Treize

34 0 0
                                    

bonus shamchat:

This is a conversation between uwu and yourself, Eijirou Kirishima.

Eijirou Kirishima: Obama?

uwu: o w o?

uwu: hewwo?

Eijirou Kirishima: I'm Dwowning!

uwu: P-pwese I don't wanna d-die

Eijirou Kirishima: I'll do anything obama!!!

uwu: a n y t h in g ?

Eijirou Kirishima: Y-Yes! Anything!

uwu: then

uwu: perish

Eijirou Kirishima: UWAH!!!

uwu: big mood

You've left the conversation.

A carnation from the lost one, too tossed around to speak
who gives to you this rue, of a truth he faced too weak.
Due to acacia, a harsh loss of oats
and two years of lichen, choking out his shouts.
He pleads for tonquil, the flavor which he chose
but all he has is marigold and elegante rose.
"What is it supposed to mean?" Gilbert had been staring at the note all day, unable to make heads or tails of it. He had put the flowers in water, staring at them, baffled.
They had to be from Matthew. There was no other person who would send him flowers like this.
But what was with this note?
Gilbert tried to piece it together, line by line. He grabbed a scrap of paper and started his decoding with diligence.
A carnation from lost one, too tossed around to speak? That had to be referring to Matthew, to his trauma, his inability to talk. There was even a carnation in the bouquet.
Who gives you this rue, of a truth he faced too weak?
Uhhhhhh.....what the fuck?
Matthew had put a rue in the bouquet, but what the fuck did the other half mean?
He highlighted that area for later.
Due to acacia? Whatever the fuck that was. Gilbert googled it. Of course. Another plant, which was indeed in this bouquet. But a harsh loss of oats? What kind of gibberish?
Two years of Lichen? There was Lichen in the bouquet but...two years of it? What?
Everything in this poem had to do with flowers. What did this mean?
He flipped the card over, inspecting the logo stamped onto the back.
Anderssen Flowers.
He tapped his chin.
Maybe there was a clue in flower language. He remembered reading something about how people used to communicate through flowers.
He pulled out his phone, looking for a site on flower language that could help him decode the message.
Once he found one, he started to write down what he found.
Carnation meant refusal...and "I can't be with you.".
Was Matthew saying he didn't want to be with him?
Rue meant regret...so Matthew was giving him regrets...over not telling him about the wedding.
Acacia? It meant secret love. And oats stood for music. The secret love had taken away Gilbert's music.
Two years of lichen, meaning solitude, had made Matthew unable to speak.
There was no tonquil in the bouquet. Maybe that meant he wanted some. It meant forgiveness. He wanted Gilbert to forgive him.
Marigold meant pain and grief, and elegance Rose was a wound that needed to be healed. Did he not think Gilbert would forgive him?
In the end, this was just a lovesick poem. It has no clues about where Matthew might be.
But there was the logo on the card.
It was time to pay Anderssen Flowers a visit.

Lured into the DangerWhere stories live. Discover now