Dear Mother,
I am seventeen today. Most seventeen year olds in the district have a cause, however minimal, for both celebration and despair: they now have only two years left of the reaping, but one more entry in the ball. But I have a different cause for despair altogether.
On this day, I can no longer deny that I have spent more my life as a victor than not.
I've tried to do good things with the lot I've been given. Sparrow came up with the idea of opening the house to the poorer side of town. The cripples, the orphans, and the elderly, to be specific, and anyone else with nowhere else to go. We're going to add an extension onto the house in the spring.
This makes it sound like there was something good to come out of the Games. There's not. At least, not yet. The other victors call me optimistic, but I know that much. I have known that much, since before that day when they put a crown on my head and proclaimed me victor.
To this day I still wonder what you would have said or did if you had been there. If you had seen me, a child of eight years old, crowned victor of the Hunger Games. You would have wept, I know. But would you have wept with joy for my life, or wept with sorrow for the burdens I was to bear from then on?
Try as I might, I cannot come to any firm conclusion on how you would have reacted. There is only one thing I am certain of: When I refused the operation, when I chose to stay crippled with my own legs forever rather than take their phony fakes won with blood and death, you would have been pride of me. Father has told me so.
I try to forgive him. I swear I do. Every time I look into his eyes, I remember you and I try to be a family with him again. But it's hard. Every time I look at him, he and I exchange a look and I know we're both thinking of the blood he carries on his hands. Talon's, and, if the Games had gone differently, he would carry mine too.
Sometimes I want to blame Grandmother for it all. Since you weren't there, I suppose I must tell you that she died long ago, taken out by a simple disease in the time it took me to get from the Capitol to the districts. I never had to see her again, one of the ones that condemned my childhood to destruction. In a lot of ways, I think that is a good thing. But in my darkest of hearts, I wish I could have looked into the eyes of the woman who sent me to the slaughter. I wish I could have haunted her dreams as Hettie haunts mine.
Have you met Hettie? She's in the same place you are, I'd think. I called her Mom once, right before she died. Do not take offense at this, Mother. She reminded me of what I'd always imagined you would be like. The next time you see her, give her my thanks for protecting me as she did. She was the one to hold me together after Talon died, until she passed away as well.
I learned a lesson from those memories, a lesson that holds me together today while so many others in my position have long since succumbed to drug or drink. When you love someone, they will leave you for the next life. Someone new will come along and capture your love anew, until they, too, leave you for what comes next. Many victors have learned this.
But what I figured out is simply: there will always be another. The cycle of dying never ends, but neither does the cycle of loving. There will always be another to love. First I had you, then Talon, then Hettie. Now I have Sparrow and Finch.
They'll die too eventually, unless I die first. That doesn't upset me as much as it used to. You see, a heart can only break so much before it either breaks forever, or it learns to bend. My heart learned to bend.
In a few weeks, it'll be the fifteenth anniversary of your death. Once it was the most mournful day of the year. Now it's just another anniversary of another death, and it's not even the hardest. I miss you, Mother, but I can barely remember you. It's Talon and Hettie's deaths that are the hardest. Their deaths are the ones that leave me waking up with nightmares and sobbing at gravestones once a year.
And yet, rather than writing to Talon or Hettie on this day, I find myself writing to you. Why? Why do I write to a woman I can't even remember instead of to my beloved brother, or the woman who cared for me as if I were her own?
I think I know why. You see, writing to you is a bit like writing to myself. I can't remember you, no more than I can remember the girl I used to be.
Your Crippled Daughter (In More Ways than One),
Dove Evans
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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