"Dreams last so long
Even after you're gone" -- Jewel "You Were Meant for Me"
All sexual relationships are 18 and above.
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They crept forward through the fallen home, their shoes pressing into the soggy, faintly colored carpet. They neared the bedroom whose window faced the barren street outside, creeping forward as quietly as possible when all of the sudden, a foreign noise was heard coming from the entrance of the home. The two boys glanced at each other and quickly retreated into the room, backing themselves into a closet where the younger, smaller boy was hoisted up onto the sturdy top shelf while the other boy, older and sallow with fear, hunched underneath in the moldy space below, his eyes bright with hearing.
They were hidden only by the closet door. The foreign noise crept closer and the two boys realized this with a sickening twist in their abdomen. Why had they come into this rotting, dilapidated, one story home whose disheveled appearance gave no indication of a potentially positive outcome?
An immeasurable fright completely took hold of the hunger that had consumed their thin bodies just a short while ago. They had thought that by leaving camp, by trying to scavenge on their own, they would find something to eat, perhaps something for the older boy's mother or father, hopefully something for themselves and be praised upon their return. They had conferred to each other in secret hiding places whilst the adults were busy, two young boys convincing the other that they had nothing to lose; death would always be their eventual end, it was just a question of when it would come.
Just then, the shield of their refuge was taken down. The closet door ripped open and the older boy whose face was first revealed stared back in the most terrified horror he had ever felt. Every sensory receptor that lived in his body screamed and gripped their nails into his cells, paralyzing his bones. It was a man's face that stared back at the boy, a man with long dark hair and widened eyes. He was even more disheveled than the home and his hands, caked with earth and mud, held the closet door in his hands.
The man's eyes flickered up to the top shelf, immediately finding the younger boy. The man's face, upon which first opening the closet door was riddled with an insane madness, as though expecting to find the very which thing that would kill him, now settled into its lines and just stared at them.
A silence fell between the group of three and the younger boy on the shelf thought to himself that although he and Todd had decided you couldn't evade death, he really rather wished now that his death wouldn't have to be accompanied by deep pain because whatever could be construed by this man's appearance, it was wild and something wild could only result in a rabid death.
The disheveled man was young, although with his current state of appearance, he didn't look it. And it was because of his crusted appearance that the two young boys were kept from realizing who they were deeply fearful of in that moment. This was not the case for the man though.
"Todd," his voice croaked to the older boy and the older boy immediately took a step backwards, hitting the wall behind him, his face terrified as to how this man knew who he was. And then, moments later, his face morphed into bewildered surprise as he remembered a time three years ago.
"Charlie," he exhaled.
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Green was a beautiful color, especially when it rained. When the water from the heavy clouds hit the fields and the forests, the green of every shard of grass and crawling moss and fern was illuminated, making it seem like an entirely different world. The green was beautiful and now, it grew everywhere.
"How could you do that? How could you just leave, considering everything we've been through? How could you have been so foolish? How could you not know what the value of your lives are?"
The two boys sat glumly side by side as the older boy's, Todd's mother rained down on them, her face glowering and enraged. This was a hard rain, a violent hail of words that, as the minutes went on, caused their shoulders to slump further and further closer to the ground. This was in mark contrast to the other rain which was occurring simultaneously to the thunder of words. This rain was a simple sort of drizzle, coating the world below it in light dew drops and blanketing the boys' jackets, cheerfully falling onto deer's noses and plopping off of the tips of leaves.
The younger boy's mother had passed away three months ago and it was the remembrance of this that finally exhausted Todd's mother. Her name was Katharine and she closed her eyes, feeling the stress in the pit of her stomach that would never uncoil even at the sight of the return of the two boys that morning.
"Please don't do that ever again, I beg of you. We need people, we can't have you dying in the woods. We'd have to send a search party out for you and what if more people were killed in the process? It would be a waste, a terrible waste," she said, shaking her head. She said this in a softer tone, however and the two boys looked up from their hunched shoulders and nodded their heads, whispering gently that they wouldn't ever dare to disobey, again.
"The irresponsibility of you boys," she said to them, looking levelly into their eyes, "could kill us all."
********
By the early afternoon, his hair cut away with Molly's pair of scissors, ragged beard shorn down by Easton's snippers and mud washed away from his flesh with the creek's streaming water, the man named Charlie was no longer recognizable as the crazed face man the two small boys first set eyes upon. By becoming unrecognizable from his previous state, Charlie became recognizable.
He didn't smile as the morning progressed and simply nodded at those who helped him, murmuring a thank you when he was fed. His throat was constricted, unable to speak. Naturally, he wasn't someone who chatted easily and here, the burden of possibly knowing something he didn't want to know made him even more unable to converse. Soon enough, however, the camp of approximately fifteen was on its way again. You didn't have to move when the camp started moving but if you didn't, nobody would wait for you.
A few different people noticed Charlie and eyed him cautiously but most were too tired and hungry and fatigued to truly care. They trudged on, their eyes on their feet to make sure their right and left toed extremities were still moving. They wouldn't be walking far but they'd been at the camp for over a week, so it was time to distance themselves from any attention they may have brought.