Katpride
Story Collector
Lark hates this, but at least this is the last time they’ll have to come here willingly. They know what role they have to fill, and they knew it was this them the moment they looked in the mirror and recognized their outfit, the wear of their shoes, the picked-at blemish near their jaw that won’t fade for another few days.
Inevitability is a bitter pill to swallow. The timeline demands and demands and demands, but they’re fresh off the heels of a week of camping and they can do this. Fate vanishes as soon as they drag her off their older self and drop her, but they anticipated that, can anticipate most of this now that it’s nearly over.
They’ve heard her monologue thrice now, and by the fourth time it’s losing its effect. They keep their eyes on the only Lark older than them, who is still kneeling on the ground like a puppet with its strings cut.
“What is she talking about?” Their twelve-year-old self snaps, hushed by a Lark a mere four years older as they fight to keep them contained and away from the danger.
When Fate reappears, Lark looks on. Their older self is still and silent, and for a moment everyone else in the room freezes as well, because they aren’t moving. They make no effort to dodge, and even though they know what’s about to happen Lark still finds themself holding their breath.
Just as Fate’s finger tenses on the trigger, the youngest Lark finally recovers from their paralysis. “No!”
They throw themself at their older self, and time obliges them. The only problem is, they don’t hit Lark with enough force to knock them aside very far, but they hardly notice with their eyes screwed shut. The gun clicks against an empty chamber.
(There is a moment.)
(A moment when the timeline shifts, cracks, splinters. A moment where Lark could choose, a moment of free will.)
(In a different time, they travel back to when their younger self confronted Fate, and they wrangle themself before they can do any damage. Their death becomes a distant dream, a nightmare that they wake from breathless and fearful and alive, wonderfully alive.)
(In a different time, they walk away. They don’t go to the office that they know to be their end. They make a different choice. The story doesn’t play out the way they know it should.)
(In a different time, they’re dead long before they reach eighteen.)
(Of course, free will doesn’t apply to them, and it never has. It doesn’t take long for the rot to set in. Those timelines go dark, fold in upon themselves until there is just Lark, at the center of a dead world. And then there is nothing more, and there never was.)
(There only is.)
(A moment when the timeline shifts, cracks, splinters. A moment where Lark could choose, a moment of free will.)
(In a different time, they travel back to when their younger self confronted Fate, and they wrangle themself before they can do any damage. Their death becomes a distant dream, a nightmare that they wake from breathless and fearful and alive, wonderfully alive.)
(In a different time, they walk away. They don’t go to the office that they know to be their end. They make a different choice. The story doesn’t play out the way they know it should.)
(In a different time, they’re dead long before they reach eighteen.)
(Of course, free will doesn’t apply to them, and it never has. It doesn’t take long for the rot to set in. Those timelines go dark, fold in upon themselves until there is just Lark, at the center of a dead world. And then there is nothing more, and there never was.)
(There only is.)
“Do you really think you can get me with a fucking gimmick?” Lark asks, snapping their head up and baring their teeth in her direction. Their eyes are dry, no longer staring emptily through the ground. Their dad was right; they should’ve been an actor.
They wrap a protective arm around the younger Lark clinging to them, their other hand shooting out to snatch at Fate’s gun with the intent of tearing it out of her hands or at least keeping it pointed at the ground. “You presume too much, you make a mirror from a sliver of glass. You forget; I know how this ends.”