap rest. âGot it right here.â
You nod and turn back to Wellie, who's been eyeing you both curiously. âReady to try some more?âÂ
She sniffles. âArenât you guys hungry?âÂ
âOh,â you pretend to grimace, âIâm stuffed from all that chocolate.âÂ
âMe too,â Haymitch groans, throwing his head back. He mashes more bits of potato. âItâs all yours, sweetgum.âÂ
Wellie wrinkles her nose, unconvinced, but doesnât argue against the next bite of food. Sheâs much more agreeable than you are, thatâs for sure. As she swallows down the potato, Haymitch thinks of how to best steer the conversation. It only took close to a decade, but heâs finally got a hang of your riddled manner of talking. Â
âSilka was skulking around here last night,â he says nonchalantly.Â
Wellie tenses up. You soothe her by running your fingers through her hair. âShe was?â
âSkulkingâs not the right word.â Sobbing in a fit of anguish is a more accurate description. âBut yeah, she was here.âÂ
âWe should move then,â you sigh out.Â
âAnd head where?âÂ
âWhere do you think?âÂ
âIâm between the meadow and the hedge. Whatâs left of it anyway. I never did get to show you my trick with the force field.â At the reminder of why that is, at the memory of Maysileeâs bloodied body, his fingers clench. Clearing his throat, he continues, âBut if we head to the meadow, we can scour the cornucopia for food.âÂ
You hum pensively, toying with your pearl charm. âWell, the cornucopia should have something left. We could at least get a show, if not more breakfast.âÂ
âThat was my thought, too.â The horn of plenty for some, a symbol of despair for all. How glorious itâll be to set it aflame.Â
You boop Wellieâs nose. âWhat do you say, little bird? You up for the trip?âÂ
She squirms, and though Haymitch isnât fond of seeing her so nervous, heâs grateful sheâs gaining some movement back. âWeâre staying together, right?âÂ
He locks eyes with you, and heâs brought back to your shared helplessness last night. Protecting Wellie is still the priority.Â
âFor as long as possible,â you say. Itâs all you can guarantee. Even without an underlying rebellion, you and Haymitch would have to leave her to take up the victor mantle on her own.Â
Wellie gives a nod, loosening up slightly.Â
âThe cornucopia it is,â declares Haymitch, clasping his hands together. âIâll start packing.â Not that thereâs much to pack. Just the hammocks and tarps. Maybe he should leave the fire going, create a diversion for Silka while you find somewhere to hide Wellie.Â
âOkay. I want to check the snares around here before we head south. Maybe try to find game, too.â If youâre to leave Wellie while you carry out the plan, you need to make sure she has some sustenance. Really, you and Haymitch need to eat, too.Â
âWhy?â he blurts out, unable to conceal the wrinkles between his brows.Â
âI assume we wonât be coming back north, and itâd be nice to take protein for the road,â you say casually, trying to alleviate the anxiety on his face.Â
âYou think we caught something?â he asks, eyes flickering to Wellie as she takes the last bite of potato. She might be able to handle something heavier once the potatoâs settled as much as it can in her stomach. Maybe it wouldnât hurt to find some meat for her sake. Butâ
âWorth checking.â You clean the fork and hand it over to Haymitch.Â
When you move to stand, Wellie grabs onto your wrist. âYou canât go,â she whispers. Â
Haymitch stretches a hand out in her direction as if to say, Thank you, Wellie!
âWe donât know if thereâll be any food at the cornucopia,â you tell her gently, easing her into releasing her hold on you. âI need to at least try to find us some now.âÂ
âThen take us with you,â she says, frowning.Â
âIâll be quicker on my own.âÂ
Yeah, okay, thatâs true. Haymitch is well aware that Wellie still has a ways to go before sheâs even halfway recovered from her emaciation. She canât go with the two of you, and sheâs not going to get any better without more food. Or at least something to hold her over until the Games end and thereâs no other choice but to declare her the victor.Â
You tighten the blanket around Wellie, tying two corners together to keep it properly secured. Your efforts do little to reassure herâyou can tell by the way her shoulders refuse to dropâbut you try to leave her with the promise of a speedy return regardless.Â
Haymitch pushes up on his feet when you stand with your bow. âAre you sureââÂ
âYou got the firewood,â you say, pointing between the two of you, âIâve got the snares.âÂ
âChecking the snares will take longer. âSpecially if you plan on hunting, too,â he counters.Â
âIt wonât be as long as you think.âÂ
âWell you shouldnât go off alone.âÂ
âHi, Pot, have you met Kettle yet?â Your own hypocrisy isnât lost on you, but you care more about getting Haymitch to let you go right now.Â
âYouâre hilarious,â he snipes.Â
Tugging him by the elbow, you pull him a foot away from the fire and lower your voice. âWellie will only slow me down, and someone needs to stay with her.â He opens his mouth, and you bulldoze over his next argument, âAnd Iâm the better shot.âÂ
Haymitch clamps down a scoff, because for all that youâre rightâyou are a better shot, you will be quicker without extra bodies to carry, you can hold your ownâhe only cares about all the things that might go wrong without you by his side.Â
You rub the crease between his brows. Itâs a tall order to ask him not to worry. Your thumb stops short of the bridge of his nose before pulling back entirely. âIâm not going back on our deal. Iâm asking you not to follow me this once. Please.âÂ
He bites his tongue, runs the tip of his teeth along the buds. âOkay,â he relents in a grumble.Â
You extend your pinkie. At his hesitation, you take a step closer into his space. Itâs a second longer before he loops his own around yours. With a sigh of relief, you peer past Haymitch to shoot Wellie a soft smile. âKeep an eye on him for me, yeah?âÂ
She tries to return your smile.Â
Haymitch is staring at you with wounded, pleading eyes when you focus on him again. Lighter in color this morningâno longer navy, but a muted wild blue reminiscent of a gnatcatcherâthey pull you back to his warmth. All-encompassing and dizzying. He reads your thoughts, follows them all the way down to your lips. You allow yourself the indulgence. For both your sakes.Â
Full of an entirely different need from last nightâone built on promises both spoken and unsaid, on hopes tender and steadfastâthe kiss seals your resolve.Â
You pull back right as Haymitch lowers his arm to cradle your waist. Suddenly, the urge to give him more, the instinct to stow him inside your heart next to all those little things you cannot yet say, overcomes you. Swallowing down the instinct in exchange for a more necessary directive, you brush your forehead against his. âLook after her. Iâll be back before you can miss me real bad.âÂ
âIâm holding you to that,â he murmurs, kissing the tip of your nose.Â
It takes all you have to suppress the shudder creeping down your back. Even more to walk away.Â
Haymitch doesnât move an inch. You leave him with another quick smile over your shoulder, then you disappear entirely. Deadweight on legs, he takes your place on the ground next to Wellie. She doesnât need his wayward worry infecting her, so he tries to sound confident as he says, âThink we can hold the fort down?âÂ
Wellie nods, not torn up as he expected. Instead, she comes off incredibly amused for someone still one strong wind gust away from blowing off.Â
âWhat?âÂ
âI thought you werenât together,â she says, her mouth twitching.Â
Haymitch clicks his tongue. âWe werenât.âÂ
âBut you are now.âÂ
âSure we are.â How else does he explain to her that itâs complicated, and you havenât really defined things past kissing, and under different circumstances heâd ask you properly to be his? Itâs true enough to just say yes. Youâve been entwined by your roots for longer than either of you have cared to admit.Â
Wellie regards him suspiciously. âRelationships are weird.âÂ
He snorts and throws another dry branch onto the fire. âTell me about it, kid.âÂ
Seconds trickle into minutes. In between distracting Wellie and fueling the fire, Haymitch keeps his attention on the gaps between the trees, willing you to return.Â
The sun beats down on your face mockingly, as if reminding you of those counting on you to come back to them soon. Time racks up to longer than you anticipated. Longer than you promised youâd be.Â
You shouldnât be surprised when there is nothing in most of the snares you set, but you are disappointed. No game of any kind in sight, no trails to track down. You know itâs a message from the Gamemakers: theyâre growing restless and bored.Â
Theyâve drawn things out long enough. In their minds, that is. Itâs only been a week, and Games past have lasted longer with fewer tributes. Forty-eight children, and forty-three dead in seven days. How could they possibly be bored?Â
You retrace your footsteps to the very last snare, not too far from where youâve left Haymitch and Wellie. A halfway point between them and the scene of Maysileeâs death. You call it quits when you come up empty again.Â
If you were back home, or if it was just a couple days earlier, youâd spend more time venturing the terrain. Patience is a virtue for most, and a necessity for hunting. Your papa always made sure to remind you of the fact when youâd groan about Burdockâs prodigal talent. So did Clerk Carmine when he first passed on your guitar. Lucky thing you picked up on that much quicker.Â
Impatient as quicksand, Haymitch is surely expecting you back by now. Youâll have to settle for the hope of another sponsor gift. This time, you wouldnât be too upset with a feast.Â
You keep your bow clutched in one hand, crossing another over to rub away your goosebumps. They fade to nothing, but your bones stay frosted over. Todayâs sun is only for show, it seems.Â
Mags and Wiress must have a way of reading your mind, you decide, when a parachute floats down from above. Instead of a feast, nestled in a snowy linear napkin, you find a pitcher. A brilliant white china, resting within a spiral staircase. An eagle sits atop the lid. You press the eagleâs tail, and the lid pops open. Hot chocolate steam curls up your nose.Â
You fall back on the familiar pattern of those first days on the mountainside, on the inclination to riddle-solve, and make quick work of connecting the dots. Plutarchâs final message couldnât be any clearer: youâre right where you need to be, finally doing something of substance, making an actual rebel of yourself. His past instructions were a stepping stone for whatâs to come. What you now know to be the real plan.Â
Holding the pitcher in the nook of your elbow, you quicken the pace back to Haymitch and Wellie.Â
Haymitch grows restless by the fourth story he tells Wellie. Heâs already detailed everything there is to Twelve that makes it worthwhile. It was a short run-down. Every time he asks her questions about Six, or anything sheâs fond of, she supplies him with minimal details and the request for him to keep talking. Youâd be much better suited to fulfill her wants. Â
But youâre not here. The fireâs fickled down to pure billowing smoke now. And still, you arenât back.Â
He distracts them both with another memory, recounting the day Sid was born, the happiest baby to ever grace the Seam. Born on the sunny side, Mamaw used to claim.Â
âYour pa was the same when he was little,â she once told Haymitch while putting him to bed. âAll smiles and optimism and mischief. You got that last part from him.âÂ
Haymitch believed her. Hard not to. His pa was a fortress of a person, steady and strong and constant. He was soft in all the ways that mattered, too. For all that the world whittled down on him, it never could harden his heart. It never could change who he was and what he believed.Â
He feels certain that you wouldâve gotten along. You wouldâve understood each other to that extent, at least.Â
Pa only met you once before he died. Haymitch was more likely to pay your household a visit than Burdock was to play at his in the early years of their friendship. And when he did trickle on over, itâs not like youâd ever want to. Even though you and Burdock had yet to outgrow the need to go wherever the other went, Haymitchâs house was the one place youâd never willingly travel to. On account, of course, of Haymitch being there. You made that plenty clear.Â
One evening, when Barb Azure was teaching Burdock and Haymitch to play a game of cards, you spent most of it on your porch steps. That was your routine whenever he was present: youâd find somewhere else to be. Halfway through the game, with Haymitch in the lead, Sorrel breezed through the kitchen with a tiredness in his posture. Exhausted as he was, he rallied to greet them with a smile.Â
He kissed Burdockâs head, then Barb Azureâs cheek, and patted Haymitch on the back. âYour paâs here, son.âÂ
They finished the game within minutes. If his pa was in a rush, he wouldâve called out for him. Haymitch won, leaving with spoken thanks and goodbyes and the anticipation of telling his pa all about his victory.Â
He never got to, his plans interrupted by a strange, melodic sound that grew louder as he walked outside: your laughter.Â
Out on the porch, his pa was kneeled on a step below yours, staying eye level with you. Upon seeing Haymitch, he smiled widely, and you dropped yours completely. Jaw dropped, Haymitch could only peel his eyes away from you once prompted by his pa saying, âThere you are. Letâs head on home.âÂ
He had to manually remind his feet how to work. They remembered pretty quickly once you glared daggers at him for blocking the doorway. You walked back inside, bidding his pa farewell with a lighthearted wave and Haymitch with a sour, âNight.â
On the path to their house, Haymitch worked up the guts to voice his curiosity. âHowâd you get her to laugh?âÂ
His pa gave him a peculiar smile. âI told her about my day.âÂ
âWhat was so funny about your day?â asked Haymitch, scratching his nose.Â
âNothing,â he said, âbut then she told me about her day. And you. Had a lot to say about you, that one.âÂ
âMe?â Oh, he could only imagine all the insults you spewed about him. It was plenty fine when you directed them straight at himâhe took them in stride, in gratitude when coming from youâbut he didnât want his pa converted to your side. âWhatâd she say?âÂ
âNot a thing I donât already know.âÂ
Haymitch blanched. How could he say that? âPa, she hates me.â
Pa laughed, a hearty, joyful melody much like yours. âOh, my boy. Youâd be surprised.âÂ
His laugh sounds different now in Haymitchâs head. Faint, muted by too many years gone by without hearing it. He wonders if thatâs whatâll become of him in Sidâs memories, and Maâs. A distant illusion.Â
The thought cracks his chest wide open. He wants so badly to be home with them right now. Home with you, too.Â
âSheâs been gone a while,â murmurs Wellie drearily, following his line of sight. âYou donât thinkâŠâÂ
âWe wouldâve heard a cannon,â he reminds her, and himself.Â
A haze falls over her eyes. âAtread was dying a long time before his cannon went off.âÂ
Wonderful point. What a vivid image it produces. He clamps his eyes shut, and when he pictures Atread, another of his soft-spoken doves, you pop up too. Writhing in pain, dying alone. âIâm gonna go get her,â he blurts.Â
âOkay,â she agrees and wiggles out of the blanket to stand, only to immediately buckle down.Â
He catches her instantly. âNo, Wellie, you have to stay.âÂ
She wheezes, panicked, âDonât leave me.âÂ
Haymitch squeezes her shoulders lightly to calm her. âItâll just be to bring her back. Iâll make sure youâre good and hidden.âÂ
âDonât. I canât be alone again. Iâll go with you.â Her bottom lip wobbles.Â
âItâs okay. Youâll be okay. Look what Iâve got for you.â Haymitch hangs Maysileeâs blowgun around her neck. âThis was Maysileeâs. Itâs all loaded. All you do is take a deep breath, blow real hard in this end, and a poisonous dart comes flying out. She killed Panache with this. Saved our lives.âÂ
âMaysileeâs dead now, too.â Wellie hugs her knees.Â
His throat tightens. âYeah, she is. But sheâd want you to have this. She thought youâd make a good victor.âÂ
âShe did?â Her eyes widen. âWhat did she mean? A good victor?âÂ
A great question, an even harder one to actually answer. âIt means that youâre good to your core. You never stop being a Newcomer.âÂ
Wellie tears up, ultimately settling into her determination. âI can do that. For the others. For her.â She whispers your name. âHide me.â She holds out her arms for Haymitch to carry her.Â
Nearby, he pinpoints a tree almost hidden by wild grapevines. Tucking Wellie behind them, he arranges the cascading vines into a curtain thatâll conceal her.Â
âRemember,â he tells her. âYouâve only got one dart, so make it count.âÂ
She lifts the blowgun to show him she understands how to use it.Â
He taps her chin with the knuckle of his index finger. âAtta girl. Now, sit tight and Iâll be back before you know Iâm gone.âÂ
He intends to make good on his parting assurance. And when he spots you after covering a half-mile of woods, heâs relieved to know he will.Â
Youâre not carrying any game, but you arenât empty-handed. Haymitch canât quite tell what it is youâre holding from afarâhe knows to credit it to a sponsor gift. You are also evidently, expectedly seething when you notice him.Â
âWhy are you here?â you demand, not bothering to keep your voice quiet.Â
âI got worried,â Haymitch answers candidly as he approaches you.Â
Of course he did. Thatâs expected, understandable even. The absence of your ally, however, is not. âAnd Wellie?âÂ
âShe was worried, too.â His eyes hone in on the pitcher, and he goes completely still.Â
âWas she?â you snap dryly. âIf youâd waited a few more minutes, she wouldnât be, because sheâd have both of us there.âÂ
He doesnât respond. He doesnât even look at you, more taken with what you have in your arms.Â
You stomp your foot, childish and petty and completely warranted in the heat of your frustration. âHonestly, Haymitch, is it gonna take a real blood oath to get you to listen to me?âÂ
He snatches the pitcher from you suddenly. âYou didnât drink any, did you?âÂ
Are you kidding me? âNo,â you scoff. âObviously not. I was bringing it toââ
Your huff comes out muffled against his chest. Haymitch holds you close, tight enough to stop the breath in your lungs. âWhat the hell?âÂ
His lips brush the shell of your ear, and the shudder that passes through you, too involuntarily to contain this time, almost quells your anger. Almost. What really does it are the words he whispers: âItâs not from who you think.âÂ
Pulling back, you search for answers in his expression. He gives you the one you need, the one you already assume deep down, with a quiver of his chin and a furrow of his brows.Â
You take a deep breath and plaster on a scowl. âI donât think you should get any hot chocolate.âÂ
He blinks, then pouts. âOh, come on now.âÂ
âYou donât deserve it,â you say sharply. âI mean, you accuse me of hogging it.âÂ
âI only asked if you tasted it without us. Thatâs a fair question.âÂ
âAnd you left Wellie after you agreed not to.âÂ
Haymitch tucks your hair back. âI missed you too much, darling.âÂ
A cover or not, your stomach bubbles. âAnd youâre just plain annoying me right now, peach.âÂ
He laughs, tugging you to him when you take another step away. âForgive me.âÂ
You narrow your eyes, a smile playing on your lips. âIââ
It all happens so fast from there. Too fast for Haymitch to pick up on the details. He only hears the way you cut yourself off. Only notices when you whir around, notching an arrow on your bow and lodging it into Maritteâs collarbone. Only sees when her knife flies into your lower abdomen at the same time. Only feels the drop of the pitcher, the fear clawing at his ribcage, the weight of his dagger before it finds the space of her neck, finishing her off.
Haymitch catches you before you hit the floor, before you land on the pile of broken glass and spilled hot chocolate. He props you against a berm of primrose. Blood spools around the dagger like the tendrils of a poppy. The black of your uniform canât hide the shape, or the texture of the crimson. Thick as strawberry juice.Â
âWhat do I do?â He all but spits out. âWhat do Iââ
âGet Wellie,â you gasp, feeling nothing but the urgency to get Haymitch back on track.Â
âDo I pull the knife out?â
âGet Wellie,â you repeat through gritted teeth. Â
âNo, youâll bleed to death.â His voice cracks on the last syllable. âHow do I stop the bleeding?â
âHaymitch.â You dig your nails into your palms to keep from wincing. âIf it hit anything important, I wouldnât be speaking right now. Go get Wellie.âÂ
He shakes his head. âIâm not leaving you alone.â
âSilkaâs around here somewhere.âÂ
âExactly why I canât leave you!â he exclaims, exasperated and scared and on the verge of something far more painful than tears. âI canât.â
âHaymitch, you promised!â you choke out through the lump in your throat.Â
The threat of your scrunched nose, the evocation of his promiseâthat absolute, binding pinkie promiseâcuts through him.Â
âPlease,â you croak, finding solace in the dirt beneath you, scraping the underside of your nail bed with rocks and twigs. âGo.âÂ
Your face begins to blur, and Haymitch realizes heâs in danger of breaking out into those horrible, wretched sobs that only overcome him when someoneâs died. And he canât let that happen right now because you need him. Wellie needs you both. âIâm getting her and coming right back, you hear me?â
You nod. âGo.âÂ
He cradles your face and presses a long kiss to the crown of your head as if thatâll bring his wishes into existence. Your hands clutch him, pushing him away. You shove your own dagger into his grip. Itâs only after Haymitch backs off, running with all his might through the trees, that you allow yourself to cry.Â
Every breath you take inflames the bursts of ice shooting up your side. You can feel the blade brushing against your insides, forcing you to confront just how much pain youâre in.Â
It sits right above your hip, perfectly content where it is. Youâre no Asterid, this is not a deceptive laceration, and it hurts a hell of a lot worse than a sprained ankle. But you canât pull it out. Haymitch wasnât wrongâyouâll bleed out, send yourself to an earlier grave than the one youâre already in, if you do.Â
You try to slide up the trunk, push yourself to your feet, but your limbs protest angrily. They resort to going numb, a roundabout paralysis where you still feel every single sting.  Â
Shedding the numbness, your mind detaches from your body entirely, guided first and foremost by the boom of a cannon.Â
Hissing, you push forward and hold out your hands before you can collapse face-down.Â
âAh!â You lift a hand back, burned by the hot chocolate, no less steaming than how you received it. You wipe yourself on your pant leg and assess the spillage, laid out in a stream of glass in front of you. Youâre quickly reminded of the river at the base of the mountain, of the snake swallowed by its own foamy blood, of the frail man perched on a frail throne.Â
âItâs not from who you think.âÂ
And if you were wrong about that, if itâs from who Haymitch would have you believeâŠÂ
Whatâs the point in dwelling, in waiting, in trying to redecipher some grand rebel plan that isnât going to save you now? Silka is alive, and so is Haymitch. Itâs a feeling as true and palpable as the stinging.Â
You pocket a piece of hot chocolate soaked glass and lift yourself off the ground.Â
That cannon wasnât for you. He just left you, breathing and alive. Injured but alive. Youâre rightâyou wouldnât be talking if the dagger was lodged anywhere truly fatal. Youâd be gone by now, and you arenât.Â
Youâre not dead, youâre not dead, youâre not dead.Â
But Wellie is when he reaches her. A dead, headless baby dove. Another casualty of a broken promise. Another image heâll never be able to scrub clean in his memories.Â
âWhat did you do?â he hisses.Â
Silka holds up Wellieâs head defensively, drawing attention to the blood spatters on her snot-green uniform. âShe attacked me.âÂ
Haymitch notices the poison dart hanging from her blousy sleeve. Wellie tried to protect herself, tried to stay strong, tried to uphold the Newcomer honor. And as she feared he would, Haymitch abandoned her. Oh, Wellie, what have I done to you?Â
âShe had to go. You have to go,â Silka continues robotically. âItâs the only way I get back to my people.âÂ
âWe all have people. You think yours will ever be able to forget this? I know mine wonât.â He hopes Sid disowns him, curses his weakness, spits whenever he hears his pathetic brotherâs name.Â
âIâll tell it how it was, when I get home,â she says.Â
âOh, youâre not going home, Silka.â He pulls the ax from his belt. You should hate Haymitch all over againâyou will. Youâll hate him when you return home for letting this happen, for leaving Wellie behind in the first place, for forcing you to fulfill Maysileeâs deathbed demand on your own without so much as a goodbye. And heâs at peace with that. Itâs what he deserves.Â
Silka tosses Wellieâs head aside, no regard or compassion for her even in death. Her callousness does wonders for Haymitchâs resolve. Even more so when she spews, âWhereâs your ally?âÂ
âIâd worry more about yours,â he seethes. His ax feels right at home in his hands. âWho do you think that first cannon was for?âÂ
Nostrils flaring, eyes welling, Silkaâs first stroke comes straight down at his head.
The clash of metal echoes across the woods. You follow the sound with an agonizing hobble. The clangs and grunts lead you back to your campsite, ravaged in the wake of a hateful battle. Beyond Silkaâs attempt to dislodge her ax from a tree, and Haymitchâs quick swipe at her thigh, and her retaliation, Wellieâs head lies detached from her body.Â
Your feet stammer, and a low hanging branch provides stability. Nothing in your stomach but a knife, you force yourself not to keel over.Â
Later. There will be time to feel it, to hate yourself, later.Â
âHey, snot-face!â you call out, raising your bow. Your papa would chide you for startling your prey, but you want her looking at you when you land the arrow.Â
Silka shrieks when it strikes through her shoulder, immobilizing her left arm. You grab another arrow, but she runs your way, rams your body to the ground, and sends the arrow aimlessly through the wind. Your bow slips from your grasp.Â
At the impact, the tip of the blade digs deeper. Your yelp is cut short by Silkaâs forearm pressing down on your throat. You claw at her face, taking chunks of skin and blood, but the only thing that gets her to let up is a dagger to her eye. Her howl comes with a blind swipe behind her back, in the direction of the culprit.Â
Haymitch, consumed by his rage for Silka and distracted by his one-track-mind for you, fails to jump back. He pays the price with a giant gash across his lower abdomen. His grip loosens on his ax as he scrambles to keep his guts from spilling onto the floor.Â
You elbow Silka in the nose and make a dash for Haymitch. âNice eye!â you shout over your shoulder as you yank him away.Â
Wounded and weaponless, his intestines twisting in his fingers and your abdomen burning with each step, your sprint sputters into a staggered zigzag. You come to a stop where the alder trees make way for the burnt hedge.Â
Haymitch leans back against one of them, his legs shaking like theyâre about to give out. You hold him up, keeping your attention on his eyes, his nose, his lips. Anywhere but the very fatal injury.Â
âWhatâs the plan?â he strains to say.Â
Your chest heaves. âForce her to split her attention.âÂ
He canât fathom leaving you again for more than a second, doesnât want to, but thereâs no good alternative. Youâre running on fumes and borrowed time. Haymitch knows that as well as you do. Why couldnât you just stay put?Â
Why couldnât he?
He gives a curt nod and dashes towards the cliffside, both hands cupping his wound now. You find cover among the trees, where he hopes youâll be safest.Â
Back pressed against the jagged bark, pinecones dropping overhead, you look down at the only weapon you have access to. You wrap your trembling fingers around the handle of the blade. Like ripping off a bandaid. You donât stifle your cry; you need Silka to find you.Â
And she does, with a fist to the face, paying you back for bloodying her nose. One eyed and all, Silka is a master at regaining the upper hand. You swipe the knife at her throat; she strikes your wrist and knocks it out of your grip. Knuckles will have to do then. You lift them and swing, spent as you are, because youâll drag her down with you by any means before she ever gets the chance to reach Haymitch.Â
Silka doesnât bother with her ax. She punches you instead, square in the jaw. You go down, but not without punting her in the shin. Dodging your next attempt, she grabs a fistful of your hair. You shriek with indignation as much as with pain.Â
Dragged like a rag-doll by the roots, you go kicking and screaming the entire way through the hedgeâs boundary. Up until youâre both feet away from Haymitch.Â
âLet her go,â he coughs out. âLet go!âÂ
With a curse of her name, a shout of yours, Haymitch tries to run your way, only for his knees to buckle entirely. He resorts to throwing whatever rocks in his vicinity at her. Does she plan to make him watch? Is she so sick in the head, so poisoned by the Capitolâs need for spectacle, that she needs to draw it out for them, even now?Â
Silka throws you down, unphased by the stone that hits her in the chest. Weakly, you lift your head, hold it up high, and spit out a curdle of blood. Right at her feet. Sheâll have to look you in the eye and live with whatever shame sheâs capable of. Same as the very people whoâve turned each of you into pawns.Â
But she doesnât care about you right now. No, not at all. Silka has another target in mind. A different, equally vindictive parting act.Â
She wants you to see Haymitch die first.Â
âKill me,â you croak, rolling onto your stomach, pushing up on your forearms. Kill me, kill me, kill me. Not him. You make a play for her ankle, and Silka steps on your fingers, cracking them in half.Â
Your scream doesnât stop her ax as it flies through the air. It never reaches its target, though. Haymitch falls forward on his face before it can, narrowly dodging the impact. You breathe out, relieved. What a pity sheâll have to settle for you.Â
Silka stands over you, her hand against her eye socket, seemingly contemplating how you should go. Her momentary setback hasnât derailed her confidence. She has time, the upper hand, andâ
The ax lodges in her head with a sickening squelch.Â
She writhes on the ground across from you. Your head snaps Haymitchâs way, in the direction of the glistening illusion of a force field behind him. Some trick.Â
You scramble onto your knees to get to him. You fall back down when Silka stops gurgling, the cannon sounds, and it sinks in that the worst of your fears has come to pass.
Haymitch is aliveâŠbut so are you.
Your fingers are surely broken, and youâre set to bleed to death any second now, but youâre a lot better off than Haymitch. Still face-down feet away, his guts splattering out of his body, good as dead.Â
Heâs as good as dead.Â
So you donât think about home, or about notions of revolution, or about Wellieâs decapitated body, or about the millions of things you have yet to feel and do.Â
You just reach for your failsafe.Â
Haymitch is slipping, literally. In-and-out of consciousness, intestines coiling around his palms like a snake. You should be by his side right now, yelling at him, scolding his audacity, kissing him goodbye. You wouldnât deny him a deathbed wish. And yet, youâre nowhere near.Â
He raises his head, feeling the weight of a dozen dumbbells threatening to push him back down. He finds Silkaâs dead body, the reflective ax sticking out of her head. And you. Slightly closer, curled on the ground, frozen completely.Â
Why arenât you moving?Â
His incoming death means nothing now. Haymitch comes to his senses, alert and desperate as he drags himself across the dirt with one hand.Â
Your tears, trickling out the corners of your eyes, are all Haymitch sees after you roll onto your back and he props up on an elbow. Heâs slow, too slowâhe shouldnât be this slowâto notice the change in your blood. From crimson to pitch black, same as the veins running in spirals across your abdomen when he lifts your shirt. An abnormality credited to foul play. To poison.Â
No. No, no, no, you said you didnât drink the hot chocolate. You didnât have any. You didnâtâyou wouldâve already been dead. And you werenât. You arenât.Â
Sunlight glistens off a piece of glass stuck to the edge of your wound. How didâÂ
Haymitch was careful setting you down, wasnât he? Heâd been panicked and frantic, but he was careful.Â
You rasp, âH-Haymitch, Iâm sorry.âÂ
âDonât apologize, sunshine,â he croaks. âYou arenâtââ You arenât dying. You canât be dying. You canâtâhe canâtâhow can he stop this? He needs to stop this, needs to save you, needs toâ
Your fingers twitch like youâre attempting to grab him. Attempting to wipe away those telltale wrinkles. âShouldâveâŠsaid it sooner.âÂ
He shakes his head. âJustâjust wait.âÂ
âShouldâve shown it,â you breathe, a ragged whistle of a note.
âYou did. You do,â he says hopelessly, truthfully, piecing the fractures of your puzzle. âB-but you gotta hold on. You have to stay with me.âÂ
You try to tell him that you wonât be apart, not really. Youâll be with him forever. But the promise comes out in a strangled sputter, which he leans in to will away. Your bluebird brushes your shoulder, reminding you there was never a chance of escaping this. Not from the second Haymitch was damned to your side. There is peace in accepting your fate. There is freedom in the world that comes next, where every last one of your people awaits. Where the ones around your neck will find you someday.Â
My sweet family, my formidable kin, know I fought like all-fire. Know weâll meet in the meadow.Â
You canât make out his pleas anymore, just his horrid, haunting gasps of air. Itâs all that hurts you now. Whatever strength you have left is used for one last attempt to tell Haymitch all he means and all you want for him in lieu of a life together. âDonât follow.âÂ
The sun fades around the corners of your vision, leaving you with only Haymitch. I love you forever, in every world, and then some.Â
Haymitch presses his lips to yours, trying to breathe into you, attempting to give you whatâs left of his life because itâs yours anyway. Heâs yours. Everything he is, everything he feels, belongs to you. âI love you.â He tastes salt mixed with metal. âPlease donât leave me,â he pleads against your frozen skin. âI love you, I love you.âÂ
He opens his eyes to the empty look in yours. Once brilliant, now lost to him forever. The agony builds and builds until it scratches his throat raw with an unending scream. But itâs not enough to numb the rest of him. He sobs, closes your eyes with shaky fingers, buries his face into your hair. âIâm sorry.âÂ
And itâs in the despair of the words that Haymitch realizes itâs okay. Itâs going to be okay. This hole in his heart, this anguish in his body, is temporary. Because he has a much more fatal, much more literal gap dragging him down beside you. Even ground, right?Â
The hovercraft fades in from afar, no announcement of the victor as far as Haymitch is aware. But itâs coming. Theyâll drag him out of here, resuscitate him from the brink, stop him from following you. Just like you want.Â
He acts on pure instinct when he digs for the makings of the bomb. The sunflower, the blasting cap, the quartz, his flintstriker. Thank you, Ampert, Wyatt, Maysilee, Lenore Dove, for laying the groundwork. The Gamemakersâ warnings fall on deaf ears and a grief-stricken heart. Keep your head up, Sid. Donât fret for me now, Ma. I wonât fail again, Burdie.
Haymitch manages with one hand and his set of teeth. He rolls onto his back, tears the blasting cap, shoves it into the sunflower, dodges the stray bullets from above. Driven by a sole purpose, and the bonus of another.Â
Forgive me, sunshine, for I cannot live without you.Â
Heâll tell you himself when he meets you again. Heâll take your anger in stride, as he always has, because he knows where it comes from. And it wonât matter so long as he has you. You and everyone else whoâs found their way to your heaven. Losses of old and those yet to pass. Pa, Mamaw, his unnamed sisters. Haymitch believes it, he feels them all waiting. Any second now.Â
When he launches the sunflower into the canyon, itâs for every loose cannon, every person back in Twelve, every life the Capitol has tried to twist into nothing. Itâs for you.Â
Black specks dot his eyes, blocking out the arenaâs artificial light, and so, he finds you. The last thing he ever wants to see in this world, the first heâll wake to in the next. Â
His brilliant, dazzling sun, keeping him warm, singing him home, as the earth crumbles beneath him.Â
Haymitch wakes later, not to the lull of your voice or the greetings of his lost loves, but to stark white walls and gloved hands on bare skin and half-eaten nightingales filling the absence of your warmth. The sorrow he sought to ward off, the loss he fought with all his strength to avoid, crashes into him at once. Permanent, wretched, vengeful. Inevitable. And he knows you have not forgiven him.Â
You decide, somewhere between digging through war-era dresses and having amber glitter smeared across your eyelids, that you dislike Effie Trinket less than you do her little sister. Though youâll admit Prosperina is plenty tolerable without a pair of scissors in her hands. The Trinketsâ brand of Capitol is different from Drusillaâs or the Gamemakersâ. Clueless, not unkind. Effie drones about the honor of the Games and Prosperina slips a comment or two about the rarity of your potential coming from Twelve. They meanâŠwell. As well as they know how to mean. Ignorance is better than cruelty, but you reckon itâs just as dangerous.Â
âOh, you look darling!â Effie squeals, pulling back the brush from your face. Your eyes blink open as she spins you around to look at yourself in the mirror. Youâre no stranger to makeupâone of your favorite pastimes is trading lipstick with Lenore Doveâbut you have to resist the urge to wipe at your face right now. The glitter itches, coarse against the sensitive skin of your eyelids, and the mascara feels heavier on your lashes than youâre used to. On the bright side, you do look nice.Â
The amber eyeshadow compliments the little crystals sewn along the high waistline of the gown. An hourglass silhouette, Effie called it. Whatever it is, youâre grateful you wonât be so plain. The crystals stand out against the black silk, offering a necessary bout of color further highlighted by the silk scarf meant to go with the dress. Beginning with marigold in the middle, the scarf ranges in shades of orange before ending with crimson on either end.Â
Effie tosses the scarf over your head and drapes it across your neck, allowing it to cascade down your back. Your charms peak out under the fabric. You pull your hair to the side so she can adjust the scarf behind you.Â
Maysilee walks into the bathroom with Prosperina on her tail. She looks like a dream in her velvet gown, off-the-shoulder as opposed to your completely strapless dress. Her eyes are dusted periwinkle to match the feather boa Effie found, and her hair is pinned up, a few loose strands curling around her face.Â
She stares at you through the mirror, devoid of her usual judgement. âI like it,â she says finally, as though her approval is the finishing touch you require.Â
You accept it anyway and gesture to her outfit. âYou look pretty.âÂ
âI know,â Maysilee responds with a slight grin, but you can tell by the deepening blush on her cheeks that the compliment means more to her than she lets on. You smile, and her eyes flicker to your mouth. âYou need a red lip.â
âGenius! I was thinking the same,â Effie exclaims and beckons for you to follow her out. âCome, come.âÂ
You sit on the edge of your bed while Effie rifles through her makeup box for the perfect shade of lipstick. Across the apartment, Haymitch and Wyatt are getting dolled up themselves. You caught a glimpse of the suits Effie handed to them before she swept you and Maysilee away, and really, youâre all fortunate Magno never showed.Â
âWe need to do something about that hair,â she says, inching away when your eyes narrow. You wonder if Prosperina told her about the biting incident. Must be why Vitus stuck to readying the boys. Effie offers a smile. âItâs lovely, but you simply cannot wear it down with this dress. No one will be able to see the scarf. Can IâŠ?âÂ
No, she cannot. You may not hate Effie, but you donât trust her not to pull out a lock of your hair, or to handle it with the same care your papa and Burdock would. You rub your hands along the silk of the dress to ground yourself.Â
âMaysilee,â you call, her name tumbling out before you can stop yourself. Maysilee peaks her head into the room curiously. You nearly choke on your pride, but the words manage to form against all odds. âCan you do my hair?â Â
Her eyes widen momentarily, and you expect a jab or a jest of some kind. You should know better by knowâMaysilee has surprised you plenty the last few days. Without a word, she walks over and motions for Effie to hand her a hairbrush. Effie does as requested and takes to shuffling around for more hairpins and hairspray.Â
Instinctively, you tense when you feel Maysilee grab ahold of your hair with one hand. She waits until you relax to begin brushing through your hair. Her touch is gentle and patient, a sharp contrast from her general disposition. It reminds you of the care with which she pieced together each of your alliesâ tokens, and in turn, you think of Tam Amber in his workshop once again. Maysilee Donner, the meanest girl in town, has elicited many emotions throughout your lifetime. Over the past four days alone, youâve ranged from contempt to trust and back to disdain. For the first time, despite your better judgement, or perhaps because of it, Maysilee Donner makes you feel safe.Â
Maysilee weaves your hair into a braid down your back first and then pins it around your head like a crown. She lets the shorter pieces frame your face similar to her own style. When sheâs done, she stands in front of you to admire her handiwork.Â
Effie and Prospering rush over with complimentary squeals. âYou are simply divine,â Prosperina gushes. âAnd Maysilee, you are an artist!âÂ
âI think so too,â you say gratefully.Â
Maysilee snorts, uncharacteristically flustered. âYou should see yourself in the mirror first.â
You shrug. âDonât need to.âÂ
She rolls her eyes but grins.Â
âWell,â Effie says brightly, âare we ready?âÂ
Smoothing the wrinkles on your dress with both hands, you stand up and hold your chin high.Â
âRemember,â said Drusilla before she retreated to the kitchen to curse Magnoâs name, âyou are a flame, and everyone else is a moth caught in your elusive, unattainable orbit.â
You suppose thatâs easy enough for you to summon with the ombre scarf, which resembles a fire kindling. With its warm undertones, you think a sunset is a more fitting description.
Effie and Prosperina walk out first, makeup box and unused dress bags in hand. The boys are waiting in the living room with your mentors, Drusilla, and Vitus. You peer over Effieâs shoulder before you enter the room. Wyatt cleans up nicely in the tuxedo borrowed from the Trinketsâ Great-Uncle Silius. And HaymitchâŠ
Okay, fine. Objectively, Haymitch has always been good looking. Biased you may be, but you arenât blind to the truth. Heâs handsome, beautiful even, under most lights. Under all lights. Now, in a dashing three-piece suit, curls left untouched and untamed, with the unnatural fluorescents somehow brightening the flecks of blue in his eyes, is no different.Â
You tear your eyes away from him, which is an irritatingly impossible task, and try to send away the warmth crawling all over your skin. It doesnât work. In fact, it only worsens when Haymitch notices you, lips parting and eyes widening just a smidge. He rubs the back of his neck like heâs trying to soothe himself. You feel it then, as you have ever since you first saw it in the hallway: his devotion.Â
Drusilla snickers from her place on the lounge chair, casting a sidelong glance at Haymitch. âMoth.âÂ
Wiress presses the back of her hand to her mouth. Mags doesnât try to hide her amusement. Nor does the rest of the room. âWe should make our way now,â says Mags, motioning for Wyatt and Haymitch to stand.Â
Drusilla pushes herself up. âYes, we should. You,â she points to Effie, âare coming with us. Everyone must know you are responsible for this, not Magno.âÂ
Effie, an avid rule-follower youâre gathering, objects, âButâI donât even have a backstage pass.â
âThat, at least, I can remedy. Come on, you lot! We need to make it to one event on time.â Drusilla ushers you and Maysilee ahead. Vitus rushes around you to press the elevator button.Â
âHowâs my mascara?â asks Maysilee while Effie stops you to touch-up your lipstick.Â
âPerfect,â answers Effie. âYou hardly need it with those long lashes of yours.â She hands Maysilee a small cotton ball. âJust in case.âÂ
You and Maysilee are the first to enter the elevator with Vitus. He keeps to the opposite end and avoids direct eye contact while you wait for the others to trickle in. He looks much less threatening like this, which stirs the slightest of guilt inside you.Â
âIâm sorry I bit you,â you say suddenly. Beside you, Maysilee lets out a gargled sound.Â
Vitus looks up, and in an instant, his chirpiness returns. âOh, itâs all right. That was a stressful day for all of us. And I know you arenât diseased.âÂ
You force an accepting smile. âThanks.âÂ
Maysilee leans over to whisper in your ear. âYou bit him?âÂ
âHe cut my hair,â you whisper back.Â
She bites down on her lip, you lift a shoulder, and the two of you burst into a fit of giggles.Â
The others step in one-by-one, and youâre thankful thereâs enough space in the elevator to keep you from feeling claustrophobic. As is now customary, the four of you are hauled into the back of the windowless van. Wiress and Mags are allowed to accompany Drusilla, which is a relief. Theyâll at least provide the comfort Drusilla is physically incapable of mustering.Â
The interviews will be televised from an auditorium full of a few thousand people, and apparently, there will be no delay like there was for the reaping. Drusilla issues about a dozen warnings to mind your manners and not screw up. Lovely words of advice. While the rest of you are taken backstage to a waiting area called the greenroomâironic, given itâs painted a pale whiteâshe walks off to speak to Caesar Flickerman. âShrew, calculator, enigma, rascal,â she repeats in a mutter as she stalks off. Â
Most of the districts, including their mentors, stylists, and escorts, are already waiting. Stylists fuss over tributesâ outfits, escorts recite the official lineup, mentors offer final bits of advice. Their words clamor into one ear-splitting blob.Â
Effie finds a nice corner for your team to wait by, and she falls into stylist mode immediately, fixing the boysâ collars, tearing a broken feather from Maysileeâs boa, adjusting your silk scarf. Mags and Wiress take the time to review each of your strategies, and you do your best to commit every piece of advice to memory.Â
Exaggerate the accent but donât overdo it. Be charming, not a pushover. Answer candidly but steer on the side of secrecy. The contradictions make your head go dizzy.Â
You slink back from your team, only a pace away, skull contracting with each clink of your heels on the floor. The green room is crowded with people and conversation, but you find a sliver of wall space behind you to rest. You close your eyes and lean sideways, careful not to ruin your updo. Your temple presses against the cool tile in search of release from the pressure in your head.Â
A mirror, an enigma, a flame. What a convoluted performance youâve taken on.Â
Haymitch doesnât say anything at first, but you can feel him take the spot beside you. His presence grounds you, and the pressure begins to evaporate. You open your eyes. His back is against the wall and his head is swirled straight ahead. Even from this angle, you can see his eyebrows bunched up. âNervous?â
He turns his attention to you. âYeah,â he admits.Â
âGood.â You pinch your nose. âNot good. Itâs not good that youâre nervous. I donât want you to be nervous. Iâm justââ
âNervous?â Haymitch finishes with a grin.Â
You breath slowly to steady yourself. âYup.âÂ
He sighs. âMaysileeâs right.â You arch a brow, and he winces. âI heard it.âÂ
You huff through your nose, light and amused.Â
Haymitchâs mouth twitches as he continues, âI mean, youâre good at affecting people.âÂ
âDoesnât mean itâs always a positive effect,â you counter. The tile grows warm under your temple. âI didnât get a ten because the Gamemakers liked me, Haymitch.âÂ
âNo, but everyone out there is only going to see the number. A ten will go over smoother than a one.â
You shake your head, hearing his nerves seep through. âItâs like Mags said. Youâve got their attention.â
âNot all attentionâs good, sunshine,â he says, mimicking the bleakness in your tone.Â
âFair.â You lean closer until your shoulders are pressed together. âItâs a good thing we have each other then. Weâll get dragged down together.â Your words ease him for all of five seconds. Then his worry lines return. You nudge him gently. âHey,â you say with mock seriousness, âthe jackass bit should be easy enough for you, peach.â
âHa, good one,â Haymitch responds, deadpan.Â
Dropping the facade in exchange for sincerity, you continue, âYouâre not whoever they make you out to be on that stage. And you better not let them convince you otherwise.âÂ
His shoulders drop. He shifts his body to fully face you. âI wonât if you donât.âÂ
âI wonât.â You extend your pinkie in his direction. A smile cracks through his nerves, and he wraps his pinkie around yours. For the briefest of moments, the room narrows down to this: Haymitch, warm and alive and at your side like the incessant weed heâs always been. Then something else catches his attention. You spot the second he tenses and his smile falters. He lets go of your pinkie before you can ask what has him worked up now. âIâll be back. I need some punch.âÂ
âOkayââÂ
Haymitch disappears through a crowd of peach tulle and butter yellow suits. The pressure returns full force, and the solace you found against the wall is nowhere to be found. You turn forward, hovering instead of leaning back now. Drusilla has returned to make sure everyone knows Effie is responsible for your transformations. Her presence must be why Haymitch tensed up so quick. ExceptâŠ
Through the pockets of people, you see Haymitch by the buffet now. Beetee stands across from him, gathering food onto his plate. Huh.Â
Wyatt and Maysilee take the wall space on either side of you. âWhereâs he off to?â questions Maysilee.Â
âPunch bowl.â You cross your arms over your torso, suddenly cold.Â
Wyatt hums, twirling his scrip coin. âThink itâs any good?âÂ
You watch Haymitch linger by the buffet. âWe can go find out.âÂ
The appearance of an electric blue blazer stops the three of you from proceeding. Ampert greets Wiress as he passes her. You bite down on your lip to keep from laughing. Not because he looks bad, or even remotely ridiculous. Quite the contrary, heâs adorable.Â
âDonât you look dashing,â Maysilee tells him, buzzing with her own laughter. You nod in agreement.Â
âThatâs what my father said.â Ampert fiddles with the collar of his blazer, his smile turning downright proud. He runs his hands down his matching slacks. âI came to talk strategy for tomorrow. I spoke to Six already. Weâll need to band together as soon as possible.â
Always right down to business with that family. You appreciate their directness. âWeâll be scattered away from each other, so we need to find a meeting spot.â
âItâll be hard to pick one when we donât know what the arena will look like,â says Maysilee.Â
You glance at Wyatt. âWell, if the tarps were a clue, it might be a rainforest. There should be bodies of water.âÂ
âOr a body of water,â she counters. âSingular. Maybe theyâll want us all fighting for a sole water source.âÂ
âIf they mean to drag out the Games, thatâd be a sure-fire way of ending them too soon,â says Wyatt. âUnless they put us on an island of some kind, like they did that one year, but itâs more likely to be somewhere rainy.â
Hazy images comes to mind: a beach terrain surrounded by the illusion of an ocean, the closest youâll ever see to the real thing, vengeful crabs emerging from the sand dunes, a twelve-year-old boy from Seven swept up by the Gamemakersâ flood.Â
âWe need to prioritize the younger kids. Make sure theyâŠâ Survive the bloodbath. Stay alive. Keep from dying sooner than theyâve already been promised. Your throat burns as the inevitable reality sinks in. âDonât get lost,â you ultimately land on.Â
Ampert reflects on your words like heâs not one of the very kids youâre trying to protect. âThe oldest among us should try to get some weapons, too.âÂ
âI can gather the little ones,â volunteers Wyatt. âIâll get them away from the cornucopia.âÂ
You nod, wary but thankful. âThe rest of us will follow after you then. Iâll try my best to get a weapon or two.â Ideally, there will be a bow for you to get your hands on.Â
Maysilee tucks a strand of hair behind her ears. âSo will I.â She addresses Ampert. âYou should tell the others about this.â
âI will,â says Ampert. âEleven is my next stop.âÂ
Itâs a flawed plan, the more you ponder everything that could go wrong. Without an official meeting spot, youâre sure to lose track of each other in the bloodbath. You think of Wiress following the light beam, of sweet Sid and his starry eyes. âWe can use the stars in case we canât find each other right away.â Whatever the arena may be, the night sky should be the same as yours.Â
Ampert tilts his head. âHow?âÂ
âFind the star that looks frozen. Itâll be pointing north, so head in that direction.â Technically, it only seems frozen. Sid calls it the diamond star. Heâd explain it much better than you can.Â
âHead north,â he murmurs. âWe should go south instead.âÂ
You lift a brow, urging him to explain his logic.
Commotion bursts across the room in the form of Magno Stift and a cage of reptiles. âThe party animals are here!â
âOh hell,â you groan.
A group of Peacekeepers attemptâand failâto corral him. Ampert wrinkles his nose and turns back to the three of you. âIâm going to talk to Eleven. Good luck out there.âÂ
Ampert hurries away, leaving you with no choice but to squash your lingering concerns. For now, at least, your focus needs to be on the interviews. Though your lunatic of a stylist steals plenty of it. Heâs backed himself into the corner across from your teamâs and managed to free a six-foot snake from the cage, waving it around in peopleâs faces. âWhere are my tributes?â he demands. âI need to dress them!â
âHe should worry more about learning to dress himself,â you murmur. Maysilee snorts beside you, and you realize, dreadfully, that you sound like her. Wyatt laughs under his breath.Â
Shrieks erupt at the sight of the snake. The Peacekeepers pull out their tasers. Drusilla claps and shouts, âTake him down! Take him down!â They make quick work of tasing Magno, but he puts up quite the fight.Â
By the time theyâve hauled him and his snake out of the room, the television at the end of the green room flickers to life. Haymitch returns, leaving little room between you two as you watch an overhead view of the audience on-screen. Youâll have to tell him about your conversation with Ampert, but for now you accept the warmth of his hand in yours and try to tamper your nerves.Â
âLadies and gentleman,â a booming voice announces, âwelcome to the Fiftieth Hunger Games Night of Interviews. And hereâs everybodyâs favorite host, Caesar Flickerman!â
Caesar descends from the ceiling on a crescent moon with sparks shooting out behind him. Real classy stuff. He looks the same as always: young, adorned with a tailored dark blue suit, tall hair slicked back into a ponytail. This year, heâs dyed his hair pine green, and heâs painted his eyelids and lips the same shade. âHello, Panem!â he exclaims as he demounts the moon. âShall we get this party started?âÂ
The audience roars with excitement; your stomach stirs with sickness.Â
While Caesar launches into a retrospective on the Games and the nature of the Quarter Quells, a young Gamemaker lines up Districts One and Two in the greenroom. You make eye contact with Silka on her way out the door, and itâs clear sheâs thinking up the numerous ways she plans to kill you.
Caesar spares no details, spewing facts about past Games, the Treaty of Treason, and the treat youâre all in for with this yearâs arena. The real treat is how disastrously the Careers perform as they cycle through their turns on stage. Silka does fine enough, only failing to give a satisfactory answer when Caesar asks about the Careersâ alliance. Panache follows and is quickly humiliated by Caesar. From then, the remaining tributes from One and Two are the butt of Caesarâs unending jokes.Â
Their alliance is revealed as fragile and disjointed, their prowess is downplayed, and their intelligence is continuously called into question. What began as a positive for your own team quickly turns into a slight against every one of you. The Careers may be placed on a different pedestal than your own lowly footstool, but you are all on the receiving end of their cruelty. You have no shortage of hate for the Careers and their own callousness. Still, you feel for them. They donât deserve this any more than you do.Â
Your mamaâs voice rings clear as a bell. âHate canât exist without the capacity for deep love. Donât you forget that.âÂ
You make it through District Threeâs interviews without losing your lunch. Dio kicks off by discussing the Newcomersâ alliance and Ampert closes with his theories on the power in numbers. When Fourâs turn rolls around, and Caesarâs line of questioning shifts to an interrogation on the Careers versus the Newcomers, your stomach ache worsens. Something sweet will settle it. Hopefully.Â
You steal your hand back from Haymitch and turn away from the screen. His head swerves in your direction. âYou okay, sunshine?âÂ
ââM fine. Just need a drink.âÂ
He stays back, but you can feel his eyes following after you for a beat. District Four is wrapping up on screen, and Five has huddled together by the buffet to recalibrate. Least theyâre too busy figuring out damage control to bother you.Â
Youâre halfway there before a flurry of gray chiffon crowds you. Wellie, leading your doves with tears in her eyes, blinks up at you. Velo stares at you with the same distrust that afflicted her in the locker room when you first met. Miles and Atread avoid eye contact all together. You crouch before them on shaky legs. âWhatâs wrong, little birds?âÂ
Wellie croaks, âAre you leaving us, too?âÂ
âWhat? No, Iââ You grab one of her hands to soothe her trembling. Her skin is cold against yours. âWhereâd you get that idea from?âÂ
Wellie looks past your shoulder. You turn your head to see Haymitch now chatting up the quiet, melancholic tributes from Nine. Your stomach churns with something else entirely. Why would he tell them that? You look back at your flock.Â
âYou were Haymitchâs ally first,â Atread murmurs, tossing Wellie a worried look. The floor is still of utmost interest to him. âSince heâs leaving, we thought youâd go with him.âÂ
It becomes increasingly difficult to speak with the lump lodged at the base of your throat. âBut Haymitch isnât leaving. He wouldnât...â Your voice trails off, and your insistence comes off as disingenuous, because he would leave.Â
If he thought it was for the greater good, Haymitch would. He is leaving you.Â
Haymitch chalks it up to your nerves, but he can tell there is an underlying cause to your silence.Â
You returned from the buffet with a calculated, unnatural ease. As if the handful of minutes you were gone fixed you right up. When Haymitch sought your hand again, you offered it with tight lips and a scrunched-up nose. In a blink, any threat of tears zapped right up, and he convinced himself that the cracks in your demeanor were an illusion. Of course, they werenât.Â
Every passing minute, your silence grows louder than the unending list of concerns in his head. Haymitch is relieved, at least, to see his doves perform without a hitch when their turn rolls around. He worried that the news of his departure mightâve shaken them up too bad. One by one, they prove him wrong. Wellie steps up to Caesarâs mix and assuredly answers the very questions that tripped up the Careers. Miles, Velo, and Atread follow with their own additions to the Newcomersâ advantages.Â
Seven and Eight display similar composure, highlighting Ampertâs plan and their commitment to the alliance. Maybe they donât stand a chance, but theyâre sure making their people proud, and the audience seems to be buying their potential.Â
Everyone clearly strategized beforehand. Haymitch assumes Ampert left him out of the conversation because he knew his efforts would be focused on the ploy to sabotage the arena. Part of him appreciates the sentiment. With all he has to worry aboutânot making a fool of himself on-stage, keeping the sabotage a secret, the blow-up heâs in for when you learn heâs separating from the Newcomersâhe could go without another plan to keep in mind.Â
His barely-covert meeting with Beetee cleared up some concerns: which direction to head, how the fuse will be supplied, and where to access the explosive. Heâs not too keen on how Ampert will have to scavenge Nineâs dead bodies for their sunflowers. Haymitch looks over at you, quiet and glued to the television screen. Heâs not keen on leaving you either.Â
The best way to watch your back is to keep you far away from any plans of rebellion. He figured that much when Beetee first clued him in on the plot. His score and Beeteeâs directions only confirmed the undeniable: ensuring your safety entails keeping you away from Haymitch, too. Whatever you may think, a one sends a more dangerous message than a ten. Haymitch is on a tighter leash than you are, and he will not drag you down with him. Your fate is not set in stone.Â
The Newcomers continue building their case. Soon enough, after the second palate cleanser and a terrifying review of the deadliest mutts in the Games history, District Twelve is up. The four of you are lined up on the side of the stage in order of appearance. Haymitch stares at the skin of your shoulder blades while he attempts to keep his heart from lurching out of his chest.Â
The selfless resolve of the Newcomers is admirable, but Haymitch can tell Caesar is itching to amp up the entertainment factor of the interviews. A quick confirmation of Twelveâs commitment to the Newcomers is plenty for him, and heâs more than ready to see what each of you have in store.Â
Maysilee garners a lot of laughs with her arsenal of insults and jokes about the front rowâs poor taste. Caesar himself is brimming with amusement, egging her on. A man dressed in a suit made of bills receives an especially fatal blow. âThatâs sweet,â Maysilee says, dripping with sarcasm. âYou wore all your friends tonight.â She finishes by calling a lady with surgically implanted cat ears a flea bag.Â
Wyatt blows Caesar and the audience away with his complicated odds. A Gamemaker with a calculator confirms his prediction on the amount of sponsor dollars it would take to send a tribute a stuffed pheasant two weeks into the Games, given rising inflation of thirty-eight percent a day. Caesar exclaims, âI donât know if the odds are in your favor in the arena, Wyatt, but if you win, Iâm taking you to the casino!âÂ
As Caesar wraps up with Wyatt, your body bunches up on instinct. Haymitch reaches out and runs his hand over your shoulder, the muscles momentarily relaxing. You turn your head. He attempts to relieve the rest of your tension by teasing, âDonât choke.âÂ
Immediately, you give him that unassuming, too-practiced smile that anyone who knows you could sniff out from a mile away. And Haymitch does. Even with your unforgiving walls and unreadable expressions, he knows you. âDonât trip.âÂ
Your name booms from Caesarâs mouth, and the audience breaks out into applause. Haymitch watches as you glide across the stage and their applause grows louder.Â
âMy, my!â Caesar jolts a little when you reach him, the back of his free hand coming up to his forehead. He addresses the front row. âI think I lost my breath for a second there.â They all nod in agreement.Â
âOh, come on now, Caesar,â you say, simultaneously sweet and sardonic, not missing a beat. âSurely youâve seen worse.âÂ
That earns you a round of laughs. Caesar shakes his head. âI can promise Iâve never seen better. Now, I speak for all of us when I say you are our most anticipated guest of the evening.âÂ
âWho?â you ask, wide-eyed with feigned disbelief. âLittle old me?â
Â
âDonât be so humble,â chides Caesar. âYou obtained an unprecedented score for a tribute from District Twelve. Thatâs no simple feat. Care to share how you made that happen?âÂ
You rest a hand over your chest. âHand to heart, Caesar, I didnât do a thing. I was saving my best bits for allâa yâall to see.âÂ
He turns to the audience, eyebrows shooting up. âI donât believe that for one second.â
âHonest! But one thing about those Gamemakers is they know a performer when they see one. So I think they appreciated my intentions.â Your eyes flicker across the crowd before they land far above where the Gamemakers are seated. With a wink in their direction, you tease, âAinât that right?â
The camera pans to them, and Faustina Gripper nods curtly. Some of the Gamemakers in the same row give hearty laughs and thumbs up. The one with a calculator winks back, and Haymitchâs stomach lurches like heâs going to be sick.Â
âA performer in our midst,â Caesar says, tapping his fingers to his lips. The audience oohs and ahhs. âAnd what is it you perform?â
âSongs,â you answer. âWhen I have a worthy cause to.âÂ
âIs it rather presumptuous of me to assume we are a worthy cause?âÂ
You smile, bright but hollow, a deceptive imitation of a real sunbeam. âThe worthiest one. But I canât let you taste the cream before you buy the cake now, can I?âÂ
âOh!â Caesar croons, receiving matching reactions from the crowd. âWhat a cheeky thing. I love it!â
Watching the effortless nature of your performance quells some of Haymitchâs own worries. Then Caesar returns to his previous questions about the Newcomers. âWhat will follow if you do take out all the Careers? Will you turn on each other?âÂ
âWeâll cross that bridge when we come to it, Caesar,â you respond candidly. Itâs the closest youâve sounded to yourself since walking on that stage. âAll I know is every one of us is willing to lay our lives for one another, and that wonât change once the Careers are gone. I can promise you that.âÂ
A chorus of coos erupts. Caesar gives an overdramatic sigh and presses his hand over his heart this time. âI do hate to let you go.â The buzzer goes off. âBut Iâm afraid our time has run out.âÂ
The room lets out murmurs of disappointment, and Caesar nods sympathetically.Â
âUntil we meet again,â you say, mimicking their sadness, and dip into a bow, which elicits a standing ovation. The first few rows go crazy pretending to catch the kiss you blow as you walk off.Â
Before long, Caesar segues into introducing Haymitch as the final tribute of the evening. Haymitch calls upon his assumptions of Great Uncle Silius, a man with enough status and wealth to grant him patience, and saunters across the stage. Caesar jumps right in. âSo, Haymitch, what do you think of the Games having one hundred percent more competitors than usual?â
His thoughts wander to Woodbine Chance, the real rascal who should be here in his place, then to you, who wooed the audience against your own odds. Haymitch gives a shrug. âI donât see that it makes much difference. Theyâll still be one hundred percent as stupid as usual, so I figure the odds will be roughly around the same.â
Heâs gifted an appreciative chuckle from the audience. He returns their attention with a half-smile. âIâm speaking of the Careers, of course.âÂ
Caesar plays into his bit, jabbing the Careers himself and allowing Haymitch the space to assure the Newcomers, at least, are safe with him. He walks right into Caesarâs joke about his score in training, but heâs quick to defend himself and highlight the courage it takes to piss off the Gamemakers. âI mean, Iâve got thirty-one sworn allies, this rock-hard body, and more brain matter than all the Careers combined. Know what else Iâve got? Guts!âÂ
He canât disparage your score without disparaging you, so he stays neutral, keeps the attention on him and not you. âA ten is great, donât get me wrong. But a one takes a special kind of trouble, am I right?â He opens his arms to the audience and paces along the front of the stage. They hoot in support. âI can tell some of you know what I mean.â He points out a man in the second row with a glass cube of live bees on his head. âThis gentleman gets into all kinds of trouble.â He nods vigorously. âAnd you, darling?â Haymitch leans over the lady with cat ears. He can hear your eye roll, and he refrains from recoiling when the woman covers her face in gleeful embarrassment. âSure, you been there.âÂ
Caesar oohs dramatically. âA real ladies man. They must fawn over you back home.â
âDonât you know it, Caesar,â he says with a proud grin.
Jackass, rascal, play-boy. Haymitch assumes it all, and the audience eats it up. What has he gotten himself into?Â
Caesar comments on his knack for pissing people off and digs for more details on his after-school activities. Haymitch steers clear of any signs that would implicate Hattie. âLetâs just call it science homework. Did you know you can make hooch out of just about anything, Caesar? District Twelve canât brag about much, but weâve got the finest shine in Panem. The base commander will back me up on that!âÂ
âButâŠisnât that illegal?â Caesar leans forward. The room quiets a bit.
âIs it? For real?â Haymitch gapes at a mustachioed man nursing a oversized snifter of brandy. "Youâd think the commander mightâve mentioned that.âÂ
A roar of laughter. Caesar slaps him on the back as the bell rings, signaling the end of his time. âThis oneâs a real rascal, ladies and gentleman! Haymitch Abernathy from District Twelve! May the odds be EVER in his favor!âÂ
Haymitch garners his own standing ovation from half the audience. The cat-eared lady nearly squeals when he winks at her before exiting the stage.Â
Mags and Wiress are waiting backstage as Haymitch walks off. He receives a hug from Mags and a quick nod from Wiress, who tells him he has some sponsors already.Â
âRock-hard body?â echoes Maysilee, snickering alongside Wyatt as Haymitch approaches the rest of the team. So long as he fooled the audience and won over sponsors, he can handle her mockery. He waits for you to chime in with a quip or two.Â
You donât. âNice job,â is all you say before turning on your heels to follow Mags down the halls. Huh. He blames residual nerves and whatever else is weighing on you.Â
Haymitch quickens his pace to keep up as they reach the exit. Heâll ask you whatâs wrong when you get back to the apartment, or when he wakes you up for your turn on watch, or when you wake him. And somewhere in between heâll sneak in the news of him flying solo in the arena. Damage control first, then blow-up.Â
When the team arrives at the van to find Plutarch waiting, Haymitch knows you are not heading to the apartment yet. He sucks his teeth.Â
Plutarch congratulates Drusilla on a job well done wrangling everyone together. âYou know, these kids never got a proper photo shoot. Why donât we swing by my place and correct that? We can even film some footage to have for cameos if they hang in there. Itâd keep others from assuming we arenât doing our jobs.â
Drusilla contemplates his suggestion. âSo long as Magno Stift is never mentioned.âÂ
âMagno who?â says Plutarch. She hums, content, and flounces off to her private car.Â
Effie sighs. âWhy they married in the first place will forever be a mystery.âÂ
Haymitchâs jaw goes slack. You snort. âDrusilla married Magno?â
âYup,â confirms Plutarch. âTheir thirty year anniversary is right around the corner. Now, shall we?âÂ
Mags and Wiress donât join the trip to Plutarchâs mansion, but the rest of you wind up at the threshold soon enough. Plutarch leaves the Peacekeepers at the entrance, claiming his private security team to be sufficient. He narrates a quick history on the estate and the portraits hanging along the hall, much like he did on Haymitchâs earlier visit. He tunes out most of it. He lingers at the entrance to the library, allowing everyone else to file in first.Â
Haymitch makes it two steps inside before you send him tumbling back into the space beneath Trajan Heavensbeeâs watchful eye.Â
Youâre on him in a second, hands on his shoulders, keeping him pinned to the wall. Brain going blank, he doesnât register the inherent threat of the moment. He just sees you, impenetrable walls dropped, fuming and livid and vulnerable. He grabs onto your forearms but doesnât try to push you away. This is safer than your empty smile.Â
Effie shrieks, Drusilla complains, Maysilee chokes on a laugh, Wyatt gasps out a whoa. Plutarch is the only one who makes a move to tear you away. âHey, hey now.âÂ
Neither of you pay him any mind. You demand, âWhat is wrong with you?âÂ
Haymitch opens his mouth to respond, but you barrel over him. âYou couldnât even muster the decency to tell me yourself? You were just going to abandon us without a word?âÂ
Oh. It seems Wellie did get the message around. âSunshineââÂ
âDonât call me that,â you sneer. You rip your arms out of his grasp, shoving his shoulders again and stepping away right as Plutarch reaches to pull you off. He takes one large step back when you rear your head in his direction like heâs the next victim of your tirade.Â
Haymitchâs hands flex around nothing, pathetically itching to reach out for you again. âYou saw my score. I got a one. Itâs notââÂ
You scoff mockingly. âYou got a one, did you? I wasnât aware.âÂ
âLet me talk, will you?â snaps Haymitch, frustrated and scared of failing the rebels, of losing his life, of losing you.Â
âNo!â Your chest heaves, and the scarf around your neck slips forward a little. You throw your hands up in a shrug. âWeâre not allies anymore, so you donât owe me anything, right? And I donât want to hear it.â Your chin quivers, and Haymitch thinks he can hear a piece of his heart chip away. âYouâre a coward, Abernathy.âÂ
Despite his best efforts otherwise, Haymitch remains immobile. He forces his lips to move, but the only sound that slips past is a pitiful murmur of your name. He wanted this, didnât he? Your hate was always the expected outcome. As inevitable as his decision.Â
Drusilla mutters under her breath about the impossibility of taming beasts, and Haymitch can tell she means it specifically for you. He pushes off the wall.Â
Plutarch takes up the space between you and Haymitch, a blockade for him to proceed in any direction. âIf you two are done,â he says before Haymitch even has the chance to insult Drusilla, âwe do need to get those shots.âÂ
âOh, please do,â Drusilla groans. She steps closer to a wide-eyed Effie. âThis stock is much worse than the last. You wouldnât believe how difficult this job is.â
Maysilee rolls her eyes. âHave you considered your retirement is long overdue?â Thank you, Maysilee!
Plutarch clears his throat, seemingly in a hurry himself and desperate to keep another scuffle from arising. A dying president and a pair of loud-mouthed teenagers must be enough action for the Heavensbee estate. âWeâll practice one-by-one in the conservatory. Everdeen, youâre with me first.âÂ
When you donât respond, Plutarch takes that as an okay. He motions for you to follow him, and Haymitch recalls the deadly glare looming above you from the presidentâs terrace, Plutarchâs curious attention back in training, the sight of President Snow tumbling through the flowers. Haymitchâs feet shuffle forward. No. Nope. Donât go.Â
âOh, wait,â says Effie as she prances over to you. Yes, wait! âJust a little touch up.â She applies another layer of lipstick and readjusts your scarf. âGood as new.âÂ
You murmur your thanks and whirl around after Plutarch.Â
Donât go, donât go, donât go.Â
Effie fixes his vest, Drusilla snarls his name, Maysilee grumbles a complaint, Wyatt sidesteps him to observe the library. You disappear down the hallway with Plutarch, and the sun turns its back on Haymitch once more. Â
Plutarch gives you five seconds to catch your breath. Itâs enough time to force back your tears, collect your thoughts, and calculate your next move by the time he opens his mouth.Â
âListen, kid, I know you donât like meââ
âWhat did you say to him?â you cut him off. Haymitch will die before he gives you an honest answer himself. Your eyes sting. Heâs leaving, heâs leaving, heâs leaving to die and youâre to blame.Â
âHm?â Clueless works for the Trinketsâitâs a shallow tactic for Plutarch.Â
âWhat did you say?â you repeat, hands balling into fists. No Peacekeepers or private security in sight. Dumb play on his part.Â
You recognize the melody of the finches chirping overhead. They flitter between tree branches, unbothered by the disturbance of your presence. If the circumstances were less dire, youâd admire the garden more. If it werenât Plutarchâs garden, youâd see it as more than a cage for pretty little things who belong to the wilderness.Â
âI say a lot of things,â muses Plutarch. He brings his fingers to his forehead. âYouâll have to be more specific.â
âWhen you pulled Haymitch away for close-ups.â You take a step down the cobbled pathway, the warm air hitting your lungs with each breath you inhale. Haymitchâs skittishness, his tangle of secretive behavior, his departure from your alliance all lead back to then. âWhat did you tell him?âÂ
âNothing.â
Anger lights a flame inside you, and your lungs start to burn. âIâm not cooperating until you tell me what you said.â You doubt youâre only here for practiceâhe wants something youâre unwilling to give without answers.Â
âNothing,â Plutarch repeats, even-toned. This is all one big show to him, isnât it? âIâm not the one who requested an audience with Haymitch, and I donât know what was said in that room.âÂ
That gives you pause. âWho elseââ You stop short, considering Plutarchâs words, his tone, his casual stance like he has nothing to hide from you. If Plutarch is to be believed, then Haymitch was pulled aside for something more than covert schemes. Faustina Gripper comes to mind, but no, thatâs not correct. Why would the Head Gamemaker want an audience with Haymitch? To punish him for the parade, maybe, but she could easily do that in the Games. She has, and she will.Â
And why would Haymitch be called away when you are equally complicit? The flame in your lungs goes out. An image falls into place: the fearful glare of a frail man.Â
âYouâre a smart kid.â You know the answer.Â
Your mouth goes dry; you try to swallow the lump in your throat anyway.Â
âHereâs what I can tell you,â Plutarch plows through your silence, steering back to the real reason you are here. âA desire for freedom is not limited to the districts, and you possess the rare ability to change peopleâs perception.â
Do I? You laugh bitterly. âThe man who films our final days for entertainment isnât free? Donât tell me youâre forced to do that.âÂ
âNo one forces me,â he concedes.Â
âWhat then? All those years buttering kids up for the slaughter finally melted your conscience?â
âPerhaps. Or perhaps Iâm interested to know if real freedom is possible,â Plutarch says with a little more urgency in his tone. âHavenât you ever imagined a world without the Hunger Games, Miss Everdeen?â
You resist the urge to laugh in his face again. âIâve never known a world without the Games.â
âIf we play our cards right, you will.âÂ
âAnd what cards am I being dealt now, Mr. Heavensbee?â you ask dryly.Â
âThere is a plan to break the arena.â Straight to it then. At least he recognizes youâll respond better to transparency. âDistrict Three is in on it; spear-heading the whole thing, in fact. The details are unimportant.âÂ
âUnimportant?â You sputter, waving your hands around, âWhatâYouâYouâre sitting on knowledge of a rebel plan and you mean to tell me the details donât matter?âÂ
âItâs a risk for you to know everything right now.âÂ
âWhy are you telling me this at all?â Why are you involved?Â
âIâm putting myself at risk here, too, because we need you, Miss Everdeen.â We. Plutarch, the rebels, District Three, andâ
âHow can we break it, Beetee?âÂ
âWho else is in on it?â You donât really need to ask, but the question carries through the wind with a tremor.Â
Plutarch checks his watch. âWe donât have much time left, and like I said, the details are unimportant right now. Are you willing to cooperate?âÂ
Time is ticking away, but you donât respond. The realization sets with a chill in your bones. Haymitchâs skittishness, his secrecy, his departure lead to you, on that stage, damning Haymitch to a death by your side. How selfish of you to expect him to stay there. How foolish of you to not use your death for something greater than yourself.Â
Goosebumps bloom across your arms despite the humidity. Whatâs a final act of recklessness for a cause you are willing to die for? âWhat do you need me to do?â
Plutarch visibly relaxes. You know heâd have found a way to spin you in his favor anyway, but your cooperation takes a load off. âIâll need to borrow that bird of yours.â
Your hand closes around Tam Amberâs gift. The other charms jingle with the force of your movement. Plutarch is rightârevealing his knowledge puts himself at your mercy nearly as much as you are at his. That doesnât mean you trust him. When all is said and done, he is still Capitol. He will never understand.Â
He holds his hands up like heâs approaching a wounded animal. âDonât worry, youâll get it back.âÂ
Doubtful. You tighten your grip, hoping to leave an imprint that will last in the wake of your bluebirdâs absence. What good will your charm even serve him? Plutarchâs likely answer rings in your head. Need-to-know basis.Â
With a shaky breath, you undo the cord and slip the bluebird off. Fortunately it sits at the edge, or else youâd have to undo all of Maysileeâs knots. You press your lips to the charm before handing it over.Â
Plutarch pockets the bluebird after a brief inspection.Â
You clench your jaw, fixing the necklace back under the scarf. âThat it?âÂ
As expected, it is not.Â
âWhen youâre in there, perform as you naturally would, though it wouldnât hurt to add some flare.â You roll your eyes as Plutarch continues, âKeep away from the north. The arenaâs sun isnât always synced to our own, but it will be this year.âÂ
Hm. If the sun is the same, you were right to assume the night sky would be too. And that partially explains Ampertâs resistance to leading the Newcomerâs north. You can only guess what exactly will be happening up there. You wonder if all of Threeâs tributes are part of the plan. It doesnât take a genius to piece together that Beetee is the real spearhead of the logistics.Â
âAnd pay attention to your sponsor gifts,â adds Plutarch.Â
You run a hand along your arm. âMeaning?âÂ
âYou like riddles, right?â Plutarch offers up a smile. âYouâll be able to solve these.âÂ
Somehow, despite the lack of details, you trust that you will.Â
âLast thing: donât die.â Plutarch shrugs. âMore a recommendation than a directive.âÂ
âHelpful,â you mutter, head spinning with what youâve learned and agreed to. Youâre not sure how any of this will be remotely helpful to the grand plan of breaking the arena. ButâŠsabotaging these Games is not where it ends, is it? A free world is made up of more than one act of rebellion.
Effie appears at the door. âMr. Heavensbee? Oh, there you are. Weâre nearly finished the othersâ photos already. Is it almost time to switch?âÂ
Plutarch nods. âYes, we just wrapped up. Come along, Everdeen.âÂ
You inhale another whiff of warm air, picking up the scent of flowers and herbs this time, and walk back up the cobblestoned path.Â
On the trek to the library, Plutarch spends a fair amount of energy reassuring Effie on her decision to forgo cosmetic procedures for the time being. Their conversation is a sharp contrast to the information dumped on your shoulders, but it leaves you space of mull over your vaguely-existent role in the rebel scheme.Â
Halfway down the hall, you think of your paw-paw, a man you seldom remember, old enough to recall the horrors of the Dark Days in a way both of your parents, practically babes at the time, could not. Most often, in the haze of memories, his voice sounds like your papaâs and his words blur like a reflection in a stream. But you hear him clearly now, echoing deep in the forest, under the happiest willow tree youâve ever encountered, you and Burdock nestled on either side: âOne day, sweet ones, this earth will belong to the people again.âÂ
You can fight for one day, for your family, for your people.Â
Maysilee is locked into an argument with Drusilla upon your return. Wyatt stands by the camera like heâs ready to intervene if it escalates. Plutarch rushes over to diffuse the situation and gestures for Effie to prepare you for your photos in the meantime. She already touched-up your lipstick earlier, so there isnât much for her to fix. You let her fuss over you anywayâit keeps you from looking at Haymitch, who makes sure you feel him watching you.Â
You wonât give him the satisfaction of a reaction. Itâs your fault. Iâm sorry. But acceptance doesnât ease the sense of betrayal. Please donât leave. You werenât deserving of his honesty, so he does not deserveâ
Your head snaps in his direction. Haymitch sits up on the couch. His lips move and no sound comes out. Youâre fairly certain he mouths your name. You wonder what he sees in your eyes, because he doesnât move to come closer. You donât want him close, and yet, your fingers twitch at your sides, frustrated by the distance. Best get used to it.Â
When he is the first to look away, your heart cracks openâout spills anger, pride, guilt. They rise to a boiling point, and for the briefest of periods, you fear they are making a permanent home inside you. Then, stubbornly and painfully, they ebb. To your dismay, a familiar sensation takes their place. No. Nope. Absolutely not. You have rebel plans to decipher and the chance for your peopleâs freedom on the line. Anger, pride, guilt hold a welcome place. One day, your family, your people are causes you will fight for. This is not welcome. This is not fight you need.Â
The feeling doesnât listen to you; it never has. It doesn't care that you are confused and scared and mad at Haymitch in spite of all you know and suspect. It festers in your lungs, soaks into your bones, poke holes in your resolve until youâre forced to confront the truth your mama tried to teach you under the safety of a storm:Â
The line between love and hate is a frail, fickle thing, and you do not hate Haymitch Abernathy.Â
A/N: this is lowkey my favorite chapter so far (and the longest). the interviews and entire aftermath were some of the first scenes i thought up for this fic, so this was very satisfying to write! i donât normally include song recs to listen to while reading the chaptersâthe fic playlist is plentyâbut this song was on repeat while i was writing so i thought it deserved an appearance. as always, thank you for all the love!