Ashley was cold.
All around him, the garden continued to shrivel up and come to an end. The once luscious green leaves had long turned brown, falling to the blackened floor and leaving the branches to become brittle and break at the slightest touch. Birdsong had once filled the arena with a cheerful tune, but now the only noise was the whistling of a cold breeze that blew through the dying trees and cast whispers into the night sky.
The young boy shivered in the wind, his hands beginning to tremble and drop the knife they had once held in their grasp. The cold of the ground beneath Ashley's knees was beginning to seep through his clothes, accompanied by the crimson lake that now covered the entire floor of the arena. He was certain that too much innocent blood had been spilled since the very first gong but, finally, it was over. No more children would die within the haunting confines of this once beautiful paradise.
Slowly, Ashley pushed the knife away from him. The blade glinted silver in the moonlight, breaking through the barrier of blood that had congealed on it's sharp blade. Smears covered it's handle, obscuring the fingerprints of those who had all wielded the weapon alongside the hope of it being their lifeline. That evening, all hope seemed to be gone.
With his deep sigh simply floating away on the breeze, Ashley laid both of his hands on the floor. His own heartbeat pounded in his ears, pumping pure adrenaline all throughout his body that made him tremble. Even when he forced his eyes shut, embracing the darkness that it brought, the image of the scene in front of him was still burnt into his mind.
Death.Ashley had never killed anyone before. Back in District Thirteen, where the Games were nothing more than a taunt rather than a reality, he could not have imagined how difficult it could be. After all, it was just a simple flick of a knife across another tribute's throat; it was barely any effort at all. Once the metallic tinge of blood filled the air and burnt at the back of your throat, the damage was already done and nothing could be repaired. You simply waited, watching the life slowly drain from the person lying on the ground in front of you. Their eyes would slowly drift shut, glazing over in a dream-like state. Occasionally, a smile would appear on their face as the pain began to fade away and their escape, death, finally came to them.
Ashley would never have an escape. No matter how much he longed for his own pain to disappear, he knew that the raw ache in his heart would never fade away and he would be forced to live with it until he could bear it no more. The final kill of the Games - his first kill, and hopefully his last - had finally taught him that the pain of death does not only come with witnessing it, but also with inflicting it as well.
Dove Evans had done nothing wrong. She was a child, broken and bruised just like the rest of the tributes who had remained. She did not deserve the fate that awaited her, but Ashley had inflicted it upon her without even a second thought. He had tried to forget everything, but he was still aware of the promise he had made his brother and Dove had stood in the way.
Now, Ashley regretted everything.
He knelt on the dirt beneath him, bent over with his head nearly touching the floor. Tears threatened to fall from his eyes, just like they had done for every single minute since the very beginning of this torture. For once, he did not allow them. He forced himself to be strong, fighting the sobs that kept threatening to escape his mouth. He had no excuse this time; this pain was all his fault.
Aries' death had been nothing but a cruel act by the Game-Makers, easily explained away. The pain of losing his twin brother - his best friend - was almost numbed by the ability to glance at the sky and know that someone else was responsible. If Ashley wanted to be angry about it, he knew exactly who he should be shouting at. If he wanted to cry, he was aware who had made him feel that way.
What about Dove's family? She must have had a mother, father, maybe even siblings. As they watched the same fate greet such a tiny, frail girl, Ashley knew exactly who they would be blaming.
Him.
The same grief washed over him for Dove as it had done for Aries. Another life had been lost, another child fallen and forgotten in the grand history of the Games that seemed like they would never stop. This time, if Ashley was angry he could only scream and hurt himself. If he wanted to cry, he was not granted that liberty because it was himself that had committed the act.
Death was like a circle, consistent and never ending. Even if it's luxury was never given to you, it would continue to consume you until it's cold grasp dragged you into a dark abyss that was inescapable. Almost like a constantly dripping tap, it would be stuck in the back of your mind forever, waiting for a suitable moment to wash over you and break you down completely.
Was this what Aries had wanted? He had told Ashley to win, almost as if victory was an expectation of his twin. He had convinced him to continue to fight when all Ashley wanted to do was curl up in a ball and forget everything that had ever happened.
Slowly, Ashley reached out and picked the knife up from the dusty ground. He wiped the glinting blade clean on his own shirt, watching his own warped reflection as he moved the metal up and down. Once it was glistening once more, he dug it as far as he could into the dirt beneath him; the ground did not bleed, unlike flesh.
Ashley was smart enough to know he could not blame anyone else for what he felt, but he was desperate enough to try it. His mind ran over everyone it could, from the Game-Makers who forced the tributes to fight to his own family who had allowed the twins to enter the Games in the first place. No one seemed to be the guilty one, until Ashley finally began to think of his own brother.
Aries was dead - that was a fact.
However, death was beginning to look more like an escape. Aries would never have to endure pain again, or feel the wet trails of tears spilling down his cheeks. He would never be hurt or broken, or forced to try and forget everything.
Even more, he had entered that painless world by his own accord.He had left Ashley to deal with everything. The two of them had always been inseparable, doing everything they could together and facing the future with each other close by. Even when something as big and as terrifying as the Games had finally graced their presence, they were supposed to be side by side. Within that tiny stone room where they had been locked together, they could have both taken the poison. They could have both refused to die until someone killed them both. They could have still been together.
Except, they were not. Aries had gone alone.
Ashley finally allowed the tears spill down his cheeks and a shout to escape his lips. Dove's cannon had not yet echoed across the darkening sky, but he knew that it was far too late to correct his own mistake. For the first time in his life, he would be enduring this sort of pain alone.
The pain of being a Victor could never be washed away.
He brought the knife out of the dust once more, taking it by the handle and throwing it as far away from him as possible. He wanted no reminded of what he had done, even though he knew the nightmares would haunt him for the rest of his life. He longed for an escape like every other tribute had been granted, but Ashley would never be granted one. It was not his fault, but he would be by himself until the end of his own time. There would be no one else to understand him.
Under the evening sky of the garden, Ashley finally realised how much he truly hated his own twin brother.
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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