I love my parents, but they have simply awful taste in romantic partners. The ironic part: that didn't change when they found each other.
Funny how that works, no? They're reasonably intelligent people. They must know they have a type, and who would be good for them. More than that, they should understand the most basic principle of relationships, the one that seems so obvious, it often goes without saying.
Any relationship that starts with karaoke is doomed to failure.
I sat, trembling, muscles tensed as an unnaturally sweet smell filled my nose. The gray stone under my hand blurred-
I'm standing in a dark room filled with the scent of alcohol and sweat. Colored lights are flashing in erratic patterns that give me a mild headache, and an inexpert voice is cheerfully mangling a popular song from twenty years ago. I know the spot, and with some incomprehensible logic, I can tell what is about to happen.
A guy in his twenties laughs loudly next to me. I look over at him, frowning. He's clearly had a few beers, and the brand-new Peacekeeper uniform marks him as a recent graduate of the Training Center. I note the goofy smile on his face, and grin back. I know this man, though I wasn't alive when he looked like this.
"Hi Daddy," I say, my voice muted, strange. The song ends, and a red-faced, beaming woman with hair an eye-watering shade of green stumbles offstage, to polite applause. My father takes another swig of beer.
I've heard the story a thousand times. I know how this goes. Bright pings ring out as the next person selects their song. A high, sweet melody rings out, different from the electronic style of a few moments ago. I turn around slowly. My father mirrors my movements.
I coughed. The sick-smell was everywhere. The walls were spinning. I slowly slid down the wall until I was lying down. My vision narrowed, darkness swallowing up the edges of my world.
My father's jaw drops open, an expression clearly generated by the alcohol. I gaze upon the stage, curious to see even though I know who's there.
My mother. Dana Killian.
Once, I asked my parents what first caught the other's attention. My mother simply laughed, saying she'd always had a weakness for men in uniform. Her first boyfriend had been a Peacekeeper too, a guy named Brenden. He'd been the one to get her into the sort of fake Irish crap that she was singing that night.
When I asked my dad what first caught his eye, he'd simply said "Boobs."
My mother opens her mouth and begins to sing. The words are indistinct. I always fell asleep before my parents finished the story, so I never heard the song. My father has closed his mouth, but he's got that stupid grin on his face again. His eyes never leave my mother. She's smiling back at him, flirtatious, singing the faux-Celtic words off a screen that's just out of sight.
My back was against rough stone. I twitched, my body wracked with coughs. The smell of dirt and decay and sweet gas was slowly fading away, the texture of rough stone shifting subtly to something else. Something smoother. Something softer.
The notes of the song are stretching out into long peals of sweet sound. The smell of alcohol is overpowering. My father and mother are both staring at each other, movements halted as my father steps towards the stage. The karaoke club is frozen, a single crystalline moment.
I stand in the middle of the moment, eyes closed. It doesn't make a difference. I'm still aware of everything that's happening. Frozen citizens pause mid-dance. A thin stream of alcohol is coming from a bartender's bottle, suspended over a slender glass.
A few years ago, I realized something about my parents. About this karaoke bar. About the Capitol itself. We're all about escape. Whether it's through pretending you're a celebrity by singing pop songs, or by getting drunk with your buddies after becoming a Peacekeeper. Whether it's about becoming so desperate for adventure that you send kids to fight to their deaths and have the gall to pretend it's "fair," a "righteous punishment" for Districts that rebelled centuries ago. Whether it's about singing New-Age fake Celtic crap about a land where everything's green and perfect and beautiful, when any schoolgirl could tell you that country sank beneath the waves centuries ago, a victim of the same collapse that created Panem.
I like to think that I'm not escaping by becoming a unicorn. I want to say that I'm embracing my innermost self, acknowledging a truer reality. In the end, though, I know the truth. I know exactly why I want to become some horse with a horn that can fart rainbows and canter off happily into the sunset. It's the same reason my mother went up on that stage, singing about a place that hasn't existed for centuries. It's why my father drank three beers before he saw my mother singing, and why he drank another five over the course of the evening. It's why my parents got married in six months, wildly in love, when who could say whether they loved each other or whether they loved a potent combination of alcohol and karaoke?
I look around at the frozen bar. I have to admit that it's a lovely little moment. Wine, women, and song are all in abundance, and the denizens of the Capitol are loving every second of it. My parents have locked eyes, and I know the story that's about to be born.
I turn away.
The bar flickers, and I look down at my hands. They're solid, and cold, and as I reach for my father, he seems far away, even though just a second ago I was close enough to smell his cologne. Instead, my hands touch something cold, and rough, and hard as a Gamemaker's heart. I start to cry, inexplicably, and in that instant, the bar and its distractions are gone, the lights going out immediately. I gasp, and grope, and-
I was sitting, weeping with my hands against the tunnel walls. The stone had scraped my fingers and my head throbbed with pressure and discomfort. All I could smell was a sweet, unnatural odor, slowly fading until it vanished completely. I trembled, hands balling into fists.
See, the trouble with escapes is that they can never last. The song plays out, and you need to let someone else take the stage. You wake up with a massive hangover, wondering what possessed you to drink everything your friends bought you. You come back from Ireland, and remember that the green land of happiness and leprechauns never existed, and that the only Irish people nowadays are fish.
You realize that the honeymoon is over, and that even after three kids and twenty-five years, you can't stand the sight of that person you met at a karaoke bar.
You realize that, no matter how much gas some psycho pumps into a tunnel, you're still a teenage girl in the Hunger Games, devoid of survival skills, supplies, and hope.
I pounded my fists against the walls, blood dripping from my knuckles.
"Why are you lying to me?" I shouted at the roof. "Can't you at least be honest before I die horribly?"
It's not real.
It was never real.
And no matter how I hard I work-
It would never be real.
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Writer Games | Masquerade of Martyrs & Family Ties
ActionWriter Games: Masquerade of Martyrs: last updated February 3 2015 Writer Games: Family Ties: last updated April 14 2015 Reuploaded with permission from AEKersey 2019