For as long as I could
remember, it had been like this. I'm sat in my room, waiting for my
alarm clock to go off. It's always the same. I have the nightmare
every night. The explosions, the shouting, people screaming, crying,
angry, and then a really bright, blinding light coming towards me.
Then I wake up, at pretty much the same time in the early hours, not
able to go back to sleep. So, from between the hours of 5 and 6am, I
just wait to hear that familiar beeping sound.
When the noise comes,
it always shocks me. As if it didn't happen every day. And then I
eventually reach down and hit the button to make it shut up. I do
the same today too. I grab my towel and make my way to the communal
bathrooms. Always pretty empty at 6.01am, I have the bathroom to
myself. The shower is luke warm, but by the time I am awake it has
got a little hotter. I rinse off large, frothy bubbles from my pale
skin, shut the shower off and wrap the towel around myself.
By the time I make it
to breakfast, the canteen is busy. I stare at the grey porridge in
my bowl and try to pretend it doesn't taste like warm gravel slipping
down my throat. I want to imagine it tastes nice, but I can't
remember the last time I tasted something appealing. I have vague
memories of one thing we used to have – before The Centre. Small
beans, hot, in a sweet tomato sauce. They tasted really good on
toast. I don't really remember what they were called. Memory of
before The Centre isn't really encouraged in here.
I don't see anyone I
know at breakfast, but it's likely they stole some fruit from the
kitchens last night and are feasting on it in their rooms. I didn't
go to the kitchens last night because I had a headache and wanted to
get to bed early. Sometimes we have quite a lot of fun. No-one
would know we're supposed to be crazy!
Well, that's what we
think we're in for anyway. No-one's really sure. A bunch of reasons
were given in the beginning, but those memories are beginning to slip
away too. Maybe that's a symptom of a seemingly endless drag of days
on end? Starting with grey porridge, ending with watery stew.
Always the same.
In the lounge everyone
sits in the same seats, stands in the same spots, and plays the same
games in the same order. Roy always gets the pool table first, and
he takes turns with Dave for the first hour. Eventually that gets
old, and they sit on the floor and try to remember what real coffee
tastes like whilst the tea lady comes in with the powdered stuff.
I usually sit on the
sofa, staring at the pages of magazines. The dates on all of them
have been blacked over. For all I know the people in the pictures
are all be dead now. They do get changed, who knows how often. I'm
not counting the days. All I know is that sometimes the stories are
different. Maybe they keep re-using them? I might have read or
flicked through these pages thousands of times. It's just habit now.
At some point I'm
joined by Steph. Steph is some kind of sanity for me in The Centre.
People rarely laugh here, but she's one person who can get a laugh or
smile from anyone. She tells rude jokes. I don't know where she
gets them from. She swears people keep writing them on the bathroom
walls, but I've looked everywhere and can't find them.
Today she's arrived at
the same time as the tea lady, so she hands me a cup of the weak,
warm tea.
“Yo, so anything
new?” she raises her eyebrows and looks at the magazine in my lap.
“Same as yesterday.”
I note.
“It's really bad that
the most exciting thing that happens to us is that we get a new
magazine, or Dave finally manages to beat Roy at pool.” She smirks.
“Dave's never beaten
Roy at pool.”
“I keep hoping. I've
got a bet on him.” she winks.
We don't bet with
money, we bet with fruit. Steph's always lucky with the bets so she
always has the most. Generally fruit is a real treat we get at
weekends only.
The inner door opens
and one of the security guards appear. This isn't common place, not
unless there's a real commotion. Once Lisa Banks whacked Dave one in
the face because she thought he'd stolen her plastic cup of tea.
Security came in then. I don't think I can remember another time.
“Jemma Right?” the
guard questions, looking around the room. At the sound of my name I
jump. The magazine falls from my lap. Steph stares at me, mouth
open, eyes wide. I can sense other eyes on me as I get up and walk,
like a robot, to the door.
“Come with me,
please.” he says in a stiff voice.
Once out the door I
take nothing in but following him. He keeps looking behind at me, as
though I'm going to run away. I'm too bewildered to do anything of
the sort.
Eventually we arrive
at a small box room which is generally used to isolate inmates during
incidents like the Lisa/Dave scenario I mentioned earlier. I don't
want to be in this room because it means discipline. And no fruit,
even at weekends. And no chance of getting down to the kitchens
tonight.
Inside the room is a
small desk with a chair at either end. The security guard sits in
one, and I automatically sit in the other.
“Jemma.” The guard
says.
I nod, wordless.
“Don't say anything,
just listen and nod, whatever I say, got it?” He demands.
I nod. I'm scared. I
feel as though I'm in hot water.
“Tonight, at
midnight, you're going to go down to the kitchens. There, you'll
meet me. I am going to get you out. I can take more with me, I'd
take you all if I could, but not now. It has to be done at another
time. You know people. Tell who you can. Maybe five or six others,
okay?”
I nod. I wasn't
expecting this. It doesn't make sense. I don't even know what's
outside. I don't remember what it's like. What if I don't like it?
What if I want to come back? I probably wouldn't make it out. Why
the kitchens? I had so many questions and the guard seemed to sense
this.
“Quickly, ask me what
you want to know. Just two questions, come on...” there was a
sense of urgency. I guessed he didn't know how much time he could
steal like this.
“Who are you?”
“I'm someone sent
here by someone else. And any thanks you have are for him, not for
me. I don't know too much about him, but I have a debt to pay him.
This is how I'm paying.” he answers in a whisper.
“Do you know why I'm
here?” I ask, the only other question that occurs to me at this
time.
“You don't know?”
he seems shocked.
I shake my head.
“After they found the
felony gene, the government acted on it. I don't know if you
remember the DNA tests, what with the memory erasure that goes on in
here...”
“Memory erasure?” I
begin.
“Yes, but there isn't
time to explain it all...” the guard cuts me off, “After the test
you all got taken in here. There's a number of other centres across
the country, and all of you are a suspected danger to society.
Prevention, it's said, is better than cure.”
“We're here because
me might commit a crime in
mainstream society?” I question.
“If
you'll believe it.” The guard says with a large measure of
scepticism.
I
am stunned into silence by this revelation. The room is spinning. I
don't know how I feel, and I don't know if I'm just having another
nightmare. Or perhaps the guard is toying with me? It would be a
cruel joke, but how easily played...
“Do
you remember the time and place?” Suddenly I'm hurtling back to the
here and now and realise the guard has just asked me a question.
“The
kitchens, midnight.” I manage to reply.
“Tell
five others. In secret.” he says, and then I am escorted back to
the lounge.
***
I don't
sleep. At least tonight there is no nightmare to be had, because I
am simply in no state to dream. I watch the minutes as they barely
move into hours. I wonder if anyone thought it odd that I didn't
stay long in the kitchens after dinner? I knew I'd be back there
very soon. I felt weird about the whole thing. Of course, I told
Steph and Roy and Dave. Roy and Dave looked at me with some
sympathy. I don't think they believed me at all. Steph was
supportive, but I wonder if there isn't a part of her that thinks
I've finally cracked? She assured me she'd tell two of the other
girls she plays hockey with on Sundays. I wonder how they'll react.
I didn't
put an alarm on, I knew I wouldn't catch a wink. Nothing alerts me
to the presence of 11.55 but somehow it's there, and with my constant
staring at the clock I realise within the sixty seconds that follow
that it's time to get moving.
I put on my
black, soft soled shoes. I doubt they'll make much noise on the
landing. With a heart beating fast, adrenaline pumping, feeling
anxiously sick and wondering if maybe I did make this whole thing up
after all, I make my way, slowly and surely, across the landing, down
the stairs and down the corridor to the kitchens. Every shadow has
me jumping.
My hand on
the handle of the kitchen door, I hesitate before slowly pulling it
open and entering the dark room. It seems I am the first one here.
Warily, I walk to the island in the centre of the room. I hear a
noise behind me and sweep round, fast and on my guard. The door
opens and in walks Steph and two other girls I vaguely recognise. I
watch as doubt crosses their faces as they see me in the empty room.
“Hi.”
Steph says, “Where are the other two?”
I shrug,
“Maybe they won't come?”
Minutes
pass. By now I'm doubting it too. I invented the whole thing. My
imagination got the better of me. Now, I'm glad I didn't tell anyone
the part about why we're supposed to be here – the felony gene –
what a joke! They'd have a field day.
“Jem.”
Steph whispers, “I don't think...”
And then the
door opens behind her and Dave and Roy peer in.
“Come in!”
I say, excited by their very presence. I can't believe they turned
up. Then I remember that we don't seem to be doing any escaping and
my heart sinks.
“We
thought you'd be gone.” Roy says, and he doesn't seem sceptical,
even though he should be.
“What's
the plan?” Dave adds, in a soft voice that's barely audible.
“I'm the
plan.” a voice comes from the darkness.
We turn around and face the
light thrown into the room by the open door at the opposite end of
the room. A door I'd never seen until now. The silhouette of a man
blocks the doorway.
We stare at
each other, not knowing what to say. Then we all share a look and
blindly, trusting oh-so-easily, we follow the silhouette into the
light.
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