PART 13: IN THE BEGINNING AGAIN
~2~
Scott tried to sleep, but how could he possibly? All he kept thinking about was Kita, if she was okay, where she could be… Where could she be? God, what could be happening with her? Scott buried his face in his pillow and groaned. To think about that was a torment. He loved her so much. He adored her from a distance, because he was too shy to just walk up to her and ask her out. Besides, what would girls like Kita find attractive about guys like him?
Scott wanted her here. He wanted things to be easy, he wanted to be able to tell her who he felt about her. Why couldn't things just be easy? Why did he have to be on his own, with a group of people that really didn't care less about him, wondering if there would be enough food tomorrow, if a new tribe with bad intentions would rise, if he could make it through the day.
Sometimes he just felt so devoid of hope and alone. Sometimes he wanted nothing but to have his old life back. Just his old life. His school, his friends, his home, his dad…
His dad had died in a hospital like this.
*
The 14-year-old boy with the shaggy brown hair
sat on a chair in a sterile, cold, white hallway. He hated this place. It
represented death to him. He could hear the coughing and the cries of pain. The
whole hospital was full by now. There was no way to handle it anymore, people
were lying sick in the hallways.
The Virus. Scott had finally heard about it on the news, finally he got to find
out what was going on. But now he wished he didn't.
Life for Scott had never really been hard, although he did learned how to do
things on his own. He was one of those people that were thrown into a nice
place at birth, one of those lucky kids. A nice big house in the suburbs, with
a pretty, nicely mowed lawn, and two nice parents that would do anything to
make sure there only child would have a nice life.
Things changed when he was seven, and all of the sudden not so fortunate
anymore. He was to young to really follow what happened, all he noticed was
that his mom and dad were mean to eachother all of the sudden, and all he knew
was that he didn't like it. And then he heard the word 'divorce' and before he
could have a say in it, his mom had moved out of the house, all the way to
Canada.
Canada. He already started to worry he would never see her again.
However, he got to spend the Christmas-holidays at his mom's, and the
summerholiday's too. He was really excited, because he got to fly a plane for
the first time. And all on his own too, because there was no chance his dad
ever wanted to see his mom again. This made Scott kind of sad, but he soon
forgot about that when he arrived at his mom's house.
She had gotten a new, good job over there in Canada and she had bought a really
beautiful, big apartment. And a lot of Christmas-presents for him. This made
Scott feel kind of uncomfortable, because every time she gave him one of those
presents, she had this scary smile on her face he had never seen before.
And at the end of the vacation the major question came: didn't Scott want to
stay with his mom afterall? This confused his seven-year-old brains to no
limit, because how was he ever going to pick. But he made his decision in the
end: he was going to stay with his dad.
He wouldn't forget the look that was on his mother's face when he said that. He
had the feeling he made her angry and sad… disappointed her. For a few years
there was a true battle between his mom and dad, and his mom spoiled him
outrageously during every holiday, and when he was about to leave for home, she
always asked him if he didn't want to stay with her.
But Scott didn't like new things, he didn't like change. The divorce had been
enough of a shock for him. He was now used to living at his dad's, and only
going to his mom's during the vacation. He couldn't imagine what it would be
like to completely adjust to a new country, a new town, a new school, make new
friends… He made it clear to his mother once and for all that he didn't want to
live with her.
After that, the holiday's with his mom just became less amusing. Every time,
she became more and more of a stranger to him. Not even his parent anymore. She
never asked if he wanted to live with her again.
But life at home with his dad wasn't that great anymore either. His dad had
given up rivalry with his mom, about who would be the best parent. He had this
arrogance over him, the kind of air a person gets when he knows he won a
battle.
His dad had gotten a new job as well. A good one, but he was going to spend
more time away from home, so he told Scott. And that's how Scott's absolute
hate and fear for being alone began. He didn't want to get his father out of
his dream; the man was so excited about his new job. And as he said: it would
provide a better way of life for the both of them. Scott didn't want to ruin
everything by saying he wasn't happy like this at all, and he doubt it would've
mattered.
Scott became strangers to both his parents. He lived in a nice, big house in a
peaceful, beautiful suburb, he went to a good school, got good grades and had
friends, and everybody would say that he had every reason to be happy. But
Scott was a very warm, affectionate person and if there was one thing missing
in his life at that moment it was warmth.
He only saw his mother a few weeks a year, and he started to dread visiting
her, because every time he saw her, she seemed like more of a different person
to him. She had gotten married again, to a guy Scott knew nothing about, and he
never trusted that man. Scott felt his mother loved her new husband more than
him. And he was probably right. He was sensitive when it came to things like
that.
Meanwhile, his dad was never at home. His job kept requesting more time, and
Scott was alone the whole time. He hated it, and on every occasion he invited
friends to his home. Because his dad was out at night so often, a lot of
parties were thrown at Scotts big house, which did make him very popular at
school… But he didn't want plain popularity. He wanted something else.
And then they first heard about a dangerous disease. This disease, which caused
rapid aging, was spreading over the whole world quickly. It had already reached
Canada, and his mom was one of the first people there to fall prey to it.
Scott knew what kind of person his mom had been. She was the kind of person
that never listened to her body, that kept working even though she had a high
fever or something, that didn't care about being sick. But when she finally
collapsed and had to be taken to the hospital, it was already too late. She
died there within two days.
It had all happened so fast, and Scott only heard after his mom had already
died. That new husband of her… He had just sort of forgotten that there were
other familymembers too, and he had only phoned Scott after his mom was already
dead.
It was a total shock ofcourse. One quiet afternoon he was just being called by
a guy he hardly knew (but hated with passion what so ever) and it was like: Hi,
your mom has just died.
Ofcourse that bastard couldn't have called a little earlier. Now Scott didn't
know until it was too late. If he had gotten a call the moment his mom had been
taken to the hospital, then maybe, just maybe he could've arrived in time to
say goodbye to her. Now he would never be able to do so.
Scott tried to imagine what his mom would've looked like, laying dead in her
bed, but to his great amazement, he could hardly imagine what she looked like
again. It was so long since he had last visited her, and when he did it was in
a chilly atmosphere, like they were complete strangers to eachother.
All pictures of his mom had been cleared from the house by his dad, except for
one that Scott had managed to save. He kept that in a special, secure place,
because he knew his dad would be angry when he saw it. His dad had never really
given him the chance to love his mom again.
It was a familypicture, the only one that had been spared. In his rage Scotts
dad had cut his mom of every picture in the house, burned her face out with
cigarettes, things like that. It had scared Scott, and he had quickly gotten
this picture and put it in his treasurebox. The picture on which he was just
five years old, and his mom and dad were still young and happy together. The
versions of them that weren't cold, hateful and bloodless. The likable
versions.
*
Scott got his treasurebox from his closet. He opened it –rusty, screeching
metal- and looked at what was inside. Little cars. Baseball-cards. A little
stuffed puppy with a missing ear. All the type of treasures little boys could
possibly gather. And on top of it, the most precious of it all: the picture.
The picture of him, his mom and his dad. The way they were, the way they always
had to be. The great link to the past.
*
"You can see him now,"a young nurse said. Her smile was kind enough, but her
eyes were deadly tired. No wonder, she had to work hard here. All the adults
were starting to fall prey to the virus. She was probably also dealing with the
knowledge that she would soon follow. Was she making arrangements for her
death?
Scott wondered when he started thinking things like that about strangers. Such
morbid things, that were really very logical questions. Because every adult was
dying now, and the smell of death was everywhere. There was no hope left for
them, no chance for a cure; the world was going to be passed onto the children.
And Scott noticed the jealous looks from adults he got when he walked through the
hallway. Those looks from the sickly yellow eyes made him shiver. They hated
him, because he was healthy and they were sick. Because he was young, and they
were growing old so rapidly. Because he would live and they wouldn't. Scott had
the feeling that… well, they couldn't kill him… but if they could somehow take
his body over, push him out like in a fairytale, they would.
Scott walked faster, ran into his dads room and slammed the door shut, as if he
just escaped from a herd of monsters.
His dad was laying in bed. His skin was like shriveling parchment, in a very
sick coloured, his eyelids were crusty and his hair was snowwhite. Scott
whimpered, scared to come closer. His own father had turned into a monster.
"Scott, is that you?"his father asked. Even his voice sounded like that of a
demon; horribly hoarse and nothing like the voice Scott knew. With hesitating
steps, shivering, he slowly came closer.
"Scott, I'm glad you came. Scott, you need to know something. That thing that
killed your mother, I'm suffering from it too. The Virus. It kills people,
Scott. And nobody has found a cure. And they won't find it in time either. I'm
going to die,"his father said.
Scott just stood there, his face frozen, slowly nodding his head. He looked
like a scarecrow moving back and forth in the wind. He couldn't think of a
proper response to what he had just heard.
"Scott, you're on your own now,"his father said.
Those words made him snap out of his lethargy. On his own. "No,"Scott screamed
right away, "I don't wanna be alone!"
"I'm sorry, Scott. I wish I could be there for you. I wish I could've been
there for you more often. But I'm sure you'll make it. You always did. I'm
proud of you, you just remember that. Guess I didn't show it often enough… Just
don't give up, okay? Try to find some other good kids just like yourself,"his
dad said.
That was the last thing Scott ever heard from his dad, as than his dad went
into a coughing-fit, after which he lost consciousness. Scott went nearly
hysterical, as the thought of being alone was too much for him. The nurses and
doctors quickly removed the screaming boy from the room.
His father wasn't dead yet. But he never came to from his consciousness. The
next morning he had really died, in his sleep. Scott had been waiting in the
hospital all that time, until a nurse came to inform him of it. She did this
pretty quickly and feelingless, she must've already broken news like that to
countless of other children.
Scott got up, in a daze, and ran from the hospital. He had never ran so hard in
his life, and he felt like he was losing it. He was crying, screaming out loud,
and he didn't care about the weird looks he got from those people. He didn't
care about anything. He was all alone now. Really he didn't want to do anything
but go insane.
Didn't happen, too bad for him. He ran all the way to his house, and as soon as
he reached it, he fell down, exhausted. He lay there for half a day,
motionless. People that walked by could've thought he was dead. But nobody
walked by anymore. If people weren't laying in the hospital, they had locked
themselves into their houses, scared of infection.
Scott got up when he got hungry. By then he had made a plan. He packed all the
stuff he would need –warm clothes, a sleepingbag, the treasurebox, and as much
food as possible- and left town. He didn't ever want to come back there again.
He wanted to forget about it all. Hopefully he would die somewhere in the wild.
But he didn't die. He walked through the forest, eating only little bits
–enough to just stay alive- of the food he brought along. Until he came to a
cabin one day. Inhabited by a guy that happened that happened to know something
about survival, and his girlfriend. Randy and Justine they were called. They
invited him in, cold, exhausted and hungry as he was. He was allowed to stay,
and even though it wasn't there name back then, he became a member of the
Argonauts.
*
He wasn't really alone anymore, not really. He lived in a tribe now. But did he
have anyone special in that tribe? No. He thought about it very often, when he
couldn't fall asleep again. When it was dark and quiet –which always soothed
him- he could nearly cry and choke because of feeling so lonely.
He wanted someone. He wanted to know where Kita was.
