One day, Ray was
wandering through the forest with a backpack full of snacks and treats.
The food experts of the world had long since figured out a healthier way
to make pie, and he'd air-baked some freshly-cut potatoes in the dorm
kitchen. It went down with decaf coffee and vanilla almond milk, from a
travel mug. The rumor that 'coffee stunts growth' had been proven to be a
myth, and in fact, a benefit. When in past eras, children would be
subject to corporate health-tampering due to targeted sugary snacks and
sodas, these days held more conscience towards what was allowed on store
shelves. Caffeine was, in lower amounts, never actually the problem at
all. It was sugar, plain and simple, and the sicknesses that tried to
live in their flesh and bones. Scientists had tried to warn them,
millennia ago, and yet humanity somehow found itself back in the sand,
head-first, every so often. A repetitive cycle of ignorance. If
anything, a little decaf in the morning was the perfect wake-up call for
a budding young student. Raimundo was already twelve years old, and
like most kids, he'd started drinking caffeine-free coffee at the age of
ten. Decaf, a bit misnomally, was only a reduced amount. It gave him a
bit of pride, as he drank, to know that he was maturing a step up in the
world, in this one, small way... but it also bored him that this was
what his maturity had come to. Obsession over nutritional details, and
micromeasuring amounts of a substance that was ubiquitously measured for
them. It was the same as his gym classes, where each step was
prescribed before the day had even started – kicking targets allotted
for soccer, basket-quotas for basketball, point-degree slapshots in
hockey. Unlike the other kids, who scored reasonably well at these
things, Raimundo lacked the coordination to meet even a single
requirement. There was no other option for him, to be considered 'a good
athlete', and this was just as much the case with the rest of his
curriculum, in all other subjects. He was not what the world called 'a
good student', and that made him furious... primarily at himself.
Because of this, he was looked down on by all of the other students,
even in those brief glimpses where he'd been noticed by them. Everyone
else was starting to hold hands, and smooch cheeks, and go on movie
dates. Ray went by himself, or with his sister, Theresa. That was when
she bothered to show up, as she was always busy with work – coaching gym
class, and quizzing the cadets. They hadn't yet been sent to their
first summer camp, but they were already more respected for every stray
fiber from their gray and red jackets than Ray would ever be in his
life, for all the hair on his head. There was nothing Ray could be good
at, and it was impossible to argue: loners who sketch tragedies on their
homework have no future in a world that counts on production,
servitude, and discipline. It felt like the world had turned him into a
loser, who had no choice but to wait to be told when to win.
As he
walked along the forest path, he saw a group of people walking towards
him. They looked like good friends, laughing and joking around –
compared to them, he felt like a miserable, pathetic nobody. Not wanting
to risk judgment by their wandering eyes, he ran into the trees, and
hid. He was nervous, however, that they might hear him breathing, so he
crept deeper into the forest. They passed by, taking no notice of him;
he'd hidden carefully. He started for the trail again, but he began to
worry that others might travel that same path, and make fun of him for
being alone. So he walked deeper and deeper through the trees, looking
for the long fence, along which was a straight path back to school.
He walked, and walked, but soon, he'd lost his way. Perhaps he was going
in the wrong direction, or in circles? He looked around at the trees
above him... none of them looked like any he knew. He looked up for the
sun, but it was hidden behind thick clouds. It looked as if the rain
might start to pour, and he had no umbrella to protect himself, or his
snacks. Lost, and without hope, he began to panic. He dashed this way
and that, with surprising speed. O'r the logs, hopping from stump to
stump, sliding under fallen trees, he was agile and quick, but nowhere
he went was a place that she recognized. If only the school had made a
gym category for woodland scurrying, he might have aced those quotas
with flying colors. Despite the people's insistence that, once and for
all, humanity had become one with nature... they sure seemed comfortable
ignoring it, whenever it was convenient. Finally, he happened upon a
clearing. A field, in fact, with soccer nets and other kids, laughing
and playing. They were having such fun! He didn't want to ruin their fun
with his glum troubles. She wanted to ask for directions, but he was
afraid. They looked aggressive, the way they kicked their ball around,
yelling and pushing each other around. Would they do the same to him? He
decided to go back into the forest, unseen, and find his own way home.
If anything, they'd just think him stupid, so he thought. So he slipped
away, back into the trees, unseen. He decided to follow near the trail
that led away from the field, in case it brought him home. That was when
he heard it. KRAK! A branch snapped nearby. Had one of the kids
followed him? He walked faster, climbing over logs and bushes, and the
snapping branches followed behind him. Then it stopped, and he saw it: a
beast with white fur, and black eyes. Its ears perked up, and it reared
its tail and back, and bolted towards him. He ran as fast as he could,
and though his speed was formidable, the beast was faster. Ahead was a
fort, made like an open tent of fallen trees, and he ducked into it.
Then he pulled a large stump in front of the entrance, and scurried to
the middle. It tried to claw at him, but he was just out of reach. He
held his breath as it sniffed around. I was then that he realized that
he'd lost his backpack, full of sweets! The beast wandered off, and he
caught his breath – waiting in silence, in case it decided to return.
Some time later, just as he felt it was safe to leave, the beast came
back. It was holding Ray's backpack! As it drew nearer, he could see it
was not a beast, but a boy. The boy had white hair indeed, but his eyes
were not black – he was wearing sunglasses. He didn't have wolves' ears,
as Ray'd thought, but his hair was spiked and swept upwards, like
horns. Instead of a tail, it was a white bed sheet, tied around his
waist, torn and scrapped. Though the boy wore grey jeans, he had no
socks, shoes, or even a shirt... and from his sunken skin that clung to
his ribs, he was starving. As he tore through the backpack, Ray decided
that he needed the food more. There was something familiar about this
wildling boy... in fact, 'familiar' was exactly it: he looked like a
member of Ray's family, the Radigans. Even with shades, his face
resembled Ray's greatly, and one might even confuse them for twins.
He ripped open the pie boxes, clawed into the berries and crust with his
fingers, and gobbled down the sweet, tender mulch. It was disturbing to
watch, as snack after dessert disappeared into his bare belly. Then, he
spotted something else: a black hoodie, with a skull and crossbones on
the front. Ray was still wearing it, but the boy grabbed it anyway.
"Hey!", Ray shouted, "Get off me!"
He looked at Ray, in his sweater, and his hood which had long fallen
from his mixed-auburn head of hair. He took off his shades, then took
Ray's glasses from his face. The boy's grey eyes met Ray's green. They
were clear, somehow. Colorless, only a hint of blue, maybe, with a red
glare in the middle. Ray's were a bit odd as well, for what looked green
was really blue, hazel, and a deep red, each color inside the next, in
rings. Like a rainbow, if you looked hard enough. But it was that deep
red in the middle that concerned people, who came too close. Another
reason to make sure they never did. The boy let go of Ray's hoodie, but
he looked cold. He looked around with Ray's glasses on, bewildered by
what he was (or wasn't) seeing. Ray was unlucky enough to have been born
with myopia, of which the UC had very few sufferers.
Ray proposed a
trade. "I need those glasses to see. How about I give you my hoodie,
and you give those back?" Ray lifted his arms, and raised the hoodie
over his head to take off. Underneath was still an undershirt.
The
boy slipped on the black hoodie, and felt its warmth on his body. He
hugged himself tight. This swayed Ray none, for it still belonged to
him, and was in fact his absolute favourite hoodie. That was why he
carried it around, even when he was already dressed. Just in case.
"You'll have to give that back, eventually," he demanded. "It's not really yours, it's mine."
The boy grunted at Ray, and screeched. His voice was an
incomprehensible garble, and it only scared Ray. He returned to the
backpack, and found Ray's school identification card. He held it up to
compare to him, shrugged, and pocketed the card. He left the backpack
and scraps behind, and returned to the darker part of the woods. He was
evidently satisfied with his meal, and paid Ray no attention. Ray
gathered his courage, and his backpack, and left the fort. What he
didn't realize, as he found the trail and returned to his dorm, was that
he was being watched... and followed, very closely.
Comments (0)
See all