"What the hell?" Kath yelled, sounding like someone who just swam 50 feet underwater and finally came up for air.
A mechanized voice responded filtered by the hazard suit.

"That's the best we can do out here to disinfect. Sorry, we don't have a hell of a lot of choices anymore. Hope the kid's okay."
With that compassion dripping statement, he gave a wave of the hand. The truck jolted and the engine squawked and they were off again. They picked up speed. With their wet clothes, it felt as if the temperature had dropped thirty degrees. Newt saw Kath shaking and without thinking too much, pulled her close, cradling both her and Dante. Dante had gone silent, perhaps shivering too violently to cry. Newt had no complains, he was cold but he didn't care. Maybe another thing the Flare had took from him.
He had flashes of a woman in his mind. Shadows made of light, no features. More a presence than anything. His mind was loosening. He knew that now.
The irony if it so thick, it seemed possible to chop at it with an axe. He would remember his mom soon. Remember her fully. Just in time to forget her in the madness of the Flare.
A few minutes later they drove through the opened doors of a gate providing entrance past a huge wall of wooden planks. A sign on one of the doors that flashed by too quickly for Newt to read the words printed there. Several people stood around, scratches and bruises on their faces. All of them holding launchers. Not a one looked too thrilled to have visitors. Then there were trees, half of them dead, half of them green and bright and hale. The world was coming back to life. Slowly but surely, especially in these higher elevations.
The truck came to a stop again. Barely enough time had passed for Newt's skin to dry, much less his hair or clothes. Both doors of the vehicle opened and closed and something told Newt their journey was over, that they might never be in another car or truck for the rest of whatever remained of their lives.

"Are you going to kill us?" Kath asked the empty air above them in a shaky voice. The first time Newt had seen her show genuine fear. "Please, don't hurt my family."

Family? Was it her fleeing mind imagining that Newt was a family member, come back from the dead? Or did awareness still cling to her strongly enough to hope for more leniency granted to a little family?
Before anyone bothered to answer, the three of them sat up, letting go of their temporary cuddle of warmth. Two soldiers stood at the tail gate of the truck. The gate was still closed. They were helmeted, their face was nothing but shiny black glass, as soulless as robots. That now familiar, muffled, slightly mechanized voice came from one of them, a low growl that sounded almost like static.

"You're lucky to be alive," it said. "Especially after killing my friend. So, if you complain, I'll beat the living hell out of you. I swear it on all of your dead relatives."

"Wow," Kath said, "someone woke up on the wrong side of the bed this morning?"
Newt was amazed that she had the guts to make even the slightest of jokes. The soldier who had spoken gripped the upper edge of the tail gate with gloved fists, the leather creaking as he squeezed.

"Say another word young lady. Just one more word. You think this would be the first time we've accidentally broken an order?"
newt's body hardened at the thought of that woman hurting Kath, but to his relief, she didn't respond. She looked at Dante, finding all the strength she needed in his eyes, in his life.

"Just get out of the truck," the other soldier piped in. "Now, you're going to spend the rest of your lives in this hellhole so you might as well make yourselves at home."
She pulled down a latch and the tail gate flopped down with a heavy, metallic crack. Newt had a sudden and almost overwhelming rush of panic. The uncertainty of his life now, all at once taking on meaning again. He moved to deflect it, scooted himself forward until he could jump down from the truck bed on to the ground. A mishmash of dirt and weeds.
A quick look around showed a lot of trees and dozens of tiny cabins and tents, as haphazard as the early days of the glade. Newt felt a longing for his friends and old days passed, as hard as those old days were. After a few seconds he offer Kath his hand to help her jump out, just to take Dante and carry him right after. It was the first time that Newt had held the child, maybe the first time he'd ever held someone so young.
To his surprise the kid didn't cry, probably too enticed by his new surroundings, probably still feeling a false sense of elation from the absence of a raging fire hose. Even Newt felt that. It was fresh on his mind and oddly made everything in the world seem a little brighter, because he didn't have a rushing explosion of ice-cold water battering his face.
One of the soldiers closed the tail gate, secured the latch, then they headed for the doors of the truck without saying anything, opened them, readied to step up and on to the seats.

"Wait!" Newt said, still holding Dante in his arms. "What are we supposed to do?"
The soldier on the passenger side ignored them, got in and slammed the door. The driver paused with a foot on the instep, but didn't turn around to face them when she answered.

"Like we said, just be glad you're alive. Hardly anyone's being sent here anymore. Almost full. Most Cranks are just... you know, taken care of."
The Crank Palace. A sicker version of Newt would've laughed. He'd ended up here after all. Even after Kath had told him to  shut up about that

"why?" Kath asked, standing beside Newt with her arms crossed "If you're offing most of the infected, then why not us? After what we did." There was no apology in her voice. None at all.

"Are you complaining?" The soldier countered. "I'd be happy to take you to the Flare Pits if that's what your heart desires. It's what you deserve."
Newt saw she was ready to start a riot so he quickly placed his free arm in from of her and spoke up.

"No, no. Thank you. We're fine." He gently grabbed Kath's arm and tried to pull her away from the truck. He wanted nothing to do with these people ever again. But she resisted, seemed intent on getting them killed or burned in the pits.

"Why?" She asked. "What are you not telling us?"
Even though they couldn't see the soldier's face, every inch of her armoured body screamed out what her facial expressions couldn't. Frustration, annoyance, anger. But then she relaxed, all of her muscles slackening at once, her foot dropping back to the ground. She turned towards them and spoke with that mechanized voice, void of feeling.

"It's him." She pointed at Newt. "They know who he is and... she wants to keep track of him. You and that kid are just lucky you made a new friend. Otherwise, you would've been dead long before you made it to the pits. Now goodbye and have a wonderful life. Short and sweet as they say." With that she jumped in the truck and drove off. The back tires spitting up rocks and dirt.

"What was she talking about?" Kath asked. "Who is... she and who are you?"
Newt only shook his head, staring at the truck as it grew smaller with distance. Finally, it turned a corner around some trees and was gone. He looked at the ground.

"Later," was the only word that came out. She. He couldn't bring himself to say her name

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