#Lucretius Flickerman
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behind the scenes!
#tbosas#the ballad of songbirds and snakes#thg#the hunger games#tom blyth#rachel zegler#josh andres rivera#peter dinklage#viola davis#jason schwartzman#coriolanus snow#lucy gray baird#sejanus plinth#lucretius flickerman#dr volumnia gaul#dean casca highbottom#movies#behind the scenes#i love these people#gifs#actors
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Good morning, I'm Lucretius "Lucky" Flickerman. A man who needs no introduction. Weatherman, amateur magician, and today, I'm honored to say⌠first ever host of the Hunger Games!
#he was such a BITCH but he was so funny sjhjdjsdjfsfdd#tbosas#the ballad of songbirds and snakes#lucretius flickerman#lucky flickerman#tbosbas#tbosasedit#thgedit#tbosbasedit#lucretius 'lucky' flickerman#jason schwartzman#spoilers#the hunger games: the ballad of songbirds & snakes#mygifs#mygfisets#myedits
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Emotionally flailing from 2023 and then rewatching Asteroid City makes everything alright for a while.
#iâd risk it all for one man only#jason schwartzman#the hunger games: the ballad of songbirds & snakes#lucky flickerman#lucretius flickerman#across the spiderverse#atsv#jonathan ohnn#the spot#scott pilgrim takes off!#spto#spvtw#gideon graves#asteroid city#augie steenbeck
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6 fan arts from twitter prompts (in which I draw too much jason schwartzman)
#thereâs is a clear imbalance of characters I know#whoops all schwartzman#jason schwartzman#lucky flickerman#lucretius flickerman#tbosas#the hunger games#the ballad of songbirds and snakes#hunger games ballad of songbirds and snakes#cousin ben#moonrise kingdom#caleb widogast#critical role#johnathon ohnn#the spot#atsv#across the spiderverse#slackers#ethan dulles#cool ethan#lucy gray baird#sad art#fanart#6 fanarts
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Lucky Flickerman: Have a holly jolly Christmas.
Lucky: It's the best time of the year.
Lucky: I don't know if there'll be snow.
Lucky: Because the weather patterns in this region are highly unpredictable.
#tbosas#the ballad of songbirds and snakes#incorrect tbosas#incorrect tbosas quotes#lucky flickerman#lucretius flickerman
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I'm reading TBOSAS, so have some memes.
Kids dying
Lucky Flickerman:
These spot the difference games are getting difficult:
Dean Highbottom in the afterlife, finally vindicated in his hate for the Snow boy:
Lucy Gray returning to 12 after the games:
Grandma Snow:
Snow walking into his presidential office for the first time:
#the hunger games#thg#the hunger games the ballad of songbirds & snakes#thg tbosas#thg tbosbas#tbosas#tbosbas#coriolanus snow#the ballad of songbirds and snakes#lucy gray#lucy gray baird#dean highbottom#dean casca highbottom#casca highbottom#thg tbosbas memes#thg tbosas memes#the hunger games the ballad of songbirds and snakes memes#the ballad of songbirds and snakes memes#dr gaul#grandma snow#grandma'am snow#please don't judge my snakes#i can't draw#i am pretty pleased with my Flickerman though#lucky flickerman#lucretius flickerman
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One of my favourite things about Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes is the little easter eggs. Like the familiar last names of students you realize are ancestors to some familiar characters!
#The Ballad Of Songbirds and Snakes#Arachne Crane#Livia Cardew#Lucretius Flickerman#Hilarius Heavensbee#Seneca Crane#Fulvia Cardew#Caesar Flickerman#Plutarch Heavensbee
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Every time I hear Jason Schwartzman say "We're live!" in the ads for A Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes I think of him
#ny arcangelo corelli#neo yokio#jason schwartzman#a ballad of songbirds and snakes#lucretius flickerman#lucky flickerman
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Rewatching "Ballad"
It's interesting how Lucky Flickerman is kind of a sad joke in the books, always messing up magic tricks and failing to get his bird to talk.
I'm not sure if it's just the casting or the actual script adaptation but he seems more important and more interesting in the movie. It still goes to pains to have his cameraman laugh at him and show he fails to get his reservation. But I think the audience laughs with him more than at him.
I guess that's the whole point of the book though. That people will become more invested in someone who is entertaining, and Jason Schwartzman is an entertainer.
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The songs from The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes sounds suspiciously like other famous songs.
The Ballad of Lucy Gray sounds SO MUCH like Street of Lorado by Marty Robbins.
Nothing You Can Take From Me is verry similar to You're The One That I Want from Grease.
#the hunger games#lucy gray baird#coriolanus snow#the hunger games the ballad of songbirds and snakes#the ballad of songbirds and snakes#nothing you can take from me#the ballad of lucy gray#grease#youre the one that i want#streets of lorado#the tenth hunger games#lucretius flickerman#Lucretius âLuckyâ Flickerman#lucy gray#president snow
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new stills! (part one).
#tbosas#the ballad of songbirds and snakes#thg#the hunger games#tom blyth#rachel zegler#coriolanus snow#lucy gray baird#josh andres rivera#sejanus plinth#coriolanus x sejanus#snowbaird#snowjanus#dr volumnia gaul#lucretius flickerman#tigris snow#grandma snow#treech#lamina#movies#peacekeepers#the capitol#viola davis#jason schwartzman#movie stills
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youtube
â đ˘ đŽđ˘đŻ đ¸đŠđ° đŻđŚđŚđĽđ´ đŻđ° đŞđŻđľđłđ°đĽđśđ¤đľđŞđ°đŻ â
Lucretius Flickerman || Gossip
#tbosas#the hunger games#the ballad of songbirds and snakes#the hunger games: ballad of songbirds and snakes#lucretius flickerman#lucky flickerman#jason schwartzman#maneskin#thgedit#tbosasedit#my video edit#youtube#video edit#tbosas fanart#my video edits#video#daily videos#gossip
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lucky flickerman was so unbearably real when he said âwouldnât it be funny if it were candyâ
#i screamed#he let the intrusive thought win#dead ass thatâs exactly what I wouldâve said#I mean if I were in his shoes#lucretius lucky flickerman#lucky flickerman#thg#tbosas movie#tbosas#the hunger games#lucy gray baird#coriolanus snow#the ballad of songbirds and snakes
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first of all YOU SEEM AWESOME
second of all do you do sfw and nsfw headcanons? i'd love if you did some of Lucky from the hunger games, thank you! :D
a/n: THANK YOU SO MUCH!!! itâs so awesome to see other jason fans! also i literally got so excited seeing a lucky flickerman request i am so obsessed with him rn GAAAHHHH!!!!!
thisâll be a mix of both sfw and nsfw headcanons!
SFW
⢠Sassy at work, sweet at home.
⢠He likes to call you âsweetieâ, âangelâ, and âhoneyâ.
⢠Actually has quite a love for music, and is really fond of jazz. He likes to throw on a record and dance around the living room with you, holding your waist and twirling with you.
⢠He prefers to do his own makeup rather than the news crew doing it for him. Except for the day of the Games, of course. It needed to be perfect for that. That didnât stop him from bossing the artist around, though. The curled mustache was his idea.
⢠Heâs surprisingly good at making mixed drinks. His favorite is a classic dry martini.
⢠Weatherman wasnât his first career choice. He wanted to be a magician since he was a kid, but unfortunately during the war there was no interest for magic tricks. He does the occasional trick on camera, but he loves to sit with you after dinner and show off some new skills heâs been practicing.
⢠Refuses to take off his wedding ring. Ever. He wears it to bed and everything. Heâll never forget the day he put it on with you. If heâs feeling lonely at work, heâll glance down at it and the warm, happy memories from that day will occupy him.
⢠Heâs quite the romantic. He loves to bring you home flowers and small gifts, and take you out to dinner.
⢠He loves to hold your chin with his hand and look at your eyes before kissing you. His hand will then drift to your cheek, and heâll stroke it softly with his thumb.
⢠His kisses are very soft and sweet. Almost as if heâs longing for you, even if the last time he kissed you was just a few minutes ago.
NSFT
⢠Heâs rather vanilla (Itâs the 60âs, after all.), but heâs very into dirty talk.
⢠He really likes it when you pull him by his tie and make out with him.
⢠His favorite position is between lap riding and doggy.
⢠Heâs definitely pulled out a condom from behind his ear before.
⢠He loves to grab your hips while he kisses you, pulling you close to him and feeling how warm you are.
⢠His favorite, most guilty daydream is of you going down on him while heâs live. Something about him trying to hold it together in front of so many people while still presenting his script really gets him going.
⢠After the first day of him hosting the Games, he came home exhausted. Despite this, he wanted nothing more than to have your hands all over him. He felt so pretty all dressed up and didnât want to undo it just yet. So, you sit on his lap and play with him through his pants, telling him how good he looked on TV today. He finishes just like that, his upper body falling forward as he holds onto you. (And, no, he never made his reservation.)
⢠In the scenario where you worked in crew for the Panem news station, your coworkers couldnât stand Lucky for how bossy he was. You loved it, though, because why wouldnât you want to be bossed around by him?
⢠If he gets too worked up on the job, heâll absolutely take you into his dressing room and fuck you there. Itâs so incredibly risky, but thatâs part of the fun.
⢠Heâs not much of a snugglier, but he does like when after sex, you rest your head on his chest and fall asleep. He especially likes being able to play with your hair like this.
#lucky flickerman#lucky flickerman x reader#lucky flickerman/reader#lucretius lucky flickerman#the hunger games#hunger games#thg#tbosas#the ballad of songbirds and snakes#jason schwartzman#imagine#imagines#headcanon#headcanons#fanfic#fanfiction#writing#writeblr#fluff#smut#fandom#fictional other#f/o#f/o imagines#f/o community
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Character posters for the upcoming "The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes"
#rachel zegler#lucy gray baird#tom blyth#coriolanus snow#peter dinklage#casca highbottom#hunter schafer#tigris snow#josh andrĂŠs rivera#sejanus plinth#jason schwartzman#Lucretius Flickerman#viola davis#volumnia gaul#the hunger games#the ballad of songbirds and snakes#the hunger games the ballad of songbirds and snakes
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thread ; coriolanus snow.
pairing ; young!coriolanus snow x capitol!reader (gender-neutral)
synopsis ; âtheyâre all just copying us, you know,â he said, sounding almost bitter.Â
âof course they are,â you replied, taking a drawn-out sip from your cup. âwe showed them thereâs no sharks in the water. obviously theyâre going to jump in.â
words ; 6.6k
themes ; mild fluff/angst, action
warnings / includes ; themes of classism, violence/injury/death/drug misuse, coryo's paranoia, he isn't exactly toxic yet but the seeds are very much planted, i tried to keep him in character as best i could </3
series masterlist. main masterlist.
Coriolanus came late to class. He rushed in, uniform only slightly askew, and hair messier than usual. You moved your bag aside so he could take a seat beside you. With a nod, he slipped into the row and began laying out his books.Â
You wondered how Tigris reacted once he got back home. Probably worried sick for her cousin and her friend. Your father, of course, was furious with you once he learned about your tryst with Coriolanus in the Capitol Zoo, but there was little he could do when he was off working in the districts. During dinner with your mother, Lucretius Flickerman, and his wife, the tributes and the games were practically all the three could talk about. Lucky was going to be the first ever host, apparently.
How fun.
To neither of your surprise, Highbottom eyed the two of you with disdain. When you had strode into the hall, he remained silent. Coriolanusâ arrival seemed to tip him right over the edge.
âBoth of your little excursions were in violation of about five different academy rules,â he grumbled. âChiefly amongst themâendangering a Capitol student. Yourselves.â
âThere were peacekeepers crawling all over the place,â Coriolanus retorted.Â
The deanâs nose twitched angrily. Then, he fixed you with a harsh look over his spectacles, and drawled out your name. âSince you are the academyâs brightest, and your records have been⌠untarnished until now, I will let you off with a warning.â There was a pause, before the dean continued. âMr. Snow, Iâm moving for the gamemakers to disqualify you as mentor, effective immediately.â
âWhat?â the two of you exclaimed at once.
âYou said we had to get them to perform, not stay away!â Coriolanus just about spat.
âIâll add insubordination, as well,â Highbottom replied, tone venomous.
Raising your hand and ignoring the deanâs irritated exhale, you haughtily said, âIt was me who went into the tributeâs truck. Coriolanus only followed. We didnât know that weâd end up in a zoo enclosure.â
Arachne tittered with condescending laughter. âYeah, and then you held hands with them. Made it seem like weâre the same as those animals.â
From your other side, Sejanus was quick to defend the two of you. âCoriolanus and Y/N didnât show those people anything they didnât already know.â
Stiffening, Coryo scowled and said, âI donât need your help, Sejanus.â
He ignored him and continued on, âThat the tributes are human beings, just like us. Thatâs why nobody wants to watch the gamesâbecause people know, deep down, that winning a war ten years ago doesnât justify starving peopleâs children, taking away their freedoms, their rights!â
âDean Highbottom,â you called, not bothering to raise your hand this time. âHow is it fair that Coriolanus gets disqualified while Iâm not? We did what you told us to do! We were just trying to get to know our tributes.â
âWould you like to be disqualified as well? I can surely arrange for that to happen,â he deadpanned. âBut poor little Wovey would be left all on her own.â
Nausea coiled within your abdomen. You drew yourself up to your full height. âWell, that would be entirely unnecessaryââÂ
Before you could finish your sentence, the doors to the lecture theater swung open once more, and Dr. Volumnia Gaul crept in, footsteps completely silent. How she managed that, you werenât at all sure.
With everyoneâs eyes on her, she fixed her stare on the two of you. Her hair was wrangled back into a high up-do, tall and grey on her head.Â
âQuite a show you two put on. Youâre good players,â she said, voice booming throughout the theater. âThe hunger games needs good players. Maybe one day youâll be gamemakers, like me.â
The thought sent chills up your spine. Coriolanus kept his expression stoic.
âIf the games continue at all,â said Highbottom.
Singular blue eye flashing, Dr. Gaul grinned in an unnerving manner. âOh, theyâll continue. With performances like young Snow and L/N in that zoo? The people would never stop wanting for more.â She drew closer to the rows of seats, gloved hand trailing over a few of the desks. âI came here to ask the star mentors a question⌠what are the hunger games for?â
You and Coriolanus exchanged a quick glance.
âTheyâre to punish the districts for their uprising,â he said, as if it were obvious. âTo commemorate the end of the war.â
Volumniaâs tongue darted out to wet her lips, in a similar fashion to a snake.
âAnd what would you say, Y/N?â
It was hard to maintain eye contact with her, especially because it felt like she could peer into your very soul and dissect you apart from inside outâbut you managed. With your father being such an avid supporter of the hunger games, you wondered if your answer would be what she was looking for. âI donât agree with the games. But I know itâs becauseâfear is power. Keep the districts afraid for themselves, for their children, and youâll always have the upper hand.â
She smiled, wide and eerie. âYouâre right. Fear is power. But punishment and fear can take many forms. They can come from bomb droppings, the cancelling of food shipments, stage executions. The question is, why games?â
Defensive, Sejanus spoke up, âShouldnât we be asking whether or not itâs right in the first place?â
âYou have a problem with my games?â she asked, unimpressed.
âSome of those kids were two years old when the war ended! The oldest of them were only eight!â he exclaimed. âThe Capitol is supposed to be everyoneâs government now. It is supposed to protect all of us. I donât see how making children fight each other to the death is protecting anyone.â
With a sneer, Dr. Gaul told him, âThat sort of sympathy might be interfering with your mentoring assignment, Mr. Plinth.â
Finally, Highbottom said to his colleague, âPerhaps Capitol students are ill-suited to be mentoring tributes. Perhaps the gamesâ time has passed.â
Yes, you thought. Itâs time to let it go.
To your surprise, Coriolanus abruptly stood up from his seat. âDean Highbottom is wrong,â he asserted. âMy classmates, too. Maybe Sejanus is onto something here. We should be viewing those tributes as human beings. You saw those kids at the zoo. They just wanted to get to know Lucy Gray. If we need people to watch, we should let them get closer to the tributes before the games. Make the stakes personal.â
âWho would watch the games if they care what happens to the tributes?â Dr. Gaul asked, as if the notion of caring about district folk was ludicrous.
âEveryone,â replied Coriolanus. âEspecially if they thought the tribute they cared about had a chance of winning. People need someone to root for and someone to root against! And if we bend a few Capitol laws, we can even have them place bets.âÂ
You felt sick as you looked up at Coriolanus with a mildly disturbed expression. If he noticed, he didnât give you any indication.
âI know Lucy Gray may not win in the arena,â he continued. âBut if you give her a chanceâI would bet the Plinth prize that she could win peopleâs attention.â
Dr. Gaul was effectively intrigued.
âI would like you to write up a proposal of these thoughts tonight, Mr. Snow,â she said.Â
Clemensia, strong-headed as ever, stood up and said that she should be working with Coriolanus, as his class partner.
With an amused snicker, Volumnia bowed her head and made her way back to the door. âItâll be an interesting test,â she ominously said before turning on her heel and exiting, her dark cloak billowing out behind her.
During lunch, you sat down across from Coriolanus in the cafeteria, noticing that he had three sandwiches stacked on his plate, along with half a dozen cookies on another. It was a rare thing, seeing him with so much food. Usually he opted for just starving himself to save some money, despite your urges to get him to eat.
âHungry?â you asked with an arched brow, but he shook his head.
âItâs for Lucy Gray,â he replied, staring down at the food. Then, he pulled out a red handkerchief and started wrapping the food up. âIâm going back.â
With a soft sigh, you started digging into your own lunch. âHopefully not inside this time.â
He spared you half a smile, though it didnât quite reach his eyes. âAre you coming? Everyone else is. I heard Arachne tell Felix sheâs going to use food to get her tribute to do tricks for her.â
With a wrinkle of your nose, you glanced over at her several tables down. âSounds like something sheâd say.â You took a bite of your food and chewed thoughtfully.
âTheyâre all just copying us, you know,â he said, sounding almost bitter.Â
âOf course they are,â you replied, taking a drawn-out sip from your cup. âWe showed them thereâs no sharks in the water. Obviously theyâre going to jump in.â
He tied the handkerchief together so the sandwiches and cookies would stay put. âTheyâre all sheep. No original thought whatsoever.â
There it was again, your wind-chime laugh. Coriolanus smiled down at his plate, now empty save for a few bread crumbs.Â
âItâs not that big of a deal, Coryo. Besides, Iâm glad most of the class is going. The tributes must be starving in there,â you told him. âIâll come and bring some food for Wovey.â
A voice from your right jutted into your conversation, Sejanusâ angry face coming into view as he slammed down his lunch tray in the empty spot beside you. âYou guys going to fatten up your tributes so you can finally start taking bets?â he just about snarled.
âDo you think theyâll give those kids a scrap if we donât give them a reason to do it?â Coriolanus responded defensively, leaning forward with narrowed eyes. âHow do you think your tribute will have a chance if he canât eat?â
âWe canât send them back to their homes,â you told Sejanus in a juxtaposingly calm tone. âThe best we can do for them now is help them out here.â
The curly-haired man slumped forward, his shoulder stooping like an old wildflower. âHe was my classmate,â he muttered. âBack in two.â
Though you gave Sejanus a sympathetic look, Coryo regarded Sejanus as if he was confused. He wondered why Sejanus even bothered to care this much when he was no longer a part of the districts.
âItâs not your fault thatââ Coriolanus began, but was swiftly interrupted.
âOh, yeah, Iâm so blameless Iâm choking on it!â he gritted out. Then, he let out a shaky breath, trying to steel himself. âMy father bought him for me, you know. At the reaping. Just so he could show me that I could never go back to two.â
A frown marred your features. âHe bribed Highbottom?â
âSomething like that,â Sejanus told you, using the prongs of his fork to poke and prod at his food. âMorphling costs a pretty penny.â
Silence stretched over the three of you for a few seconds. Coriolanus looked annoyed, but Sejanus didnât seem to notice.Â
âBeing in the Capitol is going to kill me,â he sighed.
This made Coryo scowl. âSo do something about it.â
Sejanusâ dark eyes flitted over to the bundle of food in Coriolanusâ hands. âYouâre quite the rebel.â
Coriolanus retorted, âOh, yeah. Iâm bad news.â
When he said that, heâd expected you to laugh again, but you kept quiet, staring down at your now-unappetizing lunch.
There was a considerably larger crowd around the enclosure that evening. You had a small basket clutched in one hand, consisting of juice boxes (still grape, since you now knew it was a safe option), soft bread rolls, and wrapped leftovers from your dinner with Lucky. You hoped Wovey wasnât allergic to anythingâyouâd forgotten to ask in the heat of it all.
Coriolanus still only had the few sandwiches he saved from lunch, but you assured him that you were more than happy to share with Lucy Gray if need be.Â
She looked much more haggard tonight, most of her makeup smeared off, her lips chapped and bleeding at the center from what you assumed was anxious biting, and her hair was more unruly. Though her eyes still held the same fire, the same passion, lighting up when she noticed the two of you approaching. She asked if the food was for them with slight surpriseâyou often forget that they hadnât much to eat in the districts, anywayâand took what was offered, before handing off a good portion of it to her district partner, Jessup. The larger man declined the food at first, claiming he wasnât hungry, but eventually caved and took the sandwiches.Â
When he turned to walk off, Coriolanus asked about the nasty wound on his neck. It was just behind his ear and oozing with blood and pus. A bat bite on the train, Lucy Gray told the two of you, looking awfully guilty on behalf of her friend.Â
Crooning from a little wayâs away drew your attention to Arachne and her tribute. She was dangling a cold bottle of water just inches from the tributeâs reach, urging her to beg.
Lucy Grayâs brows cinched. âOne thing I learned in twelve is that hunger is a weapon. Your friend over there sure knows it.â
The two of you scoffed at the same time.
âShe is not my friend,â Coriolanus told her. âShe is poison with perfect teeth.â
âHow such a vile tongue hides behind those pearly whites, I wouldnât ever know,â you remarked, earning you a snicker from Coriolanus. Finally, you peered around for Wovey, eager to finally get her something to eat. However, curse your damned softening heart, your eyes grew gentle upon seeing her curled up by the very same tree stump, head resting on Bobbinâs shoulder, fast asleep.Â
Lucy Gray casted a glimpse over her shoulder to see what you were looking at.Â
âCould you give this to her?â you asked, slotting the small basket between the enclosureâs metal bars. âWhen she wakes up, that is. She must be famished. Feel free to take anything in there, but just⌠leave some for her.â
The girl nodded, taking the basket from you and handing it over to Jessup, who cradled it as if it were more precious than gold. You watched him carefullyânot because you were worried he was going to keep all the food to himself, but because you were curious as to why he hadnât reached in to take anything for himself yet, even after several minutes passed by.Â
Coriolanus leaned forward, wrapping a hand around one of the bars as he lowered his voice. âAre you going to share everything with Jessup?â
Lucy Grayâs expression faltered. âWhy? You think I oughta build up my strength to strangle him in the arena? Not exactly my forte.â
âI might have a chance to help you,â he told her, watching her keenly. âTo make some suggestions to the gamemakers. I might even be able to get the audience to send you gifts in the arena. Food, and water, to keep you going. You just have to try singing again.â
Firmly, Lucy Gray said, âI donât sing when Iâm told, I sing when I have something to say.â
âAnd you have nothing to say?â you asked her, head tilting. âThe whole world is watching, Lucy Gray. Nowâs your chance.â
A myriad of emotions crossed over her face. âIt doesnât matter much now, does it? Iâve seen the arenaâthereâs nowhere to hide. Whatâs the point?â Her gaze traveled from you to Coriolanus. âThe guards say you get money if you get more people to watch and you say you want to help me. Which is it?â
âBoth?â he offered.Â
It didnât satisfy her, but it was enough, for now.Â
Then, she grabbed a sandwich from the red handkerchief and took a large bite, a muffled noise of appreciation falling from her lips.Â
âBreadâs soft,â she said around a mouthful. âSofter than in twelve.â
Then, she offered a cookie to Coriolanus. He began to protest, but she insisted he take it.
âI saw you staring,â she said. âI always thought there was plenty of food in the Capitol.â
Coriolanus laughed, a coarse and unrefined sound. âOne time during the war, I ate a whole jar of paste just to stop the pain in my stomach.âÂ
A match of pity struck within the confines of your chest, but you remained quiet. Coriolanus told you stories of his times during the war oftenâusually after the two of you laid together, sweaty and naked, bearing your souls to one another. Pillow talk made him quite emotional, you found.
âAnd how was it?â Lucy Gray queried, eyes round.
Coriolanus took a bite of the cookie, humming in though. Then, he shrugged. âPasty,â he said.
Lucy Gray laughed. She looked back to you, appreciative. âThank you, for the food. Iâm sure the little oneâs going to be happy.â Your eyes flickered back to Wovey. She stirred a bit on Bobbinâs shoulder, but remained asleep. âSheâs so sweet. So young. Something about her reminds me of my cousin, Maude Ivory. I canât stand to think of them without me like this.â
âIâm sorry,â Coriolanus whispered.
You nodded in agreement. âTheyâre waiting for you, Iâm sure. Youâll see them again.â
Lucy Gray smiled sadly. âI wonât hold you to that.â Then, after she took another bite, she blew out a gentle sigh. âYou two seem like⌠genuine folk. It sure wouldâve been nice to meet you under different circumstances.â
Coriolanus leaned his head against the enclosureâs bars. âOne of your shows, maybe.â
Somehow, her smile grew impossibly wider, but her eyes shone with unshed tears. âYeah. Yeah, I wouldâve liked that.â With a light sniffle, she asked the two of you, âYou two keen on dancing?â
You thought back to all the dance lessons you were forced to take as a young child. It was never your strong suit. âNot really, no. Coriolanus is much better than I am.âÂ
âNot your fancy Capitol dancing,â she told you, waving a hand in the air. âDancing like youâre free. Dancing with no rules. Just the music, to guide you.â
Both you and Coriolanus exchanged glances. âCanât say Iâve tried,â you replied. âBut it sounds fun.â
Lucy Gray nodded, showing more enthusiasm than youâd ever seen in her before. âYouâd have the time of your life. If you ever visit⌠Iâd love for you to come. Both of youâweâd have a drink. Share a dance or two. Weâd have all the time in the world. People always say our music shows are the best places for romantic dates. Itâd be perfect for you two.â
It was a pleasant fantasy to entertain. But thatâs all it wasâa fantasy. When you looked at Coriolanus, his expression was simultaneously strained and distant, as if he were far away, thinking of other things. You reached out to place your hand on his shoulder.
But before you could, screams erupted from around the enclosure, followed closely by shattering glass. You whipped your head away from Lucy Gray, seeing Arachneâs tribute jabbing the broken glass bottle straight into her jugular. Coriolanus yelled somethingâyou werenât entirely sure what, but he jumped up to grab Arachne, applying pressure to the wound.
It wasnât enough.Â
Blood, dark and viscous and filling the air with the smell of copper, began to pool around her neck, down her shoulders, filling the crevices of her collarbones. She was blubbering something, gargling through blood, but you couldnât quite hear with the loud static buzzing in your ears.Â
You glanced to the side, catching sight of peacekeepers lining up their guns to shoot. You rushed forward to get to Coriolanus, yanking him down just as several shots rang out. He was whimpering, telling Arachne to hold on for him, but when you frantically reached down to feel for her pale wristâs pulseâit wasnât there.
Arachne was dead.Â
You clambered off of Coriolanus, away from the dead girl, backing away. You only barely registered Sejanus calling out your name in concern, but you didnât pay him any mind. Instead, you turned your eyes to the tributes, all ducking and cowering behind trees and tires. To your relief, Wovey was now awake, eyes wide as she crouched behind the tree stump with Bobbin.
The relief was short-lived, however, because peacekeepers began urging everybody away from the enclosure. You reached out for Coriolanus, taking his arm. He was shaking, eyes as large as saucers and visibly distraught.Â
The two of you walked to his estate in tense silence.
Once there, Grandmaâam and Tigris fawned over the two of you, though in far different ways. Grandmaâam dove into a lecture about rebels and how lucky the two of you were that your tributes hadnât done the very same. Tigris wrapped a warm shawl over you and a patched blanket over her cousin, telling Grandmaâam that Lucy Gray and Wovey werenât rebels, just innocent girls.Â
âTrust me, that one hasnât been a girl in a long time,â Grandmaâam bitterly retorted. âOutside this Capitol, theyâre savages, however they may smile. She will use you, Coriolanus. You must use her or youâll end up dead in the trees, like your father.â
Coriolanus stiffened.Â
An hour later, he tugged you into his room and kissed you hard and desperate, as if he wanted to distract himself from his own thoughts. You were the one to pull away, even if everything inside you was screaming to stay. You almost caved, almost, when his head dipped forward in an attempt to capture your lips again, but you placed the tips of your fingers over his mouth with a soft, sympathetic smile. You hugged him tight until he stopped trembling, and reluctantly drew yourself away from him. After embracing Tigris goodnight, you walked home alone with your thoughts, wondering if the games were going to continue in lieu of the eveningâs events.
There was an assembly held at the academy for Arachneâs death, followed promptly by a proper funeral. Though, it didnât quite feel proper with all the cameras and reporters hovering around. You wondered if people were expecting to see you cry. You were incredibly shaken, sure, but were you sad?
Itâd be a lie if you said yes.
They made sure to zoom in on you and Coriolanus when you kissed him on the cheek and squeezed his hand just before he was appointed to go on stage and sing the national anthem. Why he was the one to do so, the two of you had no idea. Itâs not like Arachne was friends with him, despite what the reporters wanted to think. It was a ridiculous waste of breath, he thought, singing for a girl he barely knew.
After Coriolanusâ performance, President Ravinstill gave a rather monotonous speech about courage and bravery. How Arachne was going to be sorely missed. Rightâof course she was.
And the very next day, life moved on. As if Arachneâs death had never happened.
Soon after, they had all the mentors and tributes gathered into one of the academy hallsâ with the tributes shackled to tables, of course. It wasnât like there was anywhere for them to run. Youâd seen all the peacekeepers lining the hallways outside.
âIn spite of yesterdayâs tragic events,â Highbottom said, not a shred of sincerity to be found in his tone, âour President has decided that the games must go on. Show everyone that the Capitol is unafraid of such acts of terror. To which end Dr. Gaul wishes you to preview the arena this afternoon with your tributes. Later this evening, there will be a special, televised presentation of each tribute to our audience so they could⌠get to know them.â
A glorified show-and-tell, you dryly thought. How wonderful.
You and Coriolanus looked at each other for a brief momentâheâd ask Lucy Gray to sing again, you were certain. Then, you turned back forward, where Wovey was fiddling with her thumbs, sniffling a few times.
âYouâll have an hour to discuss strategy,â said the dean, before whisking himself off to the shadows of the room to down another vial of morphling.
You sat down in front of your tribute, trying your best to offer her a warm smile.
âDid you like the food I brought? Was it okay?â you whispered, making sure to lower your voice.
A nod, a scuffle of feet. Her bottom lip trembled.
Gnawing on the inside of your cheek, you moved on to the pressing matter at hand. âOkay, Wovey. I need⌠I need to know what youâre good at. Are you a fast runner?âÂ
She thought for a moment, but then shook her head.
âI know you can climb?â
She let out a shaky sigh. âI used to climb in my mamaâs factory all the time. Trees, too.â
âGood. Thatâs good,â you murmured, pulling out a notepad so you could jot some things down. âAre you good at hiding? Staying still?â
âI think so,â she said, looking awfully uncomfortable. âWill I go back home if I win?â
A sharp pang hit you square in the chest. You tore your gaze away from your notes on the paper to look at her.Â
âYes,â you hesitantly replied. âTheyâll take you home.â
This seemed to satisfy her for the time being. Gave her hope that you perhaps shouldnât have instilled.
You swallowed the lump in your throat. âSoâfor your televised presentation. We need to win the audience over so they send in donationsâIâd be able to send you things. What do you want to do?â
After quite a bit of back and forth, you managed to get Wovey to agree to talk about her family on stage. How much she missed them. It wasnât much, but perhaps the youngest tribute sympathy card would push the odds in your favor.
Halfway through the hour, however, Coriolanus and Clemensia were called away by Highbottomâmost likely to discuss the proposal Coryo had written up once you left the estate. You made a mental note to ask him how it goes once you saw him again. You felt bad, seeing Lucy Gray sitting all alone, bound hands lightly rapping against the tableâs wood.
By the stroke of four in the afternoon, they gathered all the mentors and tributes in front of the arena. Coriolanus came bounding up to the group just seconds away from the gates opening, appearing breathless and mildly frazzled.Â
âYou okay? Whereâs Clemmie?â you asked, resting a hand on his elbow, brows kinking with confusion.
âSheâs⌠not going to make it.â He winced, appearing distinctly torn. âIâll tell you later.â
There was a brief silence where you scrutinized him, eyes wide. Something bad happened when he was with Dr. Gaul, and you werenât too keen on finding out.
You walked alongside Coriolanus into the arena, with your two tributes in front of you. Lucy Gray was saying something comforting to Wovey in that sweet voice of hers, and for that you were grateful. The last thing you needed was Wovey to break down in an anxious mess.Â
The arena itself was spacious but incredibly rundown, crumbling under the weight of its neglected upkeep. The glass roof was stained and dusty, rusty slants creaking as they parted to filter sunlight into the dome.
âWelcome to the arena of the 10th annual hunger games,â a distorted voice echoed through the arenaâs shoddy speaker system. âTributes, mentors, you have fifteen minutes to survey the space and discuss strategy.â
With one final squeeze on Coriolanusâ shoulder, you parted ways with him, stepping beside Wovey to urge her into a lap around the arena. Staggered rows of dusty seats lined the edges high above the groundâWovey was a good climber, wasnât she?Â
You tried your best to give her advice. âHiding in the seats is your best option. Climbing over the rows whenever someone comes to attack you should buy you time. Youâre small, tooâI think youâd be able to crawl beneath the seats to get away. As for weapons⌠maybe grab something small from the center. A knife or a dagger. But only if you have time, and only if you know you can make it. If not, just make a break for the seats, as fast as you can. Got that, sweetheart?â
Wovey stayed silent. But she nodded. Nodded and nodded until you worried her head was going to pop right off.Â
You bent down at the waist slightly so that you were eye-level with her. âIâll be watching you the whole time. Iâm there if you need mââ
Sudden explosions rang out about the arena. Plumes of dust flew everywhere, blinding you almost instantaneously. With your eyes squeezed shut, you felt the ground shake and split and rumble until another closer explosion flung you a good few feet off the ground. You landed on your side with a strangled scream, though the pain only registered a few seconds later. Cracking your aching eyes open and squinting through the haze of dust, you caught sight of shattered glass thundering around you like crystalized rain, nicking your skin with sharp pin pricks.Â
Your right side buzzed with warmth. Something damp. You dazedly looked down.
Oh.
It seemed youâd landed right on a broken metal pipe, sticking right out of your abdomen. Blood was pooling down your academy uniform, soaking the fabric a far more sinister shade of red. You choked out something akin to a dry sob, before screaming out for help. You heard dozens of similar cries echo back to you.
With a grunt, you pushed yourself up,Â
âCORYO?!â you screamed as loud as you could. Faintly, you could hear his strained voice echo your name backâsomewhere across the arena, youâd wager.Â
The pain was starting to grow worse. Searing, almost, as if you were being laid over an open fire. You staggered through the rubble, pressing a hand to your side in a terrible attempt to staunch the bleeding, careful not to jostle the pipe. It was probably the only thing keeping you from bleeding out right then and there.
As you kept moving, you caught sight of a large, gaping hole at the opposite end of the arena. There were tributes running out. Peacekeepers shooting them. The explosions had been so loud that your ears were ringing with terrible white noiseâyou couldnât even hear the sound of the rifles blasting.
You glanced around wildly.Â
You spotted the small little girl near the edge of the arena. Running with Dill, you realized, mind still lagging a second too late from shock. Another explosion rattled through the arenaâthis time, crumbling the roof away completely.
With a mangled noise, you began limping as quickly as you could.
Another call of your name, echoing and rattling about your skull, and Coriolanus materialized right beside you out of seemingly nowhere. There were two of him, you realized. He appeared fuzzy.Â
You reached out for him, but he suddenly pulled you forward, yelling something. Something you couldnât hear. A flash of rainbow by his left, and you saw Lucy Gray just barely escape being crushed by a large stone support column.Â
More crumbling ceiling. Coriolanusâ hands were cold when he urgently shoved you forward. So hard that you went tumbling down, screaming with the sudden painful jolts the metal pipe sent shooting up your spine. A second later, you blearily looked around for Coriolanusârealizing that heâd pushed you into the clear when you found him pinned down under heavy foundational slantsâand theyâd caught on fire.Â
Numb panic shot through your mind. You barely registered your own voice croaking out his name. You tried to crawl towards him, but he only seemed to get farther away.Â
The last thing you saw before your eyes rolled into the back of your head and you went careening backwards was the rainbow dress, and wild, dark hair.Â
The hospital bed was far from comfortable, but youâd been so tired you were knocked out for half of the day. Though, Tigris told you that you did sort of wake up at some point in the night, mumbling Coriolanusâ name with half-cracked eyes, before falling right back asleep.
Heâd startled awake before youârushing to your bed (right beside his) and taking your limp hand in his cold, clammy one. Brushed the hair away from your forehead and muttered apologies and please donât die like they were a mantra.
When you finally stirred, you nearly burst into tears upon seeing Coriolanus.
âI thought you died,â you dry-sobbed. Your side ached considerably with the effort. âI thought I was going to die.â
He drew you into a loose hug, careful to avoid your bandaged midriff. He pressed a kiss to your forehead. âIâm here. I love youâIâm not going anywhere, okay? Lucy Gray saved you. Saved us.â
âShe did?â you croaked, voice soft. Yes, you sort of remembered. It was all a blur.
âShe caught you before you could crack your head open on the ground,â said another voice. You turned your stiff neck to see Sejanus at the foot of the other side of your bed, next to Tigris, who was running her hand up and down your arm in a comforting manner.
You blew out a shaky sigh. Your head pulsed, and you suddenly felt nauseous. âWhat⌠what happened?â
They took turns explaining. Rebel bombing. The dead tributes. The presidentâs son, Felix, in critical condition. Sejanusâ tribute missing. How the games were still commencing regardless. The pipe that had been lodged in your abdomen missing any vital organs. How you were lucky to be alive.
âWovey?â you whispered. âIs she okay?â
Coriolanus smoothed a hand over your head. âSheâs okay. Not one of the ones that died.â
âLucy Gray?â you whispered.Â
âAlive. She could have run. She stayed back to help you and me,â he said as his hand traveled down to gently cup your face. There were dark circles under his eyes. âI owe her now. She saved the love of my life.â
âOh, Coryoâare you okay? Are you hurt?â Your gaze roamed all over his form, clad in an identical hospital gown.Â
âA few burns and bruises. Nothing compared to you.âÂ
You drew in a staggered breath. Every muscle and tendon in your body screamed with even the slightest movements.Â
Tigris squeezed your hand. âWe were so worried for you. Coriolanus couldnât sleep all night. Your mother came by earlier but she had to leaveâa spill in the lab, or something. And your father sends his love from district two. Your mother said he was furious. Military is doubling down.â
âTypical,â you whispered, supplying the three with half a weary smile, glad that they were there for you. âI canât believe theyâre going on with the games tomorrow. This is absurd.â
âThey donât want to seem weak,â Sejanus bitterly replied. âBut you woke up just in time. The televised presentations are starting soon.â
Nearly an hour later, Sejanus switched on the television set hanging in front of the beds. Tribute after tribute went by, most of them appearing gaunt and exhausted. True to what the two of you had discussed, Wovey got on stage and talked about her family back in district eight, despite looking rather shaken. The audience crooned and sighed with pity. Donations were sparse, but still more than you had expected, to your bittersweet relief. You watched from the hospital bed, curled up with Tigris at the head of it, your head on her shoulder, whilst Sejanus and Coriolanus were standing far closer to the curved screen.Â
Lucy Gray was the last to go on. She had a guitar with her. And she sang a beautiful songâone about a boy back from home, she said. The audience cheered and sniffled. Even the nurses stopped their bustling to watch, some of them discreetly wiping away tears.
Once visiting hours were over and Tigris and Sejanus were shooed out of the hospital, Coriolanus sat beside you and slung an arm over your shoulder. He slotted his fingers beneath your chin and kissed you deeply. It was a slow embrace, with not a hint of sexual intentionsâhe just wanted to hold you. Remind himself that you were still alive, still here, still his.
Your nose nudged his when he laid his forehead over yours. The two of you breathed in each otherâs comforting presence. Just the two of you. It reminded you of when times were so⌠uncomplicated. Before all the mentoring came along, the only things you had to worry about were grades and Coriolanusâ refusals to eat properly.
Then, he told you about Clemensia. How she was probably somewhere in this very building. How she screamed when she was bitten by the snake muttation. Your mind raced with questions, but you yawned instead and leaned against his chest.Â
âI love you, too, Coryo,â you whispered into his hospital gown, realizing you hadnât said it back earlier.Â
A few minutes later, you were back asleep. Coriolanus was careful not to wake you when he laid you back down. Tucked the blanket up to your chin. He kissed your hairline once more, regarding you with a fond expression, before straightening, trying his best to ignore the aches blossoming over his back and legs.
And then he left the ward, assuring the doctors that he was fine and he could be discharged. They reluctantly agreed after a brief check-up, and had him sign off for himself. Once he was out, he immediately set off for the arena, trying to search for something, anything to keep his tribute alive.
Tunnels. The ground had collapsed into them, giving Lucy Gray a perfect place to run and hide. He went back home, making sure Grandmaâam and Tigris were asleepâbefore pouring a copious amount of powdered rat poison into his late motherâs compact.Â
It was cheating. But you and Sejanus had both said it beforeâhe was a rebel by nature. Bad news.
He visited the zoo enclosure and gave it to her then, informing her of the tunnels. Wiped her tears with a handkerchief, then told her he owed her his life and more. That you were okay, and it was all thanks to her. Lucy Gray looked overwhelmed for a moment. She did what any decent person would, she thought. He promised her that sheâd get out. Return home to the Covey. False hope whispered unrealistic dreams into her ears and she let herself listen.Â
âWe all do things weâre not proud of to survive,â he whispered when Lucy Gray attempted to protest, not wanting to poison anyone. He pushed the compact firmly into her hands. âDo it for your family.â
Conflict warred across her features. She nodded once, then twice.Â
Coriolanus' expression set with determination. âWe are going to win this, Lucy Gray. Weâre going to win this together. Iâm going to get you home.â
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