An hour later, Thomas sat in front of the Keepers for the Gathering, just like he had a week or
two before. They hadn’t let Teresa in, which ticked him off just as much as it did her. Newt and
Minho trusted her now, but the others still had their doubts.
“All right, Greenie,” Alby said, looking much better as he sat in the middle of the semicircle
of chairs, next to Newt. The other chairs were all occupied except two—a stark reminder that
Zart and Gally had been taken by the Grievers. “Forget all the beat-around-the-bush klunk. Start
talking.”
Thomas, still a bit queasy from the Changing, forced himself to take a second and gain his
composure. He had a lot to say, but wanted to be sure it came out sounding as non-stupid as
possible.
“It’s a long story,” he began. “We don’t have time to go through it all, but I’ll tell you the gist
of it. When I went through the Changing, I saw flashes of images—hundreds of them—like a
slide show in fast forward. A lot came back to me, but only some of it’s clear enough to talk
about. Other stuff has faded or is fading.” He paused, gathering his thoughts one last time. “But I
remember enough. The Creators are testing us. The Maze was never meant to be solved. It’s all
been a trial. They want the winners—or survivors—to do something important.” He trailed off,
already confused at what order he should tell things in.
“What?” Newt asked.
“Let me start over,” Thomas said, rubbing his eyes. “Every single one of us was taken when
we were really young. I don’t remember how or why—just glimpses and feelings that things had
changed in the world, that something really bad happened. I have no idea what. The Creators
stole us, and I think they felt justified in doing it. Somehow they figured out that we have aboveaverage
intelligence, and that’s why they chose us. I don’t know, most of this is sketchy and
doesn’t matter that much anyway.
“I can’t remember anything about my family or what happened to them. But after we were
taken, we spent the next few years learning in special schools, living somewhat normal lives
until they were finally able to finance and build the Maze. All our names are just stupid
nicknames they made up—like Alby for Albert Einstein, Newt for Isaac Newton, and me—
Thomas. As in Edison.”
Alby looked like he’d been slapped in the face. “Our names … these ain’t even our real
names?”
Thomas shook his head. “As far as I can tell, we’ll probably never know what our names
were.”
“What are you saying?” Frypan asked. “That we’re freakin’ orphans raised by scientists?”
“Yes,” Thomas said, hoping his expression didn’t give away just how depressed he felt.
“Supposedly we’re really smart and they’re studying every move we make, analyzing us. Seeing
who’d give up and who wouldn’t. Seeing who’d survive it all. No wonder we have so many
beetle blade spies running around this place. Plus, some of us have had things … altered in our
brains.”
“I believe this klunk about as much as I believe Frypan’s food is good for you,” Winston
grumbled, looking tired and indifferent.
“Why would I make this up?” Thomas said, his voice rising. He’d gotten stung on purpose to
remember these things! “Better yet, what do you think is the explanation? That we live on an
alien planet?”
“Just keep talking,” Alby said. “But I don’t get why none of us remembered this stuff. I’ve
been through the Changing, but everything I saw was …” He looked around quickly, like he’d
just said something he shouldn’t have. “I didn’t learn nothin’.”
“I’ll tell you in a minute why I think I learned more than others,” Thomas said, dreading that
part of the story. “Should I keep going or not?”
“Talk,” Newt said.
Thomas sucked in a big breath, as if he were about to start a race. “Okay, somehow they
wiped our memories—not just our childhood, but all the stuff leading up to entering the Maze.
They put us in the Box and sent us up here—a big group to start and then one a month over the
last two years.”
“But why?” Newt asked. “What’s the bloody point?”
Thomas held up a hand for silence. “I’m getting there. Like I said, they wanted to test us, see
how we’d react to what they call the Variables, and to a problem that has no solution. See if we
could work together—build a community, even. Everything was provided for us, and the
problem was laid out as one of the most common puzzles known to civilization—a maze. All this
added up to making us think there had to be a solution, just encouraging us to work all the harder
while at the same time magnifying our discouragement at not finding one.” He paused to look
around, making sure they were all listening. “What I’m saying is, there is no solution.”
Chatter broke out, questions overlapping each other.
Thomas held his hands up again, wishing he could just zap his thoughts into everyone else’s
brains. “See? Your reaction proves my point. Most people would’ve given up by now. But I
think we’re different. We couldn’t accept that a problem can’t be solved—especially when it’s
something as simple as a maze. And we’ve kept fighting no matter how hopeless it’s gotten.”
Thomas realized his voice had steadily risen as he spoke, and he felt heat in his face.
“Whatever the reason, it makes me sick! All of this—the Grievers, the walls moving, the Cliff—
they’re just elements of a stupid test. We’re being used and manipulated. The Creators wanted to
keep our minds working toward a solution that was never there. Same thing goes for Teresa
being sent here, her being used to trigger the Ending—whatever that means—the place being
shut down, gray skies, on and on and on. They’re throwing crazy things at us to see our response,
test our will. See if we’ll turn on each other. In the end, they want the survivors for something
important.”
Frypan stood up. “And killing people? That’s a nice little part of their plan?”
Thomas felt a moment of fear, worried that the Keepers might take out their anger on him for
knowing so much. And it was only about to get worse. “Yes, Frypan, killing people. The only
reason the Grievers are doing it one by one is so we don’t all die before it ends the way it’s
supposed to. Survival of the fittest. Only the best of us will escape.”
Frypan kicked his chair. “Well, you better start talking about this magical escape, then!”
“He will,” Newt said, quietly. “Shut up and listen.”
Minho, who’d been mostly silent the whole time, cleared his throat. “Something tells me I’m
not gonna like what I’m about to hear.”
“Probably not,” Thomas said. He closed his eyes for a second and folded his arms. The next
few minutes were going to be crucial. “The Creators want the best of us for whatever it is they
have planned. But we have to earn it.” The room fell completely silent, every eye on him. “The
code.”
“The code?” Frypan repeated, his voice lighting up with a trace of hope. “What about it?”
Thomas looked at him, paused for effect. “It was hidden in the wall movements of the Maze
for a reason. I should know—I was there when the Creators did it.”
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