Tuesday, February 11, 2014

The Scorch Trials - Chapter 5


Something softened in Thomas. This kid wasn’t lying—he could just tell. The look of horror that had taken
hold of Aris was one he knew well. Thomas had felt it himself and had seen it on too many other faces.
He knew exactly what kind of terrible memories made someone look like that. He also knew that Aris had
no clue what had happened to Teresa.
“Maybe you should sit down,” Thomas said. “I think we have a lot to talk about.”
“What do you mean?” Aris asked. “Who are you guys? Where’d you come from?”
Thomas let out a slight laugh. “The Maze. The Grievers. WICKED. You name it.” So much had
happened, where could he start? Not to mention that worry over Teresa was making his head spin, making
him want to run out of the room and search for her immediately, but he stayed.
“You’re lying,” Aris said, his voice having dropped to a whisper, his face now a full shade paler.
“No, we’re not,” Newt responded. “Tommy’s right. We need to talk. Sounds like we’ve come from
similar places.”
“Who’s that guy?”
Thomas turned around to see that Minho had returned, a pack of Gladers standing behind him on the
other side of the doorway. Their faces were scrunched up in disgust at the smell out there, their eyes still
full of the terror of seeing what filled the room just behind them.
“Minho, meet Aris,” Thomas said, taking a step to the side and gesturing toward the other boy. “Aris,
meet Minho.”
Minho stuttered out a few unintelligible words, as if he couldn’t quite decide where to start.
“Look,” Newt said. “Let’s take down these top beds and move them around the room. Then we can all
sit and figure out what’s bloody going on.”
Thomas shook his head. “No. First, we need to go find Teresa. She must be in some other room.”
“Isn’t one,” Minho said.
“What do you mean?”
“I just checked this whole place out. There’s the big common area, this room, our dorm room, and some
seriously shucked doors that lead outside—where we came in from the bus yesterday. Locked and
chained from the inside. Doesn’t make any sense, but I don’t see any other doors or exits.”
Thomas shook his head in confusion. It felt like a million spiders had just spun cobwebs through his
brain. “But … what about last night? Where’d the food come from? Didn’t anyone notice other rooms, a
kitchen, anything?” He looked around, hoping for an answer, but no one said a word.
“Maybe there’s a hidden door,” Newt finally said. “Look, we can only do one thing at a time. We need
to—”
“No!” Thomas shouted. “We’ve got all day to talk to this Aris guy. The label by the door said Teresa
should be here somewhere—we need to find her!”
Without waiting for a response, he headed for the door back to the common area, pushing his way past
boys until he was through. The smell hit him as if a bucket of raw sewage had been spilled over his head.
The bloated and purple bodies hung like carcasses of game set out by hunters to dry. Their lifeless eyes
stared back at him.
A familiar, sickening tickle of revulsion filled his stomach and triggered his gag reflex. Closing his
eyes for a second, he willed his insides to settle. When they finally did, he began his search for some sign
of Teresa, concentrating with all his might on not looking at the dead people.
But then a horrible thought struck him. What if she …
He ran through the room, searching the faces of the bodies. None of them was her. Relief dissolved the
fleeting moment of panic, and he focused on the room itself.
The walls surrounding the common area were as plain as could be; smooth plaster painted white, no
decoration of any kind. And for some reason, no windows. He walked quickly around its entire
circumference, running his left hand along the wall as he did so. He came to the door to the boys’ dorm
room, went past it, then made it to the big entrance through which they’d come the day before. There had
been a torrential downpour at the time, which seemed impossible now, considering the bright sun he’d
seen shining behind the crazy man earlier.
The entrance—or exit—consisted of two large steel doors, their surfaces a shiny silver. And just like
Minho said, a massive chain—with links a full inch thick—had been threaded through the handles on the
doors and pulled tight, two big key locks snapped shut to keep it that way. Thomas reached out and pulled
on the chains to check their strength. The metal felt cool under his hands, and it didn’t give at all.
He expected thumps from the other side—Cranks trying to get in just as they were at the windows in the
dorm room. But the room remained silent. The only sounds were muted and coming from the two dorms—
distant shouts and screams from the Cranks and murmurs of conversation from the Gladers.
Frustrated, Thomas continued his trek along the walls until he made it back to the room that was
supposed to be Teresa’s. Nothing, not even a crack or seam to indicate another exit. The large room
wasn’t even a square—it was a big oval, round and cornerless.
He was completely perplexed. He thought back to the night before, when they’d all sat there and eaten
pizza like the starved people they’d been. Surely they’d seen other doors, a kitchen, something. But the
more he thought about it, the more he tried to picture what things had looked like, the fuzzier it became.
An alarm went off in his head—their brains had been tinkered with before. Had it happened again? Had
their memories been altered or wiped?
And what had happened to Teresa?
Desperate, he thought about crawling across the floor to look for a trapdoor or something—some clue
to what had happened. But he couldn’t spend another minute with all those rotting bodies. The only thing
left was the new kid. He sighed and turned back to the small room where they’d found him. Aris had to
know something that would help.
Just as Newt had ordered, the top beds had been unhooked from the lower ones and placed around the
room against the walls, creating enough space for the nineteen other Gladers and Aris to sit in a circle,
everyone facing each other.
When Minho saw Thomas, he patted an empty spot next to him. “Told ya, dude. Have a seat and let’s
talk. We waited on you. But close that shuck door as much as you can first—smells worse than Gally’s
rotting feet out there.”
Without responding, Thomas pulled the door shut, then walked over and sat down. He wanted to sink
his head into his hands, but he didn’t. Nothing indicated for sure that any kind of danger threatened Teresa.
Something weird was going on, but there could be a million explanations, and plenty of them included her
being okay.
Newt was one bed to the right, sitting so far forward that just the edge of his butt rested on the mattress.
“All right, let’s get started on the bloody storytellin’ so we can get to the real problem—finding
something to eat.”
Right on cue, Thomas felt a hunger pang, heard his stomach growl. That problem hadn’t even occurred
to him yet. Water would be fine—they had the bathrooms—but there was no sign of food anywhere.
“Good that,” Minho said. “Talk, Aris. Tell us everything.”
The new boy was directly across the room from Thomas—the Gladers sitting to each side of the
stranger had scooted to the far ends of the bed. Aris shook his head. “No way. You guys go first.”
“Yeah?” Minho responded. “How about we all just take turns beating the living klunk out of your shuck
face? Then we’ll ask you to talk again.”
“Minho,” Newt said sternly. “There’s no reason—”
Minho pointed sharply at Aris. “Please, dude. For all we know this shank could be one of the Creators.
Somebody from WICKED, here to spy on us. He could’ve killed those people out there—he’s the only
one we don’t know and the doors and windows are locked! I’m sick of him acting all snooty when we’ve
got twenty guys to his one. He should talk first.”
Thomas groaned on the inside. One thing he knew was that the kid would never open up if Minho
terrified him.
Newt sighed and looked over at Aris. “He’s got a point. Just tell us what you meant about coming from
the buggin’ Maze. That’s where we escaped from, and we obviously haven’t met you.”
Aris rubbed his eyes, then met Newt’s gaze. “Fine, listen. I was thrown into this gigantic maze made
out of huge stone walls—but before that my memory was erased. I couldn’t remember anything about my
life from before. I just knew my name. I lived there with a bunch of girls. There must’ve been fifty of
them, and I was the only boy. We escaped a few days ago—the people who helped kept us in a big gym
for a few days, then moved me here last night—but no one explained anything. What’s this stuff about you
being in a maze, too?”
Thomas barely heard the last few words of what Aris had said over the sounds of surprise coming from
the other Gladers. Confusion swirled in his brain. Aris had announced what he’d been through as simply
and quickly as describing a trip to the beach. But it seemed crazy. Monumental, if true. Luckily someone
voiced exactly what Thomas was trying to sort out in his mind.
“Wait a minute,” Newt said. “You lived in a big maze, on a farm, where walls closed every night? Just
you and a few dozen girls? Were there creatures called Grievers? Were you the last one to arrive? And
did everything go buggin’ nuts when you did? Did you come in a coma? With a note that said you were the
last one ever?”
“Whoa, whoa, whoa,” Aris was saying even before Newt had finished. “How do you know all this?
How …”
“It’s the same shuck experiment,” Minho said, the earlier belligerence gone from his voice. “Or
same … whatever. But they had all girls and one boy, we had all boys and one girl. WICKED must’ve
built two of those mazes, run two different tests!”
Thomas’s line of thinking had already accepted that. He finally settled himself enough to speak. He
looked at Aris. “Did they call you the Trigger?”
Aris nodded, obviously as perplexed as anyone else in the room.
“And could you …,” Thomas began, but hesitated. He felt like every time he brought this up, he was
admitting to the world that he was crazy. “Could you speak to one of those girls inside your mind? Ya
know, like telepathically?”
Aris’s eyes widened, staring deeply at Thomas as if he’d understood a dark secret that only someone
else who shared it could understand.
Can you hear me?
The phrase appeared so clearly inside Thomas’s mind that at first he thought Aris had spoken aloud.
But no—his lips hadn’t moved.
Can you hear me? the boy repeated.
Thomas hesitated, swallowed. Yes.
They killed her, Aris said back to him. They killed my best friend.

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