vissernone: (Basic - Over the Shoulder)
Eva Salazar ([personal profile] vissernone) wrote in [community profile] thecapitol2013-07-30 11:48 pm

Nothing's Changed [Open]

Who| Eva and open
What| Eva plays chess in the park.
Where| Park in the Capitol
When| Week 7
Warnings/Notes| Description of cuts.

The bruises have faded into the sick yellow of urine. The cuts haven't healed yet, and wearing the bandages and stitches - old-fashioned medicine, less than what a Panem Victor could usually expect - is something of a scarlet letter. No one's forgotten that she was cavorting with a would-be assassin, but the Capitol's seen fit to remind them anyway, and unless she spends the next few months indoors Eva's damned to carry the message on her face.

She somewhat appreciates that the hook-shaped slash on her upper lip has pulled her mouth into something of a perpetual sneer. It fits her mood, lately. The cuts along her arms and cheek are a little less thematically appropriate.

The sunlight wafts down to her like steam. Her palm rests on a book in the park, her eyes strolling lazily over the words of a poem she's read a hundred times before. The other hand rests in her lap, on the demure grey fabric of a dress that could blend into any background. Eva doesn't need to accessorize; here, the white bandage around her upper arms and the patch of gauze on her cheek are eye-catching enough.

A chess set sits on the small marble table in front of her. The pieces are arranged up perfectly, each slit in the bishop's hat forming a perfect line. She looks out at the park, relatively unoccupied for a Sunday afternoon what with people watching the final week of the Games, and waits for someone, anyone to come challenge her.

She loves chess. It's just yet another game where no one has to win.
futilecycle: (I know it's everybody's sin)

[personal profile] futilecycle 2013-08-22 06:55 pm (UTC)(link)
Sigma visibly hesitated before moving his next piece. He wondered how much pressure Eponine could take, if encouragement for her to stay broken would only do her worse - but he had faith Eva's motherly intuition. "I fear she may sell her act too well and begin to believe it herself." He lifted his eye and it was cold, filled with the same determination that had lead him to kill his own son to save strangers. "But I trust you."

At last he moved a pawn to take one of Eva's pieces, leaving the other side wide open. He believed this risk might lure Eva's stronger pieces towards him, where perhaps he could catch a glimpse of her strategy.
futilecycle: (Default)

[personal profile] futilecycle 2013-08-28 03:26 am (UTC)(link)
Consoling Eponine wasn't enough, either, it seemed. In a seemingly uncharacteristic gesture Sigma placed an elbow on the outskirts of the chess table and rested a cheek in his palm, as if sulking, though his expression never changed. He'd long feigned the part of a sophisticate, but with the discomfort of wearing inherited clothes: it had never suited him the way he'd liked and after so many years the holes were starting to show through. Deep in frustration, he almost missed Eva's move. He's also too preoccupied to concentrate on his own and sends a knight forward towards the bishop thoughtlessly, finally beginning to empty the squares around his royalty.

"As long as such a strategy will work, I will do it," he confirms, but adds, "so consider this one under my care. For now, you should give yourself some time to recover." He means to alleviate her burden if only a little. Though he takes no pride in it, he never considered his bleeding heart - even for near strangers - a weakness.
futilecycle: (I know it's everybody's sin)

[personal profile] futilecycle 2013-08-30 12:59 am (UTC)(link)
Sigma's hard stare relaxes into a smirk. "Me? I am much the same..."

He straightens up and folds his hands on his lap again. "No doubt they showed it on the television. Time magic..." Subconsciously, he rubs his left arm, always left uncovered, as if in pain. The invisible scars hurt him more than a lost eye or arm, and he's sure it's no different for her. He wonders if the rest of the victors are like her, or if they are so arrogant to pretend theirs do not exist. "I have lived my own death many times over already. I will be fine..." At least as fine as she will be.