暁美 ほむら (
iflipmyhair) wrote in
thearena2013-11-13 03:53 pm
Entry tags:
You Dropped The Bomb On Me
WHO| Homura and Eponine
WHAT| Homura brings Eponine some bad news. And the joys of bombmaking.
WHEN| Week 4
WHERE| The cornucopia area
WARNING| There're bombs. And Homura being a blunt little girl.
Homura was down a tent at the moment.
Of course, she knew that would happen, and she was all right with that. Now, she was ready to go to her next phase. She had seen that previous tributes had used the platform explosions to their advantage in previous Arenas. Given the amount of supplies that there was in the Cornucopia, it was possible that most had ignored the potential which lay at their feet.
Homura hadn't. Her first priority had been to take care of Sigma. Now, he was gone, and she was ready to take the offensive. There were a good amount of tributes, with a good amount of explosives around each pedestal. She would have plenty to work with, as she quietly brought the instructions of Hara Hara Tokei and other manuals to the forefront of her mind.
She was able to make one bomb every five or so minutes. She'd have cover in the high grass, and would be able to hear anyone incoming.
It was a good plan.
She didn't anticipate anyone would be back at the now-empty Cornucopia.
WHAT| Homura brings Eponine some bad news. And the joys of bombmaking.
WHEN| Week 4
WHERE| The cornucopia area
WARNING| There're bombs. And Homura being a blunt little girl.
Homura was down a tent at the moment.
Of course, she knew that would happen, and she was all right with that. Now, she was ready to go to her next phase. She had seen that previous tributes had used the platform explosions to their advantage in previous Arenas. Given the amount of supplies that there was in the Cornucopia, it was possible that most had ignored the potential which lay at their feet.
Homura hadn't. Her first priority had been to take care of Sigma. Now, he was gone, and she was ready to take the offensive. There were a good amount of tributes, with a good amount of explosives around each pedestal. She would have plenty to work with, as she quietly brought the instructions of Hara Hara Tokei and other manuals to the forefront of her mind.
She was able to make one bomb every five or so minutes. She'd have cover in the high grass, and would be able to hear anyone incoming.
It was a good plan.
She didn't anticipate anyone would be back at the now-empty Cornucopia.

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She had been chasing another of the hallucinations through the woods, staggering after Marius and Cosette as they giggled and laughed and held hands and kissed. Why could she never have that?
As she drew nearer the Cornucopia, her hallucinations disappeared, fading into the long grass, and though Eponine looked for where they went, she couldn't tell their route. So, with a sob of frustration, she dropped the branches she used as crutches and sank down, leaning her back against the cool, gold husk of the Cornucopia. She was hungry; she hadn't received a gift from any of the viewers, and her food, though she had rationed it carefully, was gone now. And she was thirsty. But it wouldn't be long now, unless someone shared their water with her, or a Capitol citizen took pity on her and sent her a gift.
But no - they would give them all to Howard. She sighed, and dropped her head, so her forehead rested on her knees, which she had tugged into a tuck position. She was more emaciated than ever now, truly a walking skeleton. She didn't even notice Homura at first; but when she did, she took up her crutch and held it firmly, ready to strike Homura and hopefully knock her behind the knees so that she would fall and Eponine herself wouldn't have to stand.
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...and brought out a protein bar. She hadn't bothered to eat it, even when it had parachuted down. She'd had plenty of food, and still had plenty more with her rationing. Though, as she looked down at her offering, she couldn't help but find it ironic. And this moment was more than merely just lobbing extra food off onto someone.
It was symbolism, to her. Back home, entrenched in the system of the Incubators, a gift of sustenance was a way to gauge intention. Acceptance meant alliance, and rejection meant hostility. With Mami, it had been the Soul Gem. With Kyoko, Pocky.
It had been rare for Homura to even observe the idea of allying with a girl, much less a magical girl. Ironic, now, that she was the one ultimately offering, but she had her reasons.
"Here." Quietly, she took several steps towards Eponine, keeping the bar out in front of her, along with her other hand. "Take this."
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So the offering of a food bar was completely unexpected. Eponine reached out her hand automatically, but she hesitated, withdrew her hand and shook her head.
"What do you want? I don't have anything with me to pay you with. If it's a trick to kill me, I would rather you just do it - I am tired of games. Just please do it."
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"I don't have a need or interest in killing you." She didn't withdraw the hand, even though she probably could have. "You're Eponine Thenardier, aren't you?"
She paused. She wasn't sure whether it would work, whether taking the gamble would even make sense. But...she had a remembrance of her playbacks in the Capitol, watching highlights and reels before she was brought in. Perhaps she needed to appeal to something deeper than hunger. And if she played it right, she had the feeling she knew what that would be.
"Surely you know of Dr. Klim."
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She studied the girl stood before her. Eponine was quite certain she had never come across her before. So why did this girl know so much about her? Why had she remembered Eponine's name? And why did she offer food now?
Eponine's eyes drifted back to the protein bar in Homura's hand. She was hungry, starving. She wanted that bar. Slowly, slowly, she eased herself into a standing position, leaning heavily on her crutches. But once she was stood, she prepared herself to swing a crutch at Homura, to knock her over - or unconscious, even, so that she might steal the bar. But even as she shifted her weight to her right crutch and raised the left, Homura spoke.
"Surely you know of Dr. Klim?"
Eponine stopped.
"What do you mean?" She took a step closer to Homura. "What of it, Mademoiselle? Why do you need to know who I am and who I know?"
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It was basically true. The facts. The detailed specifics weren't necessary. It would be hard enough as it was.She let the words sink in before she continued. She wasn't stupid; she'd seen Eponine raise the crutch. But she didn't allow herself to appear nervous or ready to counterattack. Eponine was already wary of her as it was, apparently.
"It is not a question of need for me," Homura spoke again, quietly. "But the truth is, Dr. Klim seemed an ally to you, just as I may consider him one with myself. If that's true, I assume that he wouldn't wish to harm you. Instead, he would probably wish for you to continue forth and do your best so you might prosper. Even if he cannot say he wanted that right here at this moment."
At this, Homura flipped her hair.
"Besides...as I said, I have no need or desire to hurt you. Still, we have been brought together by fortuitous serendipity, and have a shared commonality. You now know of my side, so I suppose the question now is this. What do you intend to do to me?"
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"He's dead. Was he... was he alone?" She chewed on the inside of her bottom lip, not even listening to Homura, so lost in guilt was she. He must have felt, perhaps, how she had done, when Marius left her outside the gates in the Rue Plumet all that time ago. Or how Howard had made her feel just those few weeks ago before the arena. She sniffed hard and swallowed, scrubbing her nose with her fist. What was the use in tears?
She tuned back in to Homura's chatter in time to hear 'fortuitous serendipity, and have a shared commonality.' Eponine had no idea what Homura was talking about, but she decided not bother asking. What did it matter? But the girl asked the question, and Eponine was desperate.
"Food. And water. Every bit you have, or I'll strike." Did she sound fierce? She hoped she sounded like she meant it. She hoped that Homura would just give her a bit. She hoped she wouldn't leave her alone.
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It was, still, the truth. Even with his death.
But again, specifics needn't be given here and now."I cannot give you everything." That was yet again the truth, and not simply leaving things out. Homura, robot-like though she may have seemed, still needed food too. "But I am willing to share with you. No doubt we will also find more edible food as we continue on, as there are places with endless caches. Attacking me is unnecessary."
And - on Eponine's end - likely futile. Desperate and hungry as Eponine was, she was still not in a condition to fight against someone who'd subsisted on unlimited food for a good part of the competition. At the least, Homura was visibly in better condition in comparison.
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Eponine's wistful smile became a little more satisfied when she heard Homura's suggestion of sharing her food. Eponine hadn't thought that her threat should work; truly, she hadn't expected anything to come of it, and she was sensible enough to know that she would not last in a fight. And so, she nodded quite happily at Homura's proposal.
"Do you have a lot of sponsors? Do you have any water?"
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At this, Homura managed to draw out one of the bottles of water from her pack, handing it to Eponine. She did have Sponsors, and she had water.
"Even though you will have many chances for failure, there are also many chances to make your own successes."
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She grabbed for the water, twisting the top quickly, and gulping at the cool liquid.
"You sound like that troll, mademoiselle." Eponine was not at all given over to philosophical sounding things. "Or perhaps Monsieur Enjolras. Me, no. I do not make successes. Nothing ever is good for me. Always, no. It is not for me. But I suppose that is okay. I do not mind so much. Only, I wish we had only to die once."
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Slowly, she stood up.
"And that was purpose. And it is always easy to believe in one's own complete lack of worth without one to pursue." Her hair slowly swayed in the wind as she turned to look at the older girl. "What do you know about explosives?"
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So Eponine didn't answer. Not to the allegations of not having self worth? What was the point? Instead, she blinked a little at the question.
"I know that they bang, Mademoiselle. They kill... Is that your game? To blow me up? Or to blow someone, at least? Well, I won't be blown up, and I will not blow anyone else up either. Though... it would be a quick way to go - a good way, perhaps."
She considered that idea thoughtfully, a frown creasing her brow.
"I will not play their game. I don't care what I said.It is no good."
The heavy cuff around her emaciated left arm is testament enough to the idea that she will not do as she is supposed to.
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Homura didn't reply to Eponine's declaration. She simply walked off. It seemed abrupt, and rude. And yet several moments later, she returned, her arms full of wires, parts, many things. Some of them quite advanced-looking.
Eponine would immediately recognize the parts having come from the platforms.
"Even if you do not wish or care to fight, you must always be prepared for one." She carefully set them down. "I learned to make and unmake bombs some time ago. You could say, as the Gamemakers would put it, they are my specialty weapon."
Casually, she began to unplug the wires on one of them. There was a click, a buzz, and then silence.
"With the amount of explosives in the Cornucopia, I'm surprised others would not think to take advantage of the weapons...given to them right at the beginning. They are quite easy to use, if one knew how to handle and rebuild them for more suitable purposes."
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"Perhaps the others have not thought of returning here? Or perhaps they do not want to injure themselves by trying to break them apart."
She was firm on one point, though. "You must do as you wish but I will not kill. I cannot. It is all I have left that they cannot take from me."
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She was used to it, it seemed, as she continued to carefully take apart the items. Not being appreciated, or being told her choice of weapon was...well, problematic, as opposed to a good idea.
"So what will you do?"
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"Wait to die, I suppose. It won't be long. Someone will murder me, or I will starve away, or die of thirst. And then I shall be in the Capitol again, or dead, if there is any luck. But I have said that good things are not for me."
She sniffed and wiped her hand on her wrist.
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Silently, she reformed the pieces of platform into something more palatable around the explosives. Deftly, she reconnected the wires, this time to the cap.
"Would you like to learn how to do this? At the least, it will get the work done quickly."
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"I have said I do not want to murder, Mademoiselle. Do not ask me again. It is the only nice bit of myself that I have left, and I won't let them take it."
But she sat up a little straighter anyway, and prepared to watch carefully.
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Her situation was different. It was not Madoka who had demeaned her."One doesn't reach for what they need, by simply being nice in all they do. I don't mean to say, that you should murder." One more click. He's done. "But you should not be timid and give up, either. This is not a world to be that."
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She's so fed up of not having control - any control - of her life. For so long, she's been pushed into corners or goaded to act, or been left stood alone. For so long, she's had to watch those she loves push her away, had to realise that she is a ghost among the living. Eponine can't live for herself, or others either. She simply lives, plodding through the days in this arena, much as she had done in Paris. She wasn't really alive at all; she was a gremlin, a goblin, something not quite living, and yet solid to the touch. And this refusal was the only way she could take control, even a little bit, of her life and her future.
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"I'm not laughing at you. Nor would I."
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She spoke with vehmenence, all the while trying to push the idea that she might have killed Alex in the last arena, to the back of her mind.
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Click, click.
"Cosette. She is from where you come from as well?"
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Eponine sighed when Homura brought up Cosette, and turned her face away again.
"Yes, Cosette is from Paris. Like me. We lived together when we were children, if you should believe such a thing. She was a terrible child, you know?"
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A better gauge might have been what year. Ah, well.
"Most children are. Girls, especially." Click. "They are liable to become monsters far more easily than little boys are. But, how was she terrible?"
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She turned back to Homura, listening to her, watching her, with narrowed eyes and a stern expression about her mouth.
"She was a bad girl. She made my mama hit her often. She never did as she was told, and she used to creep about the customers. AND, she was a thief. Always she was stealing my toys, and my sister's toys and trying to pet our cat. But she ought not have touched - she weren't allowed."
Eponine sighed through her nose. "Well, what does it matter? Look what has become of me."
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Made my mama hit her.
Something about that made Homura instinctively tense, very slightly as she finished the wires of her second bomb. It was clear something Eponine had said had hit a nerve, though what it was was unclear outwardly.
Inwardly, it wasn't that Homura had actually experienced that kind of thing on her own, but even with her own public and brusque dismissal of children those age, it made the hairs stand on her neck, much like with when she heard Kyuubey's excuses.
"...She wasn't allowed. Why not?" The tenseness lessened as she worked again on the bomb; if she was too hair-trigger, the explosions would end their conversation then and there. "Did she not have toys and a cat of her own?"
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Eponine didn't really know what to do with the information about the king. To be quite honest she didn 't care. There was a king whilst she lived and that was that.
"There was talk of rebellion, Miss. Monsieur Enjolras, he is here, he led it I think."
She bristled when Homura asked about Cosette.
"She were the servant, Miss. Servants can't play with toys or have cats. She was a sneak, always trying to touch my dolly."
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Testing. She wanted to see what Eponine would say to that.
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"No, she was not as an Avox. She had a tongue. She had her own toy. She was fed and she had a bed. She were lucky, Cosette. She is always lucky, that one."
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She looked back at Eponine. Whatever Eponine's indignation, Homura's own expression was not reciprocal. There was no indignation or condemnation. It was simply that same distance on the surface.
"I must wonder. While children can be terrible, it is almost always because they have simple needs and desires that may not be met. Some of those desires are greedy and selfish, and some are not. Some should be punished, and some should not. But no matter what, in the end, either way, a child is a child. A servant child is still a child. There are ways to discipline...and ways not to. Ways to satisfy the child's wants and needs..."
Click. Second bomb finished.
"And ways not to. Think about it. Assume you are her in her place, in your house, for one moment. You are alone in the house for a few moments. And there is the cat you are not allowed to touch. But perhaps it wants to be pet. Perhaps it wants to be fed. Perhaps something is wrong with it. And you want to help it, or simply just pet it. Because it is a good cat. It is a member of the family. It is a creature with its own wants and needs that you can help it with, and in return, it purrs and makes you feel better, knowing it is content."
The bomb was laid down next to the first.
"But you know the punishment for touching the cat. And you decide not to, and you did it not out of obligation or respect, but fear of punishment. As a child, that would be how you saw it. And being hit is a very tall punishment indeed. However, I'm not finished. Suppose then, because you had left the cat alone, it had gone off, went outside, and been hit by something. A horse. A carriage. It doesn't matter. Now the cat is badly hurt, if not dead. And because you were the only one in the house when it happened..."
Quietly, Homura looked up fully to Eponine.
"As the servant, as the child bound by your master's whims, this is your choice. Would you be punished because you gave into a simple, harmless desire? Or would you be punished for obeying, but the result being an action you had no true control over?"
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What she was thinking, though, of the times when Cosette had been hit for following the rules, when she'd been hit for things Eponine had done purposely to get Cosette in trouble. And she thought of the times when Cosette had been taken away, when they still had the inn, when she had been told to clean it, when her Ma had flown into a temper with her for the first time because she had forgotten the potatoes and the water had boiled through and spoiled the pan. She remembered how she had tried to hide because Cosette wasn't there to take the blame, and she remembered how her Ma had found her and caught her by the arm and slapped her legs hard.
And she remembered the times in Paris, when her Pa had made her stand watch whilst he robbed a house, or he made her pickpocket, or - or the most horrific memory of all, when he had marched her out to the man he knew, when money had been exchanged - how she was arrested and made to sign the register by Javert. But if she hadn't done it, she would have been beaten until she couldn't walk. Or, the beating that would have happened had she not come to Panem.
In her mind, Cosette was lucky.
For a long time, she said nothing. What was there to say? What could she say to defend herself? Her Pa? But she blinked at Homura, properly seeing her again.
"Cosette... Cosette, she were lucky. She was."
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Still. If
her friendsthe girls back home. Mami, and Sayaka, them in particular. If they had listened, ruminated, the way Eponine was, at least considered the other point of view...things could have, would have been so very different.Of course, when Eponine came back, so to speak, it seemed like nothing had changed.
Still. Homura knew, she'd gotten through the entrance, at least. She knew it was a start.
"...You're out of water."
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Eponine wiped her mouth with the back of her hand, and pushed the empty bottle back at Homura. Then she used the side of the Cornucopia and one of her crutches to pull herself up onto her sore legs.
"Thank you for the water, Mademoiselle. And the food bar. But if you do not mind..."
And she began a slow hobble away.
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Homura doesn't rise to stop her. But, she speaks.
"You may leave, if you wish. I simply wish for you to know. It wasn't for that girl, Cosette's sake, that your cat had to die for."
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Eponine's cat hadn't died - not at Cosette's hand, at least. So she stopped to look back at Homura in surprise.
"Cosette did nothing to my cat. She had a good life. You see yourself she is a lady now, and to be married to -"
Her voice caught, but she cleared it, and carried on. "-To be married to a gentleman. A true one. She is lucky - she should be dead by all rights."
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"I meant...what I did. Just now."
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"What does it matter anyway, Madame? She was hit and we laughed at her and that is everything to it."
She turned away again, her heart heavy.