As they emerged from the jungle thicket, Aspen stopped dead in her tracks. It was supposed to be an animal they were hunting, but it wasn’t. No, it was the little girl from District Ten, the one she had shared pictures with. Finley. Her mouth formed an O as she stood there shocked at the scene before her.
Aspen knew she wasn’t supposed to cry, this was the Hunger Games, but she couldn’t help the tears that threatened to spill over at the sight of Finley on the ground. She was so little there with her stuffed toy.
Instinctively she wanted to help, but she knew there wasn’t any helping the girl. Instead, Aspen looked at Joule for guidance. @joulexshapiro
Joule’s heart sunk into her stomach as the cry of pain emerged from the girl she’d accidentally shot.
Frankly, she didn’t know how to feel. She stood there, numb, right hand still on the crossbow as her arm dropped to her side. Logically, this was good, right? One less obstacle towards getting her back home. But… it didn’t feel good. Of course it didn’t feel good, but she knew intrinsically that it was a necessary evil towards getting home.
But as much as she knew the facts and inevitability of what would happen, Joule Shapiro still felt that rolling nausea of horror sitting in her stomach.
“Oh… I…” she could barely get out, trying to say something to the girl. Finley. District Ten. “I didn’t…”
Joule’s words were stuck in her throat, and she shut her mouth, worried that if any more came out, they wouldn’t be the only thing coming up. She turned to Aspen, who had tears rolling down her face, and tried not to look at the little dying girl in front of her that she’d effectively murdered. The cannon hadn’t gone off, but Joule knew enough that it wouldn’t be a surprise when it did. // @finleyottern
Finley’s breath began to draw more rapid, more frantic, as she looked up to the girls. The tears broke, spilling over her cheeks and mixing with the blood she was coughing up. So briefly, the pain took her mind off of her shyness, or perhaps gave her a boost in confidence, in adrenaline. Her fingers grew weak around the parrot as the pain took over, and she choked out another cry. “Wh-hy?” Finn whispered, breath ragged. These girls had been kind to her in training. Aspen had shared her drawings and Joule had looked so beautiful in her dress. Why would she shoot her? Why?
“W-want my m-om,” Finley whispered, almost undetectably. “Want... to go home.” To Birch! What was Birch going to do? What was he going to think if she couldn’t come home? And what about... “Bunnies,” she whispered, another wave of tears coming as she panicked. She took another heaving breath, one last one. A shuddering stop, a helpless look, a feeble hug of the parrot. A still body.
The tale of Finley Ottern was not a long one. She did not have the time or space to extend any more chapters or pages. Fate is often cruel in that way. And, yes, as the cannon fired, this was the end of Finley Ottern’s story. But as stories end, new ones begin. And perhaps Finley’s death, unlike many of the other children who died year after year, would change the world.
Arlo outstretched his hand, and Finley took it, the beginning of a new story. // @couscous-dale