第125章

  i say, and i can’t help reaching out and pulling
  up the bottom of peeta’s pants. “oh, no,” i whisper, taking in
  the metal-and-plastic device that has replaced his flesh.
  “no one told you?” asks caesar gently. i shake my head.
  “i haven’t had the chance,” says peeta with a slight shrug.
  “it’s my fault,” i say. “because i used that tourniquet.”
  “yes, it’s your fault i’m alive,” says peeta.
  “he’s right,” says caesar. “he’d have bled to death for sure
  without it.”
  i guess this is true, but i can’t help feeling upset about it to
  the extent that i’m afraid i might cry and then i remember
  everyone in the country is watching me so i just bury my face
  in peeta’s shirt. it takes them a couple of minutes to coax me
  back out because it’s better in the shirt, where no one can see
  me, and when i do come out, caesar backs off questioning me
  so i can recover. in fact, he pretty much leaves me alone until
  the berries come up.
  “katniss, i know you’ve had a shock, but i’ve got to ask. the
  moment when you pulled out those berries. what was going
  on in your mind . . . hm?” he says.
  i take a long pause before i answer, trying to collect my
  thoughts. this is the crucial moment where i either challenged
  the capitol or went so crazy at the idea of losing peeta that i
  can’t be held responsible for my actions. it seems to call for a
  big, dramatic speech, but all i get out is one almost inaudible
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  sentence. “i don’t know, i just . . . couldn’t bear the thought of .
  . . being without him.”
  “peeta? anything to add?” asks caesar.
  “no. i think that goes for both of us,” he says.
  caesar signs off and it’s over. everyone’s laughing and cry-
  ing and hugging, but i’m still not sure until i reach haymitch.
  “okay?” i whisper.
  “perfect,” he answers.
  i go back to my room to collect a few things and find there’s
  nothing to take but the mockingjay pin madge gave me. some-
  one returned it to my room after the games. they drive us
  through the streets in a car with blackened windows, and the
  train’s waiting for us. we barely have time to say good-bye to
  cinna and portia, although we’ll see them in a few months,
  when we tour the districts for a round of victory ceremonies.
  it’s the capitol’s way of reminding people that the hunger
  games never really go away. we’ll be given a lot of useless
  plaques, and everyone will have to pretend they love us.
  the train begins moving and we’re plunged into night until
  we clear the tunnel and i take my first free breath since the
  reaping. effie is accompanying us back and haymitch, too, of
  course. we eat an enormous dinner and settle into silence in
  front of the television to watch a replay of the interview. with
  the capitol growing farther away every second, i begin to
  think of home. of prim and my mother. of gale. i excuse my-
  self to change out of my dress and into a plain shirt and pants.
  as i slowly, thoroughly wash the makeup from my face and
  put my hair in its braid, i begin transforming back into myself.
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  katniss everdeen. a girl who lives in the seam. hunts in the
  woods. trades in the hob. i stare in the mirror as i try to re-
  member who i am and who i am not. by the time i join the
  others, the pressure of peeta’s arm around my shoulders feels
  alien.
  when the train makes a brief stop for fuel, we’re allowed to
  go outside for some fresh air. there’s no longer any need to
  guard us. peeta and i walk down along the track, hand in hand,
  and i can’t find anything to say now that we’re alone. he stops
  to gather a bunch of wildflowers for me. when he presents
  them, i work hard to look pleased. because he can’t know that
  the pink-and-white flowers are the tops of wild onions and
  only remind me of the hours i’ve spent gathering them with
  gale.
  gale. the idea of seeing gale in a matter of hours makes my
  stomach churn. but why?

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