Felicity "Luckyuro" Yoshida (
talltaleteller) wrote in
thecapitol2015-11-03 10:02 pm
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Entry tags:
Boy, You've Left Me Speechless [Open]
Who| Felicity Yoshida and sympathetic looky-loos you
What| Felicity has herself a great big cry over her dead celebrity crush.
Where| Gary's memorial in the park
When| Week 6
Warnings/Notes| None yet
When the things that are upsetting you are things that are not the slightest bit socially acceptable to be upset about, you hold them in. That's how Felicity is sure that it works. That's the Capitolite way, isn't it? It has to be. Everyone here can't be that callous, that casual, that cold, to just keep shrugging off all the death and dreadfulness. Everyone's got to just be taking the dress-up game to the next level. They've got to, because that means that she can do it, too. She can keep in her fear for her uncle the mentor, and her terror at seeing kids from District 2 be reaped and killed, and her horrible sadness over what had happened to Gary. No one needs to see any of that stuff. It's terrible stuff. Stuff you're not supposed to be feeling. So all her energy goes to smiling and putting on the right sort of face, which doesn't leave a lot of energy for everything else. She hasn't written since the latest arena started. The quality of her schoolwork has started to slip. She hasn't been around to the Tribute Center at all. But everything is fine. Honest.
It is this everything-is-fine effort that has kept her away from the little memorial set up in the park for the late Gary Epps. If she were to show up to it, that would look like she cared. Like it mattered, like she'd put enough of herself into the awful idea of flinging herself at him in some misguided attempt to be kissy-faced besties that she couldn't let it go. But... but she couldn't. And she felt guiltier and guiltier each time she talked herself out of it. The world felt particularly cold and grey and sad today, taken as a whole, and that was the nudge she needed to give in, buy flowers, and make the pilgrimage off her regular beaten path to go and pay her respects.
It's not much, but it's well-maintained. Gary's few fans-past-the-end were devoted, and how much work does it really take to position the stuffed tribbles and tape down the goodbye letters and remove the dead flowers, anyway? The fact that it's not much, though, immediately doesn't sit well with Felicity. He deserved way more than this piddly pile of things. He'd complain if he saw it, definitely. Did anyone really care for him, here? Is that going to be it? Gary Epps, rest in peace, now go be forgotten while everyone moves on to the next big thing. He lived, he died, Panem moves on, and in the end, it didn't matter. It didn't matter that Amelia had volunteered and tried her best for District 2, she was dead, too, and ready to be consigned to history. Things were not bright and nice. Things were not safe and fine. Things were absolutely terrible. This memorial was terrible. It shouldn't even have to be, but it is. Just like a lot of things that shouldn't even have to be.
The tears come on fast, and when she raises a hand to wipe at them, the first sob escapes her. And then the floodgates are open and there is no holding any of the sadness back any longer. One hand clasped over her mouth and the other desperately clutching her bouquet of white daisies and yellow roses, she bawls her little heart out. Most of it's for Gary. Some of it's for other things. All of it is ugly and messy and a long time coming.
What| Felicity has herself a great big cry over her dead celebrity crush.
Where| Gary's memorial in the park
When| Week 6
Warnings/Notes| None yet
When the things that are upsetting you are things that are not the slightest bit socially acceptable to be upset about, you hold them in. That's how Felicity is sure that it works. That's the Capitolite way, isn't it? It has to be. Everyone here can't be that callous, that casual, that cold, to just keep shrugging off all the death and dreadfulness. Everyone's got to just be taking the dress-up game to the next level. They've got to, because that means that she can do it, too. She can keep in her fear for her uncle the mentor, and her terror at seeing kids from District 2 be reaped and killed, and her horrible sadness over what had happened to Gary. No one needs to see any of that stuff. It's terrible stuff. Stuff you're not supposed to be feeling. So all her energy goes to smiling and putting on the right sort of face, which doesn't leave a lot of energy for everything else. She hasn't written since the latest arena started. The quality of her schoolwork has started to slip. She hasn't been around to the Tribute Center at all. But everything is fine. Honest.
It is this everything-is-fine effort that has kept her away from the little memorial set up in the park for the late Gary Epps. If she were to show up to it, that would look like she cared. Like it mattered, like she'd put enough of herself into the awful idea of flinging herself at him in some misguided attempt to be kissy-faced besties that she couldn't let it go. But... but she couldn't. And she felt guiltier and guiltier each time she talked herself out of it. The world felt particularly cold and grey and sad today, taken as a whole, and that was the nudge she needed to give in, buy flowers, and make the pilgrimage off her regular beaten path to go and pay her respects.
It's not much, but it's well-maintained. Gary's few fans-past-the-end were devoted, and how much work does it really take to position the stuffed tribbles and tape down the goodbye letters and remove the dead flowers, anyway? The fact that it's not much, though, immediately doesn't sit well with Felicity. He deserved way more than this piddly pile of things. He'd complain if he saw it, definitely. Did anyone really care for him, here? Is that going to be it? Gary Epps, rest in peace, now go be forgotten while everyone moves on to the next big thing. He lived, he died, Panem moves on, and in the end, it didn't matter. It didn't matter that Amelia had volunteered and tried her best for District 2, she was dead, too, and ready to be consigned to history. Things were not bright and nice. Things were not safe and fine. Things were absolutely terrible. This memorial was terrible. It shouldn't even have to be, but it is. Just like a lot of things that shouldn't even have to be.
The tears come on fast, and when she raises a hand to wipe at them, the first sob escapes her. And then the floodgates are open and there is no holding any of the sadness back any longer. One hand clasped over her mouth and the other desperately clutching her bouquet of white daisies and yellow roses, she bawls her little heart out. Most of it's for Gary. Some of it's for other things. All of it is ugly and messy and a long time coming.
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You really did fall for that offworlder, didn't you? even a Career and a Mentor couldn't stop what was happening in front of their eyes: Felicity had a crush on the now dead pop star. Aemila's disappearance plagued him of course, but he has sent many others like her, volunteers willing to die for their nation, into the Arena. It was his job after all, and until very recently, he had never questioned it. It was the way things were.
Leo placed his hand on Felicity's shoulder and offered her a rare sight: a consoling look and a hug. He was still human after all.
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"I, I'm... I'm okay, it's just... I..." She's disappointed enough in herself, that she doesn't need any additional disappointment from him, too. She couldn't bear it. She might just die, here and now. Her eyes scrunch shut and she looks away.
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His voice, his entire demeanor doesn't read disappointed or scolding, far from it. It is just him watching Felicity be vulnerable and wanting to give her the space and support she needed for this loss. "You can cry."
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She wipes at her eyes carefully, not wanting to completely wreck her makeup, but it's already smudged beyond helping. Well... well, he won't care. He's not the sort of person that matters to. There's another one of those laugh-sob sounds. "Thought you'd be glad he's gone...."
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"Or your uncle?" At least Torin would have been more open to discuss the context...
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She wipes at her eyes again, a little more carefully. "Mom... mom knows?" She peers down at her hand, sees the eyeliner smudged there, and sighs deeply. Nothing to be done for it... "Uncle Torin didn't like him, either. And.. and this is dumb. He doesn't need me being dumb like this. He's got..." Her voice catches, then goes softer. '...so much happening." It's not safe, being a victor. Things are weird and scary right now. And she doesn't want to end up weeping for anyone else.
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But he too shared in that lingering dread, one that had only come up the more he interacted with the offworlders. If there was something sacred it was the Victory Crown itself. And now the Capitol has made it seem like this holy grail was nothing but disposable. Cora was in the service of his District but-
"Your uncle is now safe. He's being cared for and now he is recovering well," he said, the loss in his voice as faint as the whisper he spoke in, not his usual boisterous call.
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"He... he is, right. Almost as good as new." And she smiles, the happiness in it even making it to her eyes, wet and watery as they are. "It's lucky." Lucky that they didn't really kill him. And... maybe if they didn't really, then they'd leave him alone from here. Leave them all be. Let them all just be happy.
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And yet, it wasn't right. It wasn't right that Torin was reaped once more, that all the Victors of Games past were used as some ploy for ratings. They were...disposable weren't they. Anyone from the Districts was disposable.
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"He works really hard. So, so hard... mm, you're right." Well, she wants him to be right. And she can't very well say that he's wrong, can she? She sighs very, very deeply, then turns and goes to set her flowers down. There's a moment spent adjusting them to just the right position, and then she's back up and turning to Leo again.
"...I'm done." And that means he can go. Or she can go. Or they can go. Or whatever.
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Because at the end of the day, she's still growing up and the told-you-so speeches will probably come from her parents rather than him. He just watches the consequences and sternly help her get up.
[ooc: wrap here?]
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She shifts her pace to keep up with Leo, and walks alongside him, both sad and relieved to be leaving Gary's memorial behind. What's done is done. And aren't memorials supposed to be for the living? She heard that somewhere... Uncle Torin's still alive, and he needs tending to just as much. Onwards to chocolate.
[ooc: sounds good!]
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He's still limping a little from the injuries he sustained back in that Mini-Arena, but he does enjoy taking walks in the park from time to time. It's good to keep moving, keep active, even if the Capitol's repeatedly trying to take that from him. And on one such walk, well, he really wasn't expecting to see Felicity there crying like that. The whys are pretty obvious, and even if he'd done his best to discourage the crush--for everyone's safety, he reminded himself--that doesn't mean he wanted this outcome.
He's over there more quickly than he would have thought was possible with that current limp, wasting no time in trying to put a comforting hand on her shoulder.
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"I..." It's muffled, her hand still over her mouth in a vain effort to hold everything in. Her mind is already racing for some way to explain or excuse this, because he can't possibly approve, but nothing's coming. Nothing at all. So she just fixes her tear-filled eyes on him, wishing that maybe he's not going to judge and it's all going to be okay, somehow.
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"Just let it all out." It's the sort of thing he wishes he'd been told, rather than dealing with his father's admonishments to treat things like a man and not to cry. At least he hadn't cried in the Arena. Not once. It made him feel like something that wasn't quite human, even if it had thrilled the media.
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That hug is indeed comforting, and Felicity finds herself relieved to be drawn into it. One hand is still clinging hard to those flowers, but the other grabs onto Torin's coat and holds. She tries to just rest her forehead against him rather than just her face, for her lovely smokey-plum-silver eye makeup is probably running like crazy now. Can't stain his nice suit. Can't.
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And unlike her, he's not worried about the suit. Wouldn't be the first time he'd had a jacket ruined, and this is preferable to Capitolite party mishaps. A worthy sacrifice of a jacket. He moves one of his arms out of that hug just briefly enough to pull a red handkerchief out of one pocket and try to give it to her. "There you go, just get it out..."
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Nothing involving first loves or lost loves, though. Torin's trying to think of a good comedy, most assuredly not a romantic one.
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"I... if we could hang out that's... whatever we do, that's fine."
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And now this. It's just another bleak reminder that no matter how well any of them play the game, it can still be ripped out from under them at a moment's notice. Signless has long since stopped grieving -- he never allows himself to dwell on grieving, not anymore -- but there is still a little extra weight on his shoulders, another box neatly tucked away in the back of his mind to be opened at such a time that it's safe to unpack all the hurt inside it.
He's only here to fix the flowers but all thoughts of that leave his mind when he sees Felicity already there. He thinks of her in much the same way he thought of Gary: optimistic, naive, trying to live in a world where that's often the only way to defense oneself against the bad things that are all around.
"Those are beautiful flowers," he says softly. He doesn't really expect her to respond, not when she's crying, but he wants to let her know he's there. It wouldn't do at all to startle her on top of the pain she's already feeling.
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Those thoughts only make her sadder, make that ache in her chest worse, and so her efforts to get a hold on herself and answer him fail entirely. She gives a few small nods as a sort of response, and curls into herself further, wiping at her eyes with the back of her hand.
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So he goes about what he came here to do: he fixes the flowers, removes the wilting ones, arranges the newer ones nicely. Then he turns to her and holds out his hands.
"Here. I'll add them, if you like." He means her flowers, though he isn't sure if she's ready to let them go just yet. She's holding them so very tight.
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Her emotions are a little bit more under control when Signless turns back to her, but she's still watery-eyed and not sure how to respond just yet. "...no." And she shakes her head as she rushes up forward, closer to the newly-tended memorial. "I, I want to... I want to do it." She had been gripping them tightly, but that's because they were important. They were for Gary. And she should be the one to leave them for him.
Which is what she does, dipping easily down into a crouch and setting them gently with the other fresh flowers, and then slowly drawing her hands back.
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"If you want to talk about it -- about him -- I'll listen."
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"I... I don't know. I do, but..." She lets one hand swing free, fingertips brushing the damp pavement. "...it all feels so stupid. I feel so stupid, thinking that he... he really liked me, but... but that shouldn't matter, because I just want him to be happy and laughing a-and...." And that's when the words get too hard to say, and her throat constricts. That didn't make a lot of sense, did it? She tries to talk again and explain more, but it's not happening. That hanging hand claps over her mouth once more, trying to help in swallowing down a sob.
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Oh.
"I know what you mean," he says, perhaps sensing that she's worried that garbled mess didn't make sense. He would be if he were her. "You shouldn't feel stupid for having loved him. You know how many loved ones I've lost, I'm sure you do, and I don't feel stupid for having cared for them or wishing I could be sure they were safe and happy somewhere. What you're feeling isn't stupid, Felicity."
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"...I write nice stories. I don't get to be in them. I shouldn't have thought I'd get to be in a nice one." It might be hard to understand, for she hasn't dropped her hand far from her mouth and it's said very quietly. "Nothing nice happens for real so... so all I can do is write stories about it, and I should've just done that." She feels less like weeping now, at least. Now she's starting to feel tired and bitter.
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Clara's been busy with other things (her Tributes, mainly. Trying to convince the media that their red scarves were nothing more than a reminder of the blood District 10 had spilled for the Capitol's pleasure in the past and not a way to honor Peggy, and making sure that her girls had the supplies they needed to win) and hasn't had a proper chance to come out to his memorial until now. She's holding some flowers loosely in one hand when she notices the girl. She's familiar, not someone she's ever met, but someone she knows that she's seen around the Tribute Center in the past. She knows that look, the hunched, quaking shoulders and hand muffling her sobs.
Clara's worn that look.
Instead of saying a word, she deposits her own bouquet before putting a gentle hand on the back of Felicity's head, petting her hair down slightly, as if to tell her that she isn't alone.
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It's only after a loud sniffle and a moment taken to wipe her eyes that she realizes who it is, though. Clara Murphy? Really? She looks starstruck, then confused, and then manages a weak "...y-you knew him?"
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Something like the look in the girl's eyes. Which she pointedly tries not to think about, because this isn't about whether or not she wanted to be recognized as a celebrity or any of that, this is about remembering Gary. "Not well," she admits softly, "We met after my Arena and...he was very sweet. He didn't deserve this." Of course, she takes issues with the idea of children dying in general. "Were you two friends?"
She knows she recognizes the girl from around the Tower every now and then, but she can't quite put her finger on why. She knows that she isn't a Tribute, but she has to have some connection, and maybe that was it.
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"I, I wanna think that we were. Maybe we weren't. I was a fan and... and he was really nice, and we kept meeting, and just... we clicked? Like, some people, they click?" As she waits for Clara to confirm her understanding, she sniffles again. "...I guess he was like that with everyone, though."
And there, right in her chest, is a different sort of hurt. The pain of perhaps having not mattered, alongside the pain of losing the chance to ever find out.
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"He was," she says with a fond warmth in her voice. She knows that click that the girl's talking about. The click she felt with Alex, the click she feels with James that makes her feel so guilty. "I'm sure he felt that click too." She isn't certain, but it seems like the right thing to say given the situation.
She finally caves, wrapping her arms around the girl and stroking her hair. "I'm sure he knew that you cared about him."
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The hug is what jolts it all loose, though. Her hands ball, her arms rise, and though she's not quite ready to cling to Clara right back, she finds some of her words. "I just wanted to be his friend and... and maybe more too but even if I couldn't be because he doesn't like that I just wanted..."
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"It's okay," she says softly, a warm, melodic, almost sing-song tone to her voice, as if trying to wrap a verbal fuzzy blanket around the girl. She knows it isn't okay, that nothing about this situation is even close to okay, but that right now she needs to lie because it's something that might give her some comfort. (Clara knows all about lies for the sake of having a little bit of comfort.) "It's okay to be lost about these things," she says, amending her previous statement, because she knows that 'It's okay' can come off as condescending, even if she doesn't mean for it to.
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"S'not okay to be lost." She gives a sniffle, voice quieter than ever. Quiet enough that, she hopes, only Clara can hear. "You get lost, you get left behind and no one's there to help you and you're done for."
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There's something about her that's...not quite hopeful. It's hard to be hopeful in the face of something like a young man's death, but it's something resembling it. "Sometimes getting lost along the way is part of growing up."
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Felicity takes a long breath in, holds it, and then lets it all out in an explosive sigh. "...that makes sense. That makes a lot of sense." She does not feel good now, but she doesn't feel completely emotionally wrecked anymore, either. Just quiet and sort of empty. Hesitantly, she pulls back from Clara, and offers her a weak smile. "Hey... hey, thanks."
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But the fact, at the end of the day, is that Clara can see a little bit of herself in Felicity. Both the being lost and the pain, anger, grief, that hollowness that comes from a painful deep loss. Clara knows those things intimately. And, more than that, she knows that dealing with all that alone is definitely not ideal. "I'm glad I could help." She reaches out, gives the younger girl a gentle shoulder squeeze. "You're stronger than you realize. It'll be hard, but so's growing up."