June Bug
she/her
twenty-seven
April 21
Mauville City
Bisexual
Delivery-Person
civilian
Swallow the Heart and Kill the Senses
TAG WITH @rysa
june sleigh
Course he would say something like that. He sees value in what once was, instead of what is now. Many people did– but not to that extent. At some point, history must be forgotten and repeated much to the chagrin of its documenters. The saying existed for a reason, even if a preventable one.
But the dream, simulation, whatever it is, alters her mind. The words jumble themselves in her head, and alter before her very eyes.
“Not a million,” she said. Her frown deepened. Maybe it was just a glitch, or the nature of dreams. Sometimes, things were not as they seemed. She tried again, “All my own fault. I brought it upon myself from a previous failed business, and I saw it coming.”
“That’s right,” she said. What the fuck was going on? Why could she tell him even the simplest of truths? That she’d been blindsided, thrust into the world of frugality by her father, out of nowhere and violently? She reached behind her and brought a pillow into her lap.
“It was my own–” her grip around the case tightened. Her knuckles turned bone white. “It’s not a million– I’m stronger than– your debt isn’t– I opposed to selling out– fuck!”
Something was wrong, and she couldn’t even hope nor begin to explain why. While Howard could only look on and stare at her with the same expression, she floundered around like a helpless little baby. Finally, frustration bubbled forth and the pillow rose above her head.
“I’m telling the truth! I don’t promise!” It flew straight into the archeologist and she pulled at her own hair. The pain felt real, the only guaranteed thing right now. “It doesn’t hurt.”
Wait. That was the answer. “My hair doesn’t hurt when I don’t pull on it.”
She desperately kept pointing at her hair and pulling, and jolts of agony went all throughout her scalp. But she kept doing it, if only so Howard could know what she meant.
I only scrapped past by detaching from reality. I haven’t felt alive for the last three years– since dad died.
“I was well off by staying grounded. I’ve never felt more alive since dad was alive.”
howard slayte
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