It had been ten years since One had a victor.
The last one no longer recognized herself when she looked in the mirror.
She was only twenty-six, hardly an old woman, but she could see the years etched into her face. People often told her how beautiful she had become, as if she had ever been ugly, but she no longer saw beauty in the person who looked back at her. The Capitol had tried to convince her that her body was her greatest asset and when she was young, she had believed them. They'd told her that she was beautiful and she had let them use that against her. She'd let them use her, they'd taken advantage of her and she had let them. They had done terrible things to her but she allowed it, even ten years later. Now grown and aware of what her life had become, Jamilla was disgusted with the woman in the mirror. After all, she had let herself fall this far.
As she stood in the bathroom, leaning on the sink for support and trying to stop the retching that shook her entire body, it was all her fault. It was her fault that she was the last Victor. On this day, she had seen two more children buried because of her. He had been the nineteenth, the nineteenth child that she'd seen slaughtered. The second day had killed him, something practically unheard of in District One's tributes. The girl had lasted longer but it hadn't been enough to win the Victor's crown. She became number twenty on the last day, destroying any hope that One would finally win again.
Any attempt that Jamilla had made to bring home a new champion was squandered year after year. Nobody would admit that they blamed her for their losses but she could feel their hatred. It burned under her skin like a fire in her veins. After ten years of failure and loss, she was no longer sure if it was their hatred or her own self-loathing that was eating her alive. It had all begun to blend together in her addled mind. Another wave of nausea crashed down on her and she vomited into the sink. She had seen too much death in her twenty-six years. It was too much for her.
Most Victors avoided the funerals of the fallen tributes. Some said it was an attempt to show respect for the grieving families. Others said it was a way to show discontent with those who hadn't been good enough to win. Still, she had attended the burial of the fallen competitors since before she was crowned champion and Jamilla decided long ago that her crown wouldn't change that. She had seen twenty tributes die while in her care and had attended every somber ceremony. People outside of One knew how they celebrated the Games but nobody seemed to grasp that they too mourned their losses. Some, more than others. Other Victors would poke fun at her whenever she spoke of one of her lost trainees. Many assumed that Career-types like her, those who lived and died for the honor of their District, did not feel the sting that the lower few did. And they were wrong. Jamilla had always kept a straight face when they taunted her, perhaps even smiled in amusement, but they had always been wrong about the grief felt on behalf of lost Careers. Even those who lived for the Games were wounded by those who died for it. They didn't know what she had lost.
They had never seen the weakness that was hidden inside her. Or what that weakness had cost her. Though ten years of living had shattered her, she had never allowed Panem to see how far she had fallen from the grace that had been handed to her when she was sixteen. When she was young, she had thought that her time in the Games was over. She had been terribly wrong.
Every Victor that she'd met was still playing in some way and winning had ruined them all in different ways. Guilt presented itself differently in every person. Insanity took many forms, not all of them detectable in those who had learned to live their life as an act for a prying world. Grief did strange things to them all. Ten years had taught Jamilla a lot and it was those ten years that had shown her that there was no escaping the fate that came with the Victor's crown. Winning took something from every Victor but they all had to pretend that they were fine. It was a game they all played.
It was a game that had cost her more than just her sanity. Every Victor played and accepted the cards they were dealt. When she refused to do so, they took her father as payment for her treason. Her sweet father, a man who had never done any wrong, paid for her rebellious refusal to give in to the Capitol's demands. Until she learned how to follow the rules, the game beat her over and over again. And it never played fair. Ten years of secrets and lies and slowly falling apart had proved that. The woman in the mirror was one who had sold more than her body to level the playing field. Jamilla had sold her soul to the Capitol in exchange for clemency. They would spare her family if she gave into their power. They would save Orion if she let them take her apart and recreate her. Every year, they reminded her of their power by killing the tributes that she'd sold herself to protect. The Capitol owned her and she jumped through their hoops because she had no choice. The stakes were high and if she quit, they would destroy her life and leave her screaming in the ashes. She had learned years before that submitting to their wishes and doing what they asked was the only way to win. If winning was possible.
She could hear the cannons as she slumped against the sink. Her skin was clammy and slick with sweat, her breath came out in uneven gasps, and all she could smell was vomit. Days like these were days that usually found her curled up on her bathroom floor, sobbing drunkenly and laying in a puddle of gin. Not today. The room had begun to fill with steam. In her escalating panic, she had forgotten that she turned the shower on but she was glad that she had. She peeled off the pajamas that clung to her skin, shaking as she kicked them away and staggered to the shower. She couldn't stand. Her legs were shaking and she found that they could no longer support her.
Halfway between sliding down to the bottom of the shower and forgetting how to breathe, she heard somebody say her name from the other side of the door. They wanted to be let in. They rapped their knuckles on the door and she heard death. Cannons. She tried to tell them that she was fine but all that came out was a strangled cry. It was pathetic, how easily she was reminded of the Arena that she had only spent a few days in. How easily she was thrown into a panic. It was pathetic that a few days of bloodshed had lead her to this. Years ago, she had been strong enough to slaughter her way through twenty-seven innocent people. Now she couldn't even think of the Games. A few days had ruined the rest of her life.
She was sobbing before she could stop herself, practically screaming in her grief. It had been building up inside of her for years. She used to pretend that she didn't feel it, only shedding tears when she felt that she couldn't hold them in anymore. But she was beyond the point of no return. Curled up on the bottom of the shower, wailing and gasping for breath, she didn't see a way out of the game that she'd found herself trapped in. There was a razor on the side of the shower, she knew it was there. She knew it was a way out but it was one that she'd been too proud to take. It wasn't the first time she'd considered it. But it was the first time that she reached for the razor, the first time that she really wanted to do it.
The door broke before she could finish the first cut. It hurt, it hurt more than she would've thought. But the bathroom door was opened and Orion was yelling for her and she was sobbing, throwing the razor away from her and apologizing frantically. She didn't care that she was in the shower or that she looked like hell or that she'd finally broken down. He was yelling, he was crying and so was she and it was a mess. It was all her fault. It had always been her fault. She was sorry, so sorry.
It was her fault.
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Writer Games | Masquerade of Martyrs & Family Ties
حركة (أكشن)Writer Games: Masquerade of Martyrs: last updated February 3 2015 Writer Games: Family Ties: last updated April 14 2015 Reuploaded with permission from AEKersey 2019