District One - Jamilla Argentaria
The girl seemed small in the large chair when she first sat in it. Her stiletto-clad feet didn't reach the ground and she swung them lazily like the whole situation bored her. Compared to most Careers, she looked pathetically tiny and childlike. It was clear that her stylist had tried to make her look older, a little more dangerous than she first appeared to be. Her face was painted with a pallet of smoky grays and sensual reds and the dress hugging her body didn't leave much to the imagination.
"So I grew up in District One, which you should know if you've been paying attention to the Games at all. I'm sure it doesn't surprise you that I've been preparing for this moment for my entire life. You think of me as another Career, like you know anything about my life." She spoke in a cool voice, flirty and lazy and sultry. When she straightened up in her chair, it was clear that she wasn't as young as the audience had first thought. Her eyes glittered with amusement and her dark red lips were turned up in a smirk.
"But what nobody ever seems to get is that none of us are born Careers. We have to be made that way. I was born to be a jeweler, that's what my dad wanted from me. Yet here I am, Jace Argentaria the youngest District One tribute in... fifteen years, was it? I had to get here somehow and today I'll tell you about that." Her laugh was sweet and innocent despite her mature, overly-sexualized looks. The sound left the viewers wondering just how much of what they'd seen was just the part she was instructed to play on-screen.
"It all started when I was almost seven. My friend Orion was over and my dad was making pancakes for us because he liked to impress us. Of course, we were little so it wasn't that hard. Anyways, my dad made these really good pancakes for Orion and I and we were eating with my sister, Belladonna, who was eight at the time. Pretty normal stuff, yeah?" The intriguing thing about the girl was how she kept up her amused smirk the entire time. She didn't appear too nervous but the way her scarlet fingernails tapped on the arm of the chair hinted otherwise.
"So we're eating these pancakes and Orion is pulling on my hair and I'm trying to stab him with my fork when my mom and my other sister, Callista, walk into the kitchen. She was twelve at the time. They were yelling and I remember looking down at my breakfast then. I drew stuff in the syrup for a while." She gave a small chuckle and started tapping on her bare knee instead of the chair. The corners of her mouth started to fall a little and her smirk was more of a grimace. She seemed to realize this and let out another laugh to cover up what had happened.
"They were arguing about how my sister didn't want to train for the Games. Callie had always wanted to make jewelry, she was actually pretty good at it. My dad was really proud of her but my mom wasn't. She'd always told us that women should be allowed to be strong too, that confining us to making jewelry would be a waste of our strength." There was pride in her voice when she spoke of her mother. A fierce kind of strength that sparked a fire behind her pale eyes. She stopped tapping her fingers and focused her intense gaze on the camera.
"So she was furious when Callie said that she wanted to be a jeweler like Dad. I couldn't see him, but I'm pretty sure my father was grinning. He was always proud that she'd turned out like him instead. Anyways, my mom was shouting and Bella had already left the room. She tended to do that when my mom yelled. But I stayed because Orion was still eating and it would've been rude to leave him in there alone." Her voice was more affectionate when she talked about her sisters and softer whenever she mentioned her friend. A bit of red had crept into her cheeks but it was unclear if it was due to embarrassment or the blush that had been applied to her face.
"I sat there and poked at my pancakes and listened to my mom give Callie this big, long speech about being honorable and showing strength and not letting yourself be dominated by chauvinism. Orion and I giggled at all the big words she was using and I remember she told me that I wouldn't be laughing when I was getting stepped on by the boys." There was a subtle shift in her tone of voice, going from gleeful to strangely snarky. She rolled her eyes and pursed her dark lips before flashing a shiny grin and continuing.
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Writer Games | Masquerade of Martyrs & Family Ties
AksiWriter Games: Masquerade of Martyrs: last updated February 3 2015 Writer Games: Family Ties: last updated April 14 2015 Reuploaded with permission from AEKersey 2019