第81章

  amazingly similar in the execution. a bow pulled, an arrow
  shot. entirely different in the aftermath. i killed a boy whose
  name i don’t even know. somewhere his family is weeping for
  him. his friends call for my blood. maybe he had a girlfriend
  who really believed he would come back . . .
  but then i think of rue’s still body and i’m able to banish
  the boy from my mind. at least, for now.
  it’s been an uneventful day according to the sky. no deaths.
  i wonder how long we’ll get until the next catastrophe drives
  us back together. if it’s going to be tonight, i want to get some
  sleep first. i cover my good ear to block out the strains of the
  anthem, but then i hear the trumpets and sit straight up in an-
  ticipation.
  for the most part, the only communication the tributes get
  from outside the arena is the nightly death toll. but occasio-
  nally, there will be trumpets followed by an announcement.
  usually, this will be a call to a feast. when food is scarce, the
  gamemakers will invite the players to a banquet, somewhere
  known to all like the cornucopia, as an inducement to gather
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  and fight. sometimes there is a feast and sometimes there’s
  nothing but a loaf of stale bread for the tributes to compete
  for. i wouldn’t go in for the food, but this could be an ideal
  time to take out a few competitors.
  claudius templesmith’s voice booms down from overhead,
  congratulating the six of us who remain. but he is not inviting
  us to a feast. he’s saying something very confusing. there’s
  been a rule change in the games. a rule change! that in itself
  is mind bending since we don’t really have any rules to speak
  of except don’t step off your circle for sixty seconds and the
  unspoken rule about not eating one another. under the new
  rule, both tributes from the same district will be declared
  winners if they are the last two alive. claudius pauses, as if he
  knows we’re not getting it, and repeats the change again.
  the news sinks in. two tributes can win this year. if they’re
  from the same district. both can live. both of us can live.
  before i can stop myself, i call out peeta’s name.
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  part iii
  "the victor"
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  i clap my hands over my mouth, but the sound has already
  escaped. the sky goes black and i hear a chorus of frogs begin
  to sing. stupid! i tell myself. what a stupid thing to do! i wait,
  frozen, for the woods to come alive with assailants. then i re-
  member there’s almost no one left.
  peeta, who’s been wounded, is now my ally. whatever
  doubts i’ve had about him dissipate because if either of us
  took the other’s life now we’d be pariahs when we returned to
  district 12. in fact, i know if i was watching i’d loathe any tri-
  bute who didn’t immediately ally with their district partner.
  besides, it just makes sense to protect each other. and in my
  case — being one of the star-crossed lovers from district 12
  — it’s an absolute requirement if i want any more help from
  sympathetic sponsors.
  the star-crossed lovers . . . peeta must have been playing
  that angle all along. why else would the gamemakers have
  made this unprecedented change in the rules? for two tri-
  butes to have a shot at winning, our “romance” must be so
  popular with the audience that condemning it would jeopard-
  ize the success of the games. no thanks to me. all i’ve done is
  managed not to kill peeta. but whatever he’s done in the are-
  na, he must have the audience convinced it was to keep me
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  alive. shaking his head to keep me from running to the cornu-
  copia. fighting cato to let me escape. even hooking up with
  the careers must have been a move to protect me. peeta, it
  turns out, has never been a danger to me.
  the thought makes me smile. i drop my hands and hold my
  face up to the moonlight so the cameras can be sure to catch it.
  so, who is there left to be afraid of?

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