I Can Be the One You Call [Shy/Delroy]
Oct 6, 2020 19:39:37 GMT -5
Post by marguerite harvard d2a (zori) on Oct 6, 2020 19:39:37 GMT -5
He’d wanted to hesitate when she’d asked him. It felt as though this was just another thing being slung on his back to carry. What did she expect of him, in the face of near certain death, that he was supposed to put his neck out for a boy he didn’t even know?
But if Carmen Stirling had been one thing, it was persuasive to a fault.
It’d been the first games that he’d watched proper, the eightieth.
She’d shown such mettle that the whole district had been proud of her. And when she’d gone ahead and sacrificed her life for a boy that she’d known for less than week, it solidified her to a sort of saintly status that he didn’t think would ever fade. At least, not for a good while. Even as she’d stood in the justice building then and there, Delroy had felt starstruck, he supposed. As though someone who’d seen too much and knew so much better than he did, was asking him to do the right thing.
Delroy found himself staring at Shy Aubergine from the end of the line in the mess hall. His tray in hand, he felt as though his feet were stuck to the tiles underneath.
Six years ago, he’d fought his way from start to the very end. And even if Shy had been first to fall out of the four, it’d still meant he’d made it. Things could’ve easily gone the other way, and for a boy of twelve, he’d always have pushed past the odds anyone had given him.
What was it like being back here? Delroy wondered. He swallowed down the rest of what twisted in his throat, and started on his way over.
“Shy Aubergine,” Delroy put his try down onto the table and started to slide in across from him, “What’s up, bud?” He started pulling his utensils out of the little plastic packets and cutting through the warm biscuit at the side of his plate. “I thought I would come over and introduce myself,” Which wasn’t a totally awkward way for this to start, Delroy wanted to add.
“Delroy Wickersham. Eleven. Smartest boy in the district,” He added the last part as a flourish, “And I’m here to say,” I leaned back to take a bite of the biscuit, “That we ought to get to know each other.”