Bear in Mind & Bear It All [id v teddies]
Nov 26, 2013 0:14:57 GMT -5
Post by Deleted on Nov 26, 2013 0:14:57 GMT -5
[/color] There had to be some sick soul in Panem that was rogering about this sort of thing, no doubt.
I a g o
I z a r – M c C l a i n e
It came out in explosions, really. Large, brown, syrupy explosions that erupted with the very hellish lava fire that could only compare to what Hope must have felt in her last moments. The diarrhea had started just before the anthem, when I had ducked behind a small patch of ferns to get away from my allies. I hadn’t been the one caught by the jaws of the pitfall lizards, but my body was showing all the signs that something was amiss—sweaty palms, a feverish forehead, cotton mouth—I wracked my brain trying to think just what could have possibly been the cause. The small tin of applesauce, now next to empty in my purse, was the sole answer for my condition. I could only grit my teeth and grunt as I evacuated my bowels with a squish onto the waiting ground. Were people watching this on camera?
I didn’t expect Beatrice to be first. I gagged into my hands when I saw her face, and felt the bile splash through my fingers just as she was starting to fade. I wish I could’ve felt more—especially for the spare moments we spent in the training center together—but who was I to say what I was to feel? Better dead than alive, riddling my thoughts with questions, making me wonder just what she had thought of me. Cerise followed, and much to my surprise, considering how much of a threat she had been. Inbetween squeezing out another explosive spray, I had thought she would have been one of the few that would bring a knife against my neck, but I supposed, much like the mess behind me, she’d been undone through means that were not her choosing. Shadow’s face had me gagging again. I’d felt a cold numbness for him since the third day, and never thought much more than that. He’d burned of revenge and suffered some sort of price for it, I suppose.
The boy from nine was unfamiliar to me. All the better, seeing as I was still doubled over in pain from the fire coming out of my backside. We had never said one word to one another, and I hadn’t thought he would make it much farther than two steps out of the bloodbath. Was that a compliment? I licked my lips and did my best to clean myself. I doubted the others would say anything, save for Emery, about my condition. I didn’t want to show my weakness around all of them, but it was hard to hide the fact that I needed to disappear every so often. That and I threw up into my hands several times—not orange and frothy, but the yellow bile that stuck to my fingers and dripped down the sides of my cheeks. I soldiered on, despite the pain in my stomach. There were but eight others remaining, just a hop, skip, and jump toward home.
From my knowledge, I’d gone as far as any District Eleven Male was intended. Denver Samuels placed tenth, and Benat eleventh. Dying now would leave me an aspiration—god, was this something to aspire to? I bet the mushmouths of district eleven would, though. They were all the sort of idiots that, even when someone was an absolute monster, they could stand behind them as one of their own. I wondered if Sampson saw me one way or another. He could have been the one gathering up the few ratty coins from neighbors, friends, others—all to send me a new jar of tar for the days ahead. I couldn’t help but think that he was the one giving his all. Was that foolish?
It must have been toward noon when we reached the beanstalk. There were stories I’d heard, of giants, that explained an absurd tale about a boy and his chasing of golden eggs. Silly stories, the same ones that my mother had tried to put into my head as a child. They should have comforted me, seeing as so many of them had been turned to life here. I had had enough stories, though. I didn’t need things that weren’t real—god if there was anything that I wanted, it was reality. My stomach let out a low rumble, and I gave a wave to my allies. I felt like falling to my knees then and there, but forced another step. Small, padded footsteps rang out and I blinked, thinking that I must have been seeing things. A trove of bears approached, looking the same as one that Sampson used to cradle underneath his arms. Well, except for the claws at the ends of their limbs and the sharp fangs set about their mouths.
[Iago Izar-McClaine lights his glaive with tar and a match]
[Iago slashes his glaive at bear #1]
[dice=200+13000]
[Result:Deep Gash on Chest -- 9.5 damage]
[dice=50]
[result: Extinguished]
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