crimson knuckles
red
it's the only color They allowed
after taking over
and "uniting" the world
and squashing the rebels.
red is the only color seen anywhere.
we learned about it in school, i think.
something about dna being too complex to control.
that didn't stop Them from taking our melanin.
crowds of people, all different shades of grey.
we look like cadavers.
i feel like a cadaver, at times.
anyway, red.
we can blush.
our eyes can become bloodshot after tears.
our noses, rosy in the cold weather.
we can bleed.
i've held onto that privilege.
the gift of red blood.
it's what keeps us together.
grey is too... lifeless but red;
red is vibrant
and versatile
and beautiful.
i used to get into fights
during the small reprieve
after school, before "recreational" time.
all the kids in my class
would meet up behind the bleachers
and just wail on each other.
rosy, dripping knuckles;
the mark of a child
growing up in this sick, twisted world.
the rite of passage
before They stopped being so lenient
with "continuous acts of rebellion"
and plant guards behind the bleachers.
it was cathartic
while it lasted.
i haven't seen red in years.
nobody feels anymore.
nobody cries
or shouts
or holds their breath
or blushes
or fights
or lives.
it's all grey.
it's all dull.
i miss it.
i can barely remember it,
but i see color every night
in my dreams.
it's not my fault,
but i feel guilty that
the new generations
don't get to experience it.
especially not since
They're developing a serum
that will take away our red.
or kill us.
They don't ever do trials first.
"We live as one.
We suffer as one
We die as one."
everyone gets their shot
at the same time.
...
the room is cold,
cold, and white.
pristine, even.
i'm scared to touch anything.
not that there's anything to touch.
we were all called in
during our "recreational" time.
i wasn't so shocked
at how fast They developed Their serum.
i'm buzzing with nerves
when the representative walks in.
face covered in that eery mask.
"To protect their identities."
to keep our abusers faceless
and powerful.
we exchange no words.
i twiddle my toes
in my shoes,
where the representative can't see me.
the representative brings out a silver tray with
one syringe,
one label-less bottle,
one band-aid.
it's over too soon.
a prick in my arm
with no warning
and a quick
covering with the band-aid.
i'm taken outside
where a waiting room
full of fellow citizens awaits me.
hundreds of rows of seats
with neat tray tables standing next to them.
on the table rests
one small knife
and one band-aid.
to check, i suppose,
if Their serum worked.
the people sitting next to me
keep their gazes forward
and distant.
i do the same.
it's quiet enough
to hear a pen drop.
i think some
hope for death.
it certainly would be
an easier escape.
better than underground
where everyone holds out ridiculous hope
that the resitance still resides.
just ten more minutes
until we'll all simultaneously
cut ourselves
and bleed for our opressors.
to see if we fit Their standard
for a colorless world.
it's over all too soon.
i take a stuttering breath.
years of this dreary existence
and i still haven't gotten used to
this feeling of dread.
shakily i take the small knife
and cut a horizontal line
on my palm.
black