第78章

  i think. sing what? i do know a few songs. believe it or
  not, there was once music in my house, too. music i helped
  make. my father pulled me in with that remarkable voice —
  but i haven’t sung much since he died. except when prim is
  very sick. then i sing her the same songs she liked as a baby.
  sing. my throat is tight with tears, hoarse from smoke and
  fatigue. but if this is prim’s, i mean, rue’s last request, i have
  to at least try. the song that comes to me is a simple lullaby,
  one we sing fretful, hungry babies to sleep with, it’s old, very
  old i think. made up long ago in our hills. what my music
  teacher calls a mountain air. but the words are easy and
  soothing, promising tomorrow will be more hopeful than this
  awful piece of time we call today.
  i give a small cough, swallow hard, and begin:
  deep in the meadow, under the willow
  a bed of grass, a soft green pillow
  lay down your head, and close your sleepy eyes
  and when again they open, the sun will rise.
  here it’s safe, here it’s warm
  here the daisies guard you from every harm
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  here your dreams are sweet and tomorrow brings them
  true
  here is the place where i love you.
  rue’s eyes have fluttered shut. her chest moves but only
  slightly. my throat releases the tears and they slide down my
  cheeks. but i have to finish the song for her.
  deep in the meadow, hidden far away
  a cloak of leaves, a moonbeam ray
  forget your woes and let your troubles lay
  and when again it’s morning, they’ll wash away.
  here it’s safe, here it’s warm
  here the daisies guard you from every harm
  the final lines are barely audible.
  here your dreams are sweet and tomorrow brings them
  true
  here is the place where i love you.
  everything’s still and quiet. then, almost eerily, the mock-
  ingjays take up my song.
  for a moment, i sit there, watching my tears drip down on
  her face. rue’s cannon fires. i lean forward and press my lips
  against her temple. slowly, as if not to wake her, i lay her head
  back on the ground and release her hand.
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  they’ll want me to clear out now. so they can collect the
  bodies. and there’s nothing to stay for. i roll the boy from dis-
  trict 1 onto his face and take his pack, retrieve the arrow that
  ended his life. i cut rue’s pack from her back as well, knowing
  she’d want me to have it but leave the spear in her stomach.
  weapons in bodies will be transported to the hovercraft. i’ve
  no use for a spear, so the sooner it’s gone from the arena the
  better.
  i can’t stop looking at rue, smaller than ever, a baby animal
  curled up in a nest of netting. i can’t bring myself to leave her
  like this. past harm, but seeming utterly defenseless. to hate
  the boy from district 1, who also appears so vulnerable in
  death, seems inadequate. it’s the capitol i hate, for doing this
  to all of us.
  gale’s voice is in my head. his ravings against the capitol
  no longer pointless, no longer to be ignored. rue’s death has
  forced me to confront my own fury against the cruelty, the in-
  justice they inflict upon us. but here, even more strongly than
  at home, i feel my impotence. there’s no way to take revenge
  on the capitol. is there?
  then i remember peeta’s words on the roof. “only i keep
  wishing i could think of a way to . . . to show the capital they
  don’t own me. that i’m more than just a piece in their games.”
  and for the first time, i understand what he means.
  i want to do something, right here, right now, to shame
  them, to make them accountable, to show the capitol that
  whatever they do or force us to do there is a part of every tri-
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  bute they can’t own. that rue was more than a piece in their
  games. and so am i.
  a few steps into the woods grows a bank of wildflowers.
  perhaps they are really weeds of some sort, but they have
  blossoms in beautiful shades of violet and yellow and white. i
  gather up an armful and come back to rue’s side. slowly, one
  stem at a time, i decorate her body in the flowers. covering
  the ugly wound. wreathing her face. weaving her hair with
  bright colors.
  they’ll have to show it. or, even if they choose to turn the
  cameras elsewhere at this moment, they’ll have to bring them
  back when they collect the bodies and everyone will see her
  then and know i did it. i step back and take a last look at rue.
  she could really be asleep in that meadow after all.
  “bye, rue,” i whisper. i press the three middle fingers of my
  left hand against my lips and hold them out in her direction.
  then i walk away without looking back.
  the birds fall silent. somewhere, a mockingjay gives the
  warning whistle that precedes the hovercraft. i don’t know
  how it knows. it must hear things that humans can’t. i pause,
  my eyes focused on what’s ahead, not what’s happening be-
  hind me. it doesn’t take long, then the general birdsong begins
  again and i know she’s gone.
  another mockingjay, a young one by the look of it, lands on
  a branch before me and bursts out rue’s melody.
  my song, the hovercraft, were too unfamiliar for this novice
  to pick up, but it has mastered her handful of notes. the ones
  that mean she’s safe.
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  “good and safe,” i say as i pass under its branch. “we don’t
  have to worry about her now.” good and safe.
  i’ve no idea where to go. the brief sense of home i had that
  one night with rue has vanished. my feet wander this way and
  that until sunset. i’m not afraid, not even watchful. which
  makes me an easy target. except i’d kill anyone i met on sight.
  without emotion or the slightest tremor in my hands. my ha-
  tred of the capitol has not lessened my hatred of my competi-
  tors in the least. especially the careers. they, at least, can be
  made to pay for rue’s death.
  no one materializes though. there aren’t many of us left
  and it’s a big arena. soon they’ll be pulling out some other de-
  vice to force us together. but there’s been enough gore today.
  perhaps we’ll even get to sleep.
  i’m about to haul my packs into a tree to make camp when
  a silver parachute floats down and lands in front of me. a gift
  from a sponsor. but why now?

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