TASK 010 // HAPPY HALLOWEEN
Couple’s Costume: Mermaid Man (Maverick) and Barnacle Boy (Alder)
Because they’re gay. Duh.
@alder-reid
seen from China

seen from T1
seen from Poland
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Malaysia
seen from Switzerland
seen from China

seen from Malaysia
seen from France
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Canada
TASK 010 // HAPPY HALLOWEEN
Couple’s Costume: Mermaid Man (Maverick) and Barnacle Boy (Alder)
Because they’re gay. Duh.
@alder-reid
A LIVING DEATH // SELF-PARA
The flashbacks don’t take long to start. For a person who’s been transplanted into a new body, it becomes increasingly difficult to tell what’s real and what isn’t. He isn’t real because he can’t be real. The laws of possibility state strictly that the dead remain dead, and yet, here he is. The dead, walking through an empty home.
His new house is for him and him only. His parents and several siblings meet him at the train station when he gets home but he refuses to speak to any of them.
He can’t listen to what they have to say. He doesn’t want to hear it, whatever empty words they might have for him, or worse, if they have love.
No one is allowed in. Maverick is not allowed in, not even allowed to talk to him. He walks past Agatha’s empty house, the lights darkened. He often finds himself in Orpheus’s bed, discovering his new body, discovering that the only thing approaching pleasure is in the carnal. Nights slip by. His old weed dealer is happy to see him.
The first flashback is in his cavernous bedroom, which he learns is cold in the winters. It feels like the bitter mountaintop, and suddenly the covers are not simply cotton, but rather, a blanket of snow, and before him is Seraphina: Take care of yourself Everett, and I’ll catch you in the next lifetime, okay?
How? His voice is an echo and is begging. It is raw, he is raw. He’s not sure if he’s speaking aloud or not, but no one is here to confirm. How do I take care of myself, Sera, how?
The Bonk Alliance (minus one)
Night 3, Sector XIII.
@alder-reid @firststarisee2night
TASK 006 // VACATION
The perfect vacation would be in the mountains with Alder. If it were summertime, there’d be hiking, fishing, and swimming in alpine lakes; in the winter, he’d teach Alder to ski or snowboard. They’d stay in a cozy cabin with a wood-burning fireplace, where they’d sit with Trouble (who would have to wear sweaters to keep warm) and drink hot toddies and stay up talking and laughing all night.
A silver parachute drifts slowly to the ground. A small box is attached with a note from Alder Reid. Inside is a painkiller tablet. The note reads: “We've got your back.”
Once the whirlpools dispersed, Madeleine and Lara quickly and quietly parted ways. They had different ideas about what the right thing to do was, which was perfectly acceptable if you asked Maddie. In such a high stakes game, going with your gut was essential. It wasn’t like she wasn’t used to being alone.
The entrance no longer blocked left her with an opening to emerge back to the surface world and onto another sandbar. Unless someone came out of the same tunnel or made their way to her on a boat, Madeleine was safe. This was fortunate, as a series of beeping sounded from above and descended upon her, drawing all the attention of no one to her on that silent night. Not one, not two, but three whole boxes. She wondered how Lara would feel about her now that she was swimming in presents. Her mentor team had pulled through where she felt Lara’s may not. Unfortunate.
A gift from the positive girl she’d met in the middle of the night, crackers gone in a second to stop the emptiness in her stomach from spreading. She wanted to laugh at the note, but instead simply treated the little note with extra kindness instead of tossing it aside. Alder’s gift seemed strange until she remembered how badly her wrist was still hurting. Her body had been unable to worry about it when the threat of drowning was around her. Though she didn’t have anything to wash it down with, the painkiller slid down her throat as easily as the crackers had. There was no telling how fast it would begin working, but she was thankful for it.
Lastly, she pulled out a pair of goggles from the woman she had met briefly at the window of the 7th floor. It wasn’t something she knew existed. Glasses to see beneath the sea all around her. The world of the living wasn’t foreign to her, but the watery depths were. Her natural gifts allowed her to see what she wasn’t supposed to. With the goggles, she would again have the edge she needed.
A silver parachute drifts slowly to the ground. A medium box is attached with a note from anonymous. Inside is a large meal and socks. The note reads: “Make the food last."
Memphis didn’t often pray for his own blessings, but he sent a thank you to the big guy in the sky and the nameless person in the Capitol who had watched him long enough to know he’d gone without proper food. The bread he received was soft as though it had just been baked. Something green and thin invigorated him and made him more confident he could continue on for at least one more day.
He was reminded of Sunday dinners at home in District 9. Mom would spend early mornings cooking up all sorts of foods, the kitchen a complete mess until later that evening when Memphis and his sisters would clean it all up. His dad, a hard-working man, wouldn’t show up until right before it was ready. He’d be sweaty and exhausted from the day’s efforts, but never missed a meal with his family. He and his sisters would chat about work, school, and the goings-on of the district. All sorts of folks would come round in the evenings, regardless if they were invited or not. No invitation was needed though. Any seat open was a seat you could sit in at the Shiloh home.
The young man almost projected himself all the way across the country back to the table he’d grown up at. When he snapped back to reality, he wasn’t there, but he wasn’t without company. A grumpy friend who seemed less grumpier as the days went on and another friend he couldn’t have been happier to see alive. They were no different than the Wheatgrass family, all a little strange like the daughter they had produced, who would come over for bonfire sing-a-longs. Alder reminded him of Uncle Yeller, an elderly man who hobbled through the rows and who wasn’t actually anyone’s uncle. Of the many faces that had come and gone to family dinners, Memphis knew he could see all of them at once and wouldn’t be able to tell the difference between the ones he knew then and the ones he knew now. Family and friends were family and friends. Both groups ever growing.
With that thought, Memphis broke off two pieces from the bitten loaf of bread and handed a piece to both of the friends he was glad to share a meal with.