05-28-2018, 06:32 PM
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[sup]c) miithers[/sup]
★ WHEN MY HEART IS MADE FROM GOLD AND FORGIVENESS SEEMS TOO BOLD
ooc trying out a new fancy (or the same one i keep revamping rip) bc i got bored!!
Hazel didn't know what to do with herself.
The clan was a mess of emotions: anger and grief and despair, all jumbled together in a massive thundercloud that clung relentlessly to the observatory. People tried to go about their normal lives, but...it was all half-effort. Some holed themselves away in their rooms, while others went through the motions but let the filter between their brains and their mouths dissipate. Starry had touched the Ascendants so deeply - it was literally his creation - that no one knew what do to but mope; mope and grieve and drag themselves through the next day, hoping that when they woke up in the morning, the pain in their hearts would be gone.
Hazel couldn't say the same. She hadn't been close to Starry like most of the members were. She wasn't there when he was sculpting the clan from nothing; she hadn't even talked to him, really. So there was always the reality that slammed home after the death of someone that had been in her presence. There was the weight of knowing Starry had been a living, breathing thing with a brain with imagination and creativity and she had witnessed those things. Starry had been alive. And now? Now all Hazel could think of was the fact that he wouldn't be there if she had a question. There would forever be an empty space where Starry used to be.
There were days where she would sit stone still, staring at the ground and wondering if Starry knew how much they appreciated and loved him. Deus, she hoped he knew. She would sit, hoping for it so much that time would slip away from her and she wouldn't move for an hour or so at a time. Arion would find her every now and again, paws tucked under her as she rested amongst Margaery's roses, letting their cloying sweet scent fill her nose until she could smell nothing else.
It wasn't just Starry's death, though.
Hazel had been avoiding her room for days - nine, if she was keeping track. She would pass it, every now and again, thinking someone might have stolen something. But they never did. It was all just as she left it: lamp broken on the floor, glass shards shattered in every direction, blood spots on the floor from her feet, the crack in the cement that Bastille had left, and the lingering terror of an old world coming to haunt her precious new one. It hadn't been her first panic attack, and she was terrified that it wouldn't be her last. It was different when she had no choice but to live with Mother, and she knew what was going on and what the next day would bring. But here? Where she was free from it? Everything was different, and the ghost of her past was supposed to stay in that old, abandoned house...where she left it.
Part of her wished she could talk to Bastille about it, even if it was a ridiculously small part of her. She was still deeply ashamed that he had witnessed it. She was only afraid that he would discover what she hid under her bandana next, and...and a lot, actually. There was so much that could go wrong. He could stop teaching her to read, or quit speaking Latin to her. The concept of him ceasing to be her friend terrified her a lot more than she cared to admit.
Hazel was, once again, in Margy's garden, knowing she should have asked for permission but being a little too muddled in her thoughts to follow through on it. With her was colorful string, all carefully tied. The bracelet she was working on was teal, red, and white - a sister bracelet to the one Hazel was currently wearing, which was pink, red, and white. They were for Suiteheart and Margy respectively. She had one for Bastille, too, which was teal, copper, and white, but she hadn't found the right time to give it to him. If he wanted to avoid her, that was...fine. She could give it to him another time.
She could go through bracelets pretty fast at this point; string was never hard to find, and it didn't take a lot of concentration. Hazel could hum under her breath - pointless little tunes that went nowhere and meant nothing - and think and make bracelets simultaneously if needed. And right now, she just needed to give her paws something to do before she vibrated out of her own skin with all the turmoil in her brain.
Tufted ears twitched at the sound of hushed whispers and pawsteps further down the path: two npc's, talking. Hazel didn't pay them much attention - she didn't want it returned - until the two turned her way and asked what she was doing.
"Oh," Hazel said, a bit slow on the uptake with this for some reason. "I'm making bracelets. Would you like one? It won't take very long." She offered, nodding down at the string. The expression on their faces turned bitter, like they were sucking on a lemon. Hazel's skin felt cold; Mother used to make that face.
"Starrynight is dead," One of them said disdainfully. "And you're making bracelets?" It was a statement more than it was a question.
Hazel frowned, her ears falling and eyes flicking downwards. She opened her mouth, then shut it, nodding. Should...should she be ashamed? Was she doing something wrong? She was aware everyone was grieving, but... "You could be helping with the memorial, or doing something to actually commemorate him. But you're here, playing with string instead." The other deadpanned, looking like Hazel had just done something disgusting.
"I thought I would make them for you all," The cocoa feline defended quietly. "to cheer you up. Everyone is so downcast nowadays, I thought - "
"We're downcast because we're grieving the death of our leader," One scorned, interrupting. Hazel flinched, even though they weren't near her, but didn't respond. The two left a few seconds later, leaving the impression that she should be miserable and grieving, too. Which...she was. Wasn't she? Tears prickled in the corners of her eyes, and she ignored them, returning to her humming with a shaky voice because that...that was too familiar. Far too familiar.
Hazel didn't know what to do with herself.
The clan was a mess of emotions: anger and grief and despair, all jumbled together in a massive thundercloud that clung relentlessly to the observatory. People tried to go about their normal lives, but...it was all half-effort. Some holed themselves away in their rooms, while others went through the motions but let the filter between their brains and their mouths dissipate. Starry had touched the Ascendants so deeply - it was literally his creation - that no one knew what do to but mope; mope and grieve and drag themselves through the next day, hoping that when they woke up in the morning, the pain in their hearts would be gone.
Hazel couldn't say the same. She hadn't been close to Starry like most of the members were. She wasn't there when he was sculpting the clan from nothing; she hadn't even talked to him, really. So there was always the reality that slammed home after the death of someone that had been in her presence. There was the weight of knowing Starry had been a living, breathing thing with a brain with imagination and creativity and she had witnessed those things. Starry had been alive. And now? Now all Hazel could think of was the fact that he wouldn't be there if she had a question. There would forever be an empty space where Starry used to be.
There were days where she would sit stone still, staring at the ground and wondering if Starry knew how much they appreciated and loved him. Deus, she hoped he knew. She would sit, hoping for it so much that time would slip away from her and she wouldn't move for an hour or so at a time. Arion would find her every now and again, paws tucked under her as she rested amongst Margaery's roses, letting their cloying sweet scent fill her nose until she could smell nothing else.
It wasn't just Starry's death, though.
Hazel had been avoiding her room for days - nine, if she was keeping track. She would pass it, every now and again, thinking someone might have stolen something. But they never did. It was all just as she left it: lamp broken on the floor, glass shards shattered in every direction, blood spots on the floor from her feet, the crack in the cement that Bastille had left, and the lingering terror of an old world coming to haunt her precious new one. It hadn't been her first panic attack, and she was terrified that it wouldn't be her last. It was different when she had no choice but to live with Mother, and she knew what was going on and what the next day would bring. But here? Where she was free from it? Everything was different, and the ghost of her past was supposed to stay in that old, abandoned house...where she left it.
Part of her wished she could talk to Bastille about it, even if it was a ridiculously small part of her. She was still deeply ashamed that he had witnessed it. She was only afraid that he would discover what she hid under her bandana next, and...and a lot, actually. There was so much that could go wrong. He could stop teaching her to read, or quit speaking Latin to her. The concept of him ceasing to be her friend terrified her a lot more than she cared to admit.
Hazel was, once again, in Margy's garden, knowing she should have asked for permission but being a little too muddled in her thoughts to follow through on it. With her was colorful string, all carefully tied. The bracelet she was working on was teal, red, and white - a sister bracelet to the one Hazel was currently wearing, which was pink, red, and white. They were for Suiteheart and Margy respectively. She had one for Bastille, too, which was teal, copper, and white, but she hadn't found the right time to give it to him. If he wanted to avoid her, that was...fine. She could give it to him another time.
She could go through bracelets pretty fast at this point; string was never hard to find, and it didn't take a lot of concentration. Hazel could hum under her breath - pointless little tunes that went nowhere and meant nothing - and think and make bracelets simultaneously if needed. And right now, she just needed to give her paws something to do before she vibrated out of her own skin with all the turmoil in her brain.
Tufted ears twitched at the sound of hushed whispers and pawsteps further down the path: two npc's, talking. Hazel didn't pay them much attention - she didn't want it returned - until the two turned her way and asked what she was doing.
"Oh," Hazel said, a bit slow on the uptake with this for some reason. "I'm making bracelets. Would you like one? It won't take very long." She offered, nodding down at the string. The expression on their faces turned bitter, like they were sucking on a lemon. Hazel's skin felt cold; Mother used to make that face.
"Starrynight is dead," One of them said disdainfully. "And you're making bracelets?" It was a statement more than it was a question.
Hazel frowned, her ears falling and eyes flicking downwards. She opened her mouth, then shut it, nodding. Should...should she be ashamed? Was she doing something wrong? She was aware everyone was grieving, but... "You could be helping with the memorial, or doing something to actually commemorate him. But you're here, playing with string instead." The other deadpanned, looking like Hazel had just done something disgusting.
"I thought I would make them for you all," The cocoa feline defended quietly. "to cheer you up. Everyone is so downcast nowadays, I thought - "
"We're downcast because we're grieving the death of our leader," One scorned, interrupting. Hazel flinched, even though they weren't near her, but didn't respond. The two left a few seconds later, leaving the impression that she should be miserable and grieving, too. Which...she was. Wasn't she? Tears prickled in the corners of her eyes, and she ignored them, returning to her humming with a shaky voice because that...that was too familiar. Far too familiar.
★ — hazel — "speech" — seven months — the ascendants — tags — ★
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WITH EVERY HEARTBEAT I HAVE LEFT
i will defend your every breath; i'll do better