#I am so glad I keep Gale alive at all costs because I could not live with hurting Tara like this
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
Four Steps to Being Single
Written by: @wingletblackbirdā
Betaed by: @butrfac14
Prompt 24: Canon Divergence. Through the years Katniss canāt stop paying attention to Peeta and sheās actually aware of it. When they settle as victors in district 12 or when the time for the victory tour comes (whichever you prefer) she canāt keep herself away from him and the line between friendship and something more becomes blurry until it disappears. [submitted by anonymous]Ā Ā
Rating: General
Four Steps to Being Single
Step 1: Go For the Impossible
I couldnāt say when it started, noticing Peeta Mellark. Well, I mean, I know when I first noticed him, as in learned his name. It was after he gave me the bread and risked a beating from his mother to do it.
Ā āWhoās that boy?ā Iād asked Madge casually one day. Although Iām not certain I succeeded at casual, since it is not in my nature to inquire about strangers, let alone ones from Town. I tried to cover by saying that I thought my father used to trade with his family.
Ā āPeeta Mellark,ā Madge told me. āHeās my cousinās best friend. Heās quite nice.ā
Ā And so he was.
Ā I waited for the other shoe to fall, but it never did. He never in word, gesture, or deed made me feel small. Never, to my knowledge, boasted, bragged about, or mocked my situation to his friends. Never cornered me and asked for favours in return. That was why I first watched him. He sometimes watched me too, and I figured that mustāve been because he was checking up on me, the starving girl he saved. It wounded my pride a bit, and I clung to the resentment like a shield, watching to see if there were anyway to repay him. There really wasnāt, not in scope. Approaching him would probably make things worse if it got back to his mother anyway.
Ā So I watched him then not because I feared his price, but because nothing should hurt this kind boy. I watched him to see what the smallest acts of courage and kindness could wrought. My life saved, my family saved, and through my mother and sistersā healing hands, who knows how many lives touched? All because of Peeta Mellark. No, I could never repay him. Even now, he gives me hope. When all I see is cruelty, and death, and hard-heartedness, there existed that one person who not only was kind, but resiliently so, even in the face of personal cost. Yes, I watched Peeta Mellark, but when did it go from hope, and gratitude, and fear toā¦.attraction?
Ā I donāt know.
Ā I watched him hanging around with his friends and was glad he had them. Marvelled at his talent as an actor at school plays. Seethed when he was teased for his gifts, for his height. Watched as he excelled in wrestling after his growth spurt. The broadening of his shoulders, and the development of his muscle mass gave me comfort in the fact that he was more able to protect himself now.
Ā I watched him become so popular, youād never guess heād ever noticed a girl like me. But he never stopped being gentle or nice. I knew his schedule, observed in gym class that he always double-knotted his shoes, remembered his shifts at the bakery. I was just keeping tabs on him like I should given the debt owed. Right?
Ā And if I ever got upset when girls talked about him, it was only because they were vain, self-centered, and shallow. Peeta Mellark was owed more than that. Thatās all. I was like his little protector, because I owed him. No other reason. I really never thought otherwise, never gave much thought to it at all. I can never peg when it started, only the moment of realisation.
Ā It was so simple.
Ā It was a cold winterās day; I had come a bit too early to trade at the bakery, so Mr. Mellark had invited me to wait inside for a bit, and taken my coat before giving me my bread. Peeta was on the early rotation that morning, and heād been the one to package it. Heād been the one to escort me out, and heād been the one who had courteously and gallantly gotten my fatherās coat. He hadnāt just helped me slip it on either. (And I was intimately aware of every movement as his arms went around me, and his fingers brushed my shoulder, just so.) Oh, no. Thatās not good enough for Peeta Mellark. Peeta took the time to help me button it up, then to roll up the cuffs on the sleeves that were far too long for my bony arms.
Ā āItās fine. I can do it myself.ā Iād bit out, never liking to feel vulnerable, being the center of attention, and Peeta made me feel that way, which is why in spite of myself my tone came out harsher then Iād have liked, especially given who I was talking to.
Ā āItās alright. I donāt mind.ā Heād smiled at me, and it was shy, hesitant, gentle, hopeful, sincere and so blue. My body thrummed like Iād unwittingly placed my hand on the electrified fence. I opened my mouth to make a quick retort about personal space, but my mouth felt dry. I couldnāt focus it, so I bolted out like a crazy person. I was never looking him in the eye again, but I couldnāt shake the feeling. Now that I was aware of it, I was aware of it.
Ā Still, I reasoned, all told, if I must endure this feeling, like all creatures of the wild. Better instead to pine for the boy I can never have, because that way thereās no need for awkward refusals and explanations. No chance of having to deal with it all. I am never getting married, or having kids. As for Peeta Mellark, the popular, golden boy, wrestling champion noticing me? He may as well fall in love with the mud on his boots. Really, I was absolutely safe.
Ā Step 2: Enforce Boundaries
āIt was all for the Games,ā Peeta says. āHow you acted.ā
Ā āNot all of it,ā I say, tightly holding onto my flowers.
Ā āThen how much? No, forget that. I guess the real question is whatās going to be left when we get home?ā
Ā I look up, but I donāt really know what to say. The depth of feeling I felt when he almost died, every timeĀ he almost died, when they separated us, itās so deep Iām not sure I can see the bottom. Itās like being afraid of heights. I never dreamed he might feel for me what I did for him. Or rather, I dreamed it upon a rare occasion, but never presumed it would ever, ever be reality. Who could have seen this coming? And was it real? My caring for him might have been, but most every way I acted was for the cameras, and now that theyāre goneā¦
Ā I canāt have kids. I canāt go through that. How much is going to be left when we go home? I donāt know. He can never be more than my friend. Heād move on though. Probably. There are loads of women whoād want Peeta Mellark, victor, many more than would have wanted him before. I would just get in the way.
Ā I look down at the flowers in my hand. The wild onions which remind me of my life before the Reaping, of Gale. Heād hate me being with any Townie. He barely tolerates Madge, and while Iām not inclined to let Gale dictate my friendships, Iām not in the mood to deal with the fallout either. I wish things would go back to the way they were before, simpler, without the blood of children on my hands, before Peeta and I had ever shared a conversation, when it was safer. And maybe that would be better for him too, a clean break. I donāt know how to say this the right way without crushing him. Iām not good with words at the best of times. Peeta is fidgeting and huffing and clearly expecting an answer.
Ā āI donāt know. Iāweāll be neighbours. Weāll see each other. I donātāā
Ā āItās fine.ā He cuts in abruptly raising his palm towards me in a gesture to stop. āItās fine. I shouldāve seen this coming. Itās fine. Iāll justā¦stay away. Wonāt mess things up for you.ā
Ā āPeeta, wait!ā I call out, but heās marching off to the train, his shoulders are so tense they remind me of rocks. I drop the flowers to the ground and collapse. Mid-sob I realise I donāt want to be caught crying out here, so I head straight to my room and lock it where I lie on the bed. I cry until I sleep. Youāre not supposed to feel loss for people who are alive.
Ā Peeta and I donāt talk again for weeks.
Ā I miss him. I try to go through the motions of being who I used to be. The girl who hunts in the woods with her friend, Gale. It doesnāt work though, because that Katniss doesnāt know what it feels like to be in the games, to be the prey, to be on the receiving end of Peeta Mellarkās affection. Even when Iām not having nightmares, I dream of him. I hunt. I come home. I see his house, and I worry. I yearn, and it scares me so much I rush back inside and try not to think about it.
Ā As time goes by, I know this isnāt feasible. Thereās the Victory Tour, and mentoring, and Peeta and I will always be neighbours. His words, Iāll stay away, echo through my ears, and I know I have to find the courage to talk to him, because I donāt want that. I never wanted that. I hadnāt told him that. Weāre going to have to work together anyway, get along. So I storm across to his front door, and in my determination knock far more harshly than I likely should. Iām scared Iāll lose my nerve.
Ā āKatniss?ā I have clearly woken him up. Heās been sleeping even though itās almost noon.
Ā āDid I wake you?ā Itās a stupid question given heās bleary-eyed, and his hair is sticking up every angle, and his shirt is all rumpled, but itās supposed to be polite, isnāt it? And Iām no good at this stuff.
Ā āUm, yeah.ā His voice sounds hoarse from sleep and he blinks a few times to orient himself. āWhy donāt you come in?ā
Ā I nod, and brace myself to enter, preparing for what, Iām not even sure. His house is much like ours, but his colour scheme is different. Itās clear he hasnāt done much with the place. Hasnāt tried to personalise it. He lives here, but it doesnāt look like he considers it home.
Ā āIs there anything, youād like to drink? Eat?ā
Ā āNo, itās fine. I just wanted to talk.ā
Ā He sighs, and looks resigned to misery. Frankly I feel a touch annoyed at his melodrama, but I follow him into the living room and sit on the sofa across from him.
Ā There is an awkward silence. If I ever had a biography written about me, it ought to be called just that. Unless Iām in the woods. Silence is a language in the woods, and Iām a native speaker. Peeta isnāt making it easy either. Ā Heās leaning forward, his elbows resting on his knees, watching me intently. I feel pinned. Clearly I am required to start this conversation.
Ā āI donāt want you to think I want you to stay away from me.ā He looks nonplussed. So I clarify, as I grip and ungrip my hands in lieu of biting my nails. I am stiff as a board on this stupid sofa. āYou said that at the train stop, that youād stay away. I donāt want that.ā
Ā āYou donāt?ā He asks tentatively and his head rises just slightly. I can see hope glow in his eyes, but itās so fragile a babyās breath could puff it out.
Ā āNo. I mean, we have to work together, and Iāā
Ā He huffs, interrupting me, and leans back against the sofa, shaking his head. He looks put out.
Ā āLook, Katniss, if this is about the Tour, or the Games, or the cameras. I wonāt let you down, but Iām notā¦justā¦ā He waves his hands erratically in frustration. āDonāt lie. Donāt say you want me around when you donāt.ā
āIām not!ā I shout. I am incensed he would think that of me, and Iāve had more than enough of his self-pity. āI never said that. Why would you think that? Look, Iām not getting married, okay? Iām not having kids. Itās nothing to do with you.ā I cross my arms and my legs petulantly. I am mad. He should know it. Idiot. āI decided that years ago, so you can stop acting like a kicked puppy, because itās really getting annoying.ā My tirade slows as I see poor, Peetaās jaw hanging open. āLook, I donāt want to hurt you, but I can only be your neighbour, okay? Iām pretty sure thatās what I said in the first place. Itās nothing personal.ā Ā Ā
Ā Peeta nods slowly, like heās absorbing it all. Finally, he apologises.
Ā āIām sorry. Iā¦I just thought you were doing what you had to do, and Iām grateful you were looking out for me too, but I didnāt think that meant you wanted to be around me. Why would you? And I thought Gale might be upset. Andāā
Ā āHe is. He doesnāt like people from Town, but itās not like that anyway. I told you. No marriage. No kids. Gale knows how I feel.ā I shrug. āNow you do too.ā I look away, because I canāt make eye contact with him, and I donāt know what to say. I almost feel like Iām lying. Fortunately, Peeta has never been troubled by such things.
Ā āWell,ā he says wryly after he collects his thoughts, āwhatās your favourite colour?ā
Ā We grin.
Ā Step 3: Maintain Boundaries
Having Peetaās friendship makes things easier, so much easier. I donāt have to hide from him, or explain things. Mom and Prim understand the flashbacks, and the nightmares, but I donāt want to talk to them. Prim is so young, and with Momā¦itās just hard. I donāt want to add to her burdens. Gale would rather pretend nothing happened, yet somehow still seethes. Peeta though, he was there. He knows me. He goes through it with me. When I jump at loud noises, he quips a one-liner with an empathetic look in his eyes. I am still Katniss, just extra jumpy. He has an entirely different approach to handling nightmares though. He paints. I donāt know how he can stand it. I try to avoid that part of my life entirely the way you jerk your hand off of a hot oven. Peeta feels he has to remember it though.
Ā āIt helps to realise that itās just a nightmare,ā he explains. āWhen I paint it. I have control over it, distance.ā
Ā āBut you still have nightmares.ā
Ā āYes, but it happened. I donāt know if I want to forget what happened there.ā He glances at me out of the corner of his eye as we examine his work. āShould Rue be forgotten?ā
Ā Tears fill my eyes, and I want to glare at him, but I canāt. I let him wrap his arms around me, and I press my face against his warm, strong chest, and the tears flow. I do nothing to stop his affection. He rests his cheek against the top of my head.
Ā āIām sorry,ā he whispers. āI just want to find some meaning in it.
Ā āThere isnāt. One manās power trip. Capitol cruelty.ā Itās risky saying it, but I donāt care.
Ā āI know, butā¦I survived, and I canāt get past that I am alive, because so many arenāt. Good people. Children like Rue. I need toā¦acknowledge that. Live somehow in a way that doesnāt dishonour that.ā Heās choking up now too, and I hug him tighter. We stay like that for a very long time, until our arms hurt, and itās hard to stand. Then we sit, and stay wrapped up for even longer. I feel safe.
Ā It doesnāt entirely stop the nightmares, but sharing with Peeta does decrease their severity and frequency. At least when I wake up, it can be easier. I am up every morning to check on the snare line for Gale, and when I return, I help Peeta with his bread routes. Peeta bakes where I hunt. He takes cat naps while the dough is rising, or the bread is in the oven. True to his desire to make his survival mean something, he delivers the bread to the Community Home, and leaves other loaves in the trash bins in Town where he knows starving Seam children will find him. When he first brought me with him I wanted to lean up and whisper in his ear that I thought he was amazing, that I desired him too. But I donāt. I canāt.
Ā Instead I tell him he has inspired me. Itās true. I decide my so-called talent will be gardening and botany. Itās just a cover so I can plant berry bushes, and fruit trees, and vegetables inside the fence. Maybe, itās not much, but I know what a difference even two loaves of bread can make between life and death. I think of Rue in the plants, how she wanted me to win. Peetaās right. This makes me feel like, somewhere, sheās smiling.
Ā Thatās the only downside to being with Peeta really. He does something seemingly small, and I almost combust. Itās the yearning, the want to run my fingers through his hair, to hold his hands, to caress his jaw, to sit on his lap, to kiss him until I canāt feel my lips. I never do, and it takes more discipline than I expect, since I know he would welcome my attentions. I guess I am the Girl on Fire. I spend a lot of time gazing at him when I know he isnāt looking. When heās painting is an excellent time. Peeta gets so focused, still, hinting at entire worlds locked away inside him. His hands are gentle, but precise, as he places each stroke of the brush. I pretend to read in the corner, but more often than not, I just watch him, bask in him, the knowledge he is alive, safe, for now.
Ā Sometimes I fall asleep in that corner, and Peeta will pick me up, carry me to bed, and carefully tuck me in. One time, I groggily grasp his hand and ask him to stay. So he does. He crawls into the bed alongside me and I nuzzle into his chest as he wraps his arms around me and I drift off dreaming of warmth and sunshine.
Ā It starts a pattern. I join Peeta in his morning catnaps, and I like it so much, I take to dragging blankets down and creating a nest in front of the fireplace during mid-afternoon, when everyone, insomniac or otherwise, gets sleepy. Maybe itās just an excuse, but Iāll make any I can to spend more time in Peetaās arms. Sometimes, more often than not, if I wake before him, I run my fingers through his curls, or down his cheek. I kiss his forehead, and eyes, and nose, and cheeks, and sometimes even his lips. He sleeps like a log so he never notices. I doubt heād mind though, so I keep doing it, because when affection bubbles up inside me, this is the best way I can think of to handle it. That, and fussing over him, or bringing him meat. Iām not good with words, so I just do stuff and hope people understand. Prim used to tease I was like Buttercup bringing in trophies of dead mice for his loved ones. I resent the comparison, probably because itās accurate. Peeta and I call each other every night, especially when the nightmares are bad. Often I slip over just to be sure heās still breathing.
Ā We never have to worry about anyone interrupting us. Sometimes Peeta visits his family in Town. Even more rarely, his father, and occasionally one of his brothers will drop by. They arenāt a close family. Peeta confesses his mother pitched a fit at the idea of living so close to the Everdeens, then said it was too far from the bakery, and didnāt look good, or whatever. The truth is sheās a witch. When Peeta says itās just as well, they never got on anyway, the woebegone look in his eyes makes me wrap my arms around him, and I do kiss him on the cheek. I rest my head on his shoulder. Itās not right the way they treat him. I donāt understand it. I never even wanted to love anyone, and I couldnāt help myself. Worse still, I feel bad for being so hard on him when he stopped talking to me for awhile, because I can understand now why he leapt to all the wrong conclusions. If your family rejects you, I suppose you come to expect it. It hurts my heart. I want to wrap him up in cotton wool and place him on a really high shelf where nothing will ever wound him again. I feel like a dragoness who hisses and spits at anyone who would dare try to steal her gold hidden deep in a cave, except it is not gold I guard, but my golden boy, the sunshine boy, the boy with the bread. Hiss. My sweet boy. I really am very feral.
Ā āWe can be your family.ā I whisper into his ear one day as we are lying together, and it is worth every bit of anxiety I feel to see the lazy grin spread across his face.
Ā āIād like that.ā
Ā Mom and Prim are healers at heart. They take Peeta in like heās a wounded puppy.
Ā Itās ironically the best summer of my life. I donāt worry about food, or warmth, or winter. I go on picnics. I swim in the lake. I teach Peeta to swim, (which is playing with that fire, but I regret nothing.) I stargaze. I curl up like a cat, and stretch when I get up. The only struggle is Gale. I wish it wasnāt so, because he has been my support for years, but I find I have to hide most of my life from him. He resents me living in Victorās Village, I think. He despises hearing about Peeta. He wonāt talk about the mines, which I donāt suppose I can blame him for, but that only leaves the woods and his family to talk about. Since Hazelle keeps me informed about that, itās really just the woods. It wouldnāt be an issue, the woods have always been ours, except his bitterness spills out over sometimes. His eyes flash, and his jaw tenses. The air feels sharp and dangerous. I canāt abandon him though, and I cannot even fathom how awful it must feel to be so trapped. I garner the impression he feels cheated out of something. I do what I can to lift his spirits, have him enjoy his one day above ground. We find our new routine, But the last Sunday before the train comes he presses a kiss on me.
Ā āI had to do that. Just once.ā He says before storming away. I donāt know what to make of it. I stand stupefied for awhile, never having really considered that it could be a future with me he feels so cheated of. It would never have happened anyway. I donāt dare tell him that.
Ā To add insult to injury, I am forced to talk with President Snow.
Ā Step Four: Throw Your Hands up in Despair
āWas that really the only time you kissed Gale?ā
Ā My eyes widen that heās even asking me. āYes!ā
Ā āSorry, sorry.ā Heās quick to reassure me which hurts in so many other ways. āI justā¦you said he knew how you felt about kids, marriage, soā¦ā
Ā āHe was just being an ass.ā I reassure him and rub my hand across his shoulders. We are both sitting on his bed after the travesty that was our encounter with District Eleven. I wrap my arms around him from behind and rest my cheek on his shoulder.
Ā āThanks for standing in front of that Peacekeeper. It was really brave.ā I can feel the tension drain out of him, and can practically hear his proud smirk. I swear. Men. But if it makes him feel better I donāt complain. Instead, I turn his head to face me and kiss him softly on the lips.
Ā āTo make you even,ā I explain with an uncharacteristic wink, and I am gratified to hear Peeta laugh. We go to sleep not long after that. Thereās no question that he stays with me.
Ā It really is remarkable how bad I am at convincing anyone that I am in love with Peeta, especially given that itās true. I suppose itās the nature of the camera. It canāt show the little things I do. And Iām not prone to grand gestures in front of audiences. I canāt make it look real. Iām supposed to speak my love, but if I did, it would probably come out all wrong with smatterings of ābut Dandelions, and Spring, and sunshine, donāt you see?ā But thatās for me not them, and I cannot bring myself to part with it. It makes me too vulnerable to share the story about the bread either. It occurs to me Peeta has a courage, a strength I donāt. He told the truth to Caesar in our Tribute interviews, and he turned his vulnerability into a honed weapon. I am a survivor in my own fashion, but I donāt know how to do that. Ā
Ā Kissing Peeta and pretending I donāt want more is a chore too, and only complicates an already sticky matter. Well, when itās in front of the cameras, I generally donāt want more, but when we sneak off to get caught on them, itās another matter. Itās hard not to get too into it, and I wonder how in the world Iām supposed to do this for the rest of my life, assuming Snow doesnāt kill us all? How am I supposed to kiss Peeta on camera, and then go home, and keep my hands to myself? Being around Peeta is nothing short of deadly.
Ā So when we come to the Capitol, reasonably sure weāve failed, I throw it out-
Ā āWe could get married.ā
Ā Peeta agrees and then leaves as quickly as he can. I make to follow, but Haymitch says I ought to leave him alone. He gives me a stare that proves he thinks I am some kind of surly, heartless creature. Maybe he has a point, because if Peeta wants this to be realā¦well itās not like I hate him, but Iāve never clued him in. So I glare back at Haymitch, and I do follow him, because Peeta suffers enough insecurity without him thinking heās going to marry me and I donāt want him. Itās just that I donāt want to be hurt; I donāt want my kids to hurt.
Ā Peeta surprises me. He goes into the bathroom when I arrive and turns on all the faucets.
Ā āI want to talk to you about something.ā He speaks as quietly as he can. I know he must be trying to avoid having our conversation overheard, so I join him as he sits down by the bathtub where the shower is rushing. āI know you said you didnāt want marriage and kids, because of the Reapingā¦but, I guess thatās unavoidable now. Soā¦I justā¦ā He trails off, and looks uncertain. Itās rare Peeta canāt express himself, so I gather this is something that cuts very deep to his heart. I donāt dare interrupt him. āMy parentsā marriage was arranged. Lots of marriages in Town are, and they hate each other. I always swore, Iād rather go to the Seam then live my parentās lifeānot that I think youāre like my mother!āā he hastens to clarify when he sees the look on my face, ābut a loveless marriage by two people who feel they have to do it, and end up resenting each other, and kids who are born for necessity and not love. Andā¦ā He shakes his head. A grimace is etched on his face. āWe have to get married. Thereās no avoiding that, and if they make us have kids, which they eventually willā¦ thenā¦they donāt have to be mine.ā
Ā āWhat do you mean?ā
Ā āI mean, that this doesnāt have to be a real marriage. If itās forced, it canāt count. Like, if you fall in love with someone else, you can have his kids. I get you never planned on it, but you should at least get a choice in the who. We can pretend theyāre mine for the cameras. Butā¦behind the scenesā¦ā
Ā āPeeta, thatās insanity.ā
Ā āIām just saying,ā he stresses, raising his voice slightly, and he lifts his hand up and down in emphasis like heād be slapping a table if we werenāt sitting on cold tile, āitās a possibility. If you donāt want it to be me thenā¦just say so. You wonāt be doing me any favours pretending. I have enough of that in my life. Can you love me, Katniss? Do you?ā His voice cracks a little.
Ā āPeetaāā He doesnāt let me get a word in edgewise. Heās lost in his own fears.
Ā āBut then thereās the fact that itās practically a guarantee our kids will get Reaped. Heck,ā he laughs bitterly, āmaybe more than one. I dunno, Katniss, maybe I should just right the imbalance now.ā He looks somberly at me. His blues eyes are as dark as Iāve ever seen them. āThereās only meant to be one victor.ā
Ā āNo!ā I shout and then drop my voice when I remember weāre supposed to be being discreet. āNo! Peeta, if I was ever okay with that, I would have let you die in the arena,ā I hiss. āHow could you even suggest it?ā I choke as I feel sobs rise up in my throat. āYou donāt even know for sure, theyāll Reap them! And, I mean, itāll be someoneās kidā¦and I justā¦ā Iām not even making sense, Peetaās words have catapulted me down a dark tunnel where little girls are abandoned when their fatherās die. I cling to him and shake. Peeta looks guilty, as he wraps me up in his arms.
Ā āIām so sorry. I didnāt mean to upset you.ā
Ā āThen donāt ever, ever suggest that again! Donāt even consider it.ā My crying is ugly, and I wipe my nose into his shirt and donāt even care.
Ā āAlright, I wonāt, but you know as well as I do, our kids will have an increased risk of being Reaped. Itās basically guaranteed. I canāt just sit idly by while that happens. What if they Reap all our kids? I justā¦I know we have to try and subdue the districts or Snow will kill us all, but afterwards, I think we need to try something. Weāll have at least twelve years after our first child is born to Ā prepare them, but Iād far rather prefer there be no Games at all. Weāll be coming to the Capitol every year now, maybe we can learn more about their weaknesses, scout out the other victors for sentiment in their districts. I donāt know. I just canāt take this lying down Katniss. I canāt. I wonāt be someone who does nothing at all when someone tries to hurt their child. I canāt.ā
Ā I pull out of his arms so I can see his face. I run a soothing hand across his forehead where his hair waves; it helps to ground me as well. Iām not sure Iāve ever seen him so desperate which is really saying a lot. I can understand why this issue devastates him. It devastates me too, albeit from a different childhood trauma. I curl into him again. Any direction I go scares me, but Iād rather hold onto him in the storm. I canāt hold this from him when he so needs to hear it.
Ā āI agree, but Peeta, it was always you. I decided ages ago I couldnāt marry if only because of the Games, although Iām scared of losing you too. It was always you, okay?ā
Ā āWhat?ā He seems so genuinely confused I donāt know whether to slap him or his mother.
Ā āI mean, that I knew who you were when you were Reaped, and Iād been watching you for ages too. I mean, marriage wouldnāt be my first choice, but I doā¦.I do love you.ā I twist my head up to see him better. There is dawning comprehension on his face as his eyes widen and his cheeks lift.
Ā āYou mean that?ā
Ā āYes, obviously.ā I donāt like that he is dragging this out, so I sit up to kiss him.
Ā He gets the picture.
131 notes
Ā·
View notes