When Max woke up and got out of bed, the first thing he noticed was that the robots hadn't stop driving the RV since late last night. He woke up and remembered how awesome the inside looked and how Botty was right about it was more awesome than the outside was, which was awesome enough. As he made his way to the bathroom to wash himself, he noticed that this RV was like a mansion on wheels. His bed was massive and comfy, the kitchen had everything a kitchen needed, the sitting room had a seventy-inch plasma screen and bookcases with lots of books on each side of it and when he went to the bathroom he discovered it was an en-suite type.

After he finished washing himself, he looked through the window and noticed something as the RV kept on driving. It was a cemetery and it was one he recognized immediately. It was the one where his mother was buried at. He and Goofy would visit it every time they could and the last time he visited it was the day they moved to Spoonerville when he was eleven and a half years old. Then realising that he was twenty-two years old, he realised that he hadn't visited his mother's grave in over a decade. He would have loved to visit her if he wasn't under strict observation from the robots.

Then the van screeched and came to a complete halt.

"What's going on, guys?" Max asked the robots.

"The van has broken!" Botty cried.

Then Screwy grabbed Max. "Come with me, T-Rax." He dragged him out of the RV and led him to the metal gates of the cemetery.

"We've got thirty minutes max before the RV gets fixed, T-Rax," Screwy said. "So go and make the most of with whoever it is you want to see in that cemetery."

"You mean you broke the RV? On purpose?" Max asked.

"Temporary," Screwy said. "And in answer to your next question, I did it because you looked like you were very desperate to visit one of the graves here."

"Thanks, Screwy. How did you –"

"I'll tell you later. Now, just go quickly before they repair the van before you can even say hello to the person you want to see. Oh, I nearly forgot." Screwy gave Max a bunch of flowers and ran to head back to the RV.

"Thanks, Screwy," Max said, as he headed into the cemetery.


Max was glad that he remembered where his mother's grave was. The stony headstone was grimy and the writing was fading, but he could just make out that it was his mother's. He knelt in front of the headstone.

"Hi, Mom," Max said. "How are you doing? I know it's been a while and I'm very sorry that that neither Dad nor I have visited you over a decade. It's just that so much has happened since we left."

Then he went on to explain that since they moved to Spoonerville, they were neighbours with his dad's former high school classmates Pete and Peg Pete and how he became friends with their children PJ and Pistol, with the first being his very best friend and how they were almost like a family to him. Then he went on to explain about that his school life. School had always been a challenge for him. Despite his very best efforts, he was a C student in middle and high school. Despite that, some good things came out of school like that he was the most popular and coolest kid in Spoonerville High School (even though that had a massive rocky start as well) and he was very talented, winning a lot of talent shows, playing in a lot of sports competitions and having starring roles in school plays. He was so skilled that he didn't know what he wanted to do with his life. He never dreamed of becoming the rock star he was now, not even when he danced with Powerline, which he explained to his mom that was another one of the highlights of his life.

Then Max moved onto his college life and how he won three college x game trophies and again how he was a C student in there as well. Then he got his first job as a janitor at the Tanchester Square Garden before he became the rock star he was now. "Not bad for a C student, eh, Mom?"

Then he went on to say that he made lots of friends and how he was remained best friends with PJ and Bobby since the day they met and even became the godfather of each of their children.

"Yes, my life is great," Max said to his mom, "but it's not perfect." He explained that he thought the biggest failures in his life was that he couldn't keep a girlfriend and this was before he became the busiest rock star in the world. He told her all about Roxanne and Lisa from high school and Lola and Mona from college and how they were all great in their own way and how sad it was for him when they had to end their relationships because they had to leave, which for reasons he understood but it didn't make it less sad, apart from Mona. He explained to his mom that what she did to him, which was breaking up with him and not even telling him, made him feel that he was not meant to have a girlfriend and that he was better off alone.

"Remaining single does have some advantages, but I don't know," Max said to his mom. "I really don't know what to do for the best for me and for others."

Then he looked at the RV and he could see that the robots were still fixing it. It made him glad that the Phantom wasn't here to see this moment. Then remembering her reminded him about she said about how she knew his mother.

"I have to ask you something, Mom. This Angel of Music told me that she was a friend of yours and that you would send her to help me if anything happened to you. If you did, I'm grateful. It's just that this angel is a great manager, but I feel like she's pushing me too much both psychically and mentally. It feels like I'm a prisoner now and she is my jailer. Since I stupidly yanked her mask off and saw her face she tried to hide under her mask, it's never been truer than ever."

Then he heard a RV horn beep.

"And I'd better go and get back on the wagon and do the shows, now the RV's been fixed. It was great to see you again and catch up with you, Mom. I'll come and visit you more often, I promise."

After hearing another RV horn beep, he ran back as quick as he could.

As they walked back, a figure wearing black clothes and a mask on her face popped around it and watched the RV drive away.

"That was such an inspiring life story, T-Rax, but that's nothing compared to what I've been through. You will learn, though. You will learn."