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The Last of Us
The Last of Us
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The Last of Us

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The Last of Us

Alex, who’s young, has to read Kipper’s Birthday, which he’s done before but this time with feeling. Duncan’s the same age as me, yet he won’t be encouraged. He mostly lies head-down until it’s time to go. Calum Ian is one year below Elizabeth, so he copies her mostly.

I turn the pages and stare at the sums I know I did last year. The book is very good – giving examples, sums that are worked through, but even so, it’s not enough. I don’t want to tell the boys that I don’t know. The last time I did that they called me Gloic, which means brainless idiot, not even anything to do with the truth.

Then the sun starts to shine on my desk, and now I want to be outside. I think of the gardens we saw on the way here, with flowers I haven’t the name for, either in the Gaelic or English. I recognised some very big daisies, but the rest I didn’t know. Daffodils? Roses, maybe? There might be a book in one of the houses, or the library. For learning there can’t be a better place to start than there.

‘This is dumb,’ Calum Ian says.

I look up at Elizabeth, who pretends not to hear, at least not until he says it for a second time.

‘Why is it dumb?’

Calum Ian scratches his pen across the lid of his desk. ‘It’s the same page, over and over. Plus I never cared about sums in the before. How can they help us now?’

Elizabeth lines up her jotter and pencils. Then says, ‘Sums are needed for lots of things.’

‘Say some.’

She tries to think of examples. In the long run she says, ‘Sums can tell you what the date is.’

‘No they don’t. All you need for that is a calendar. And there’s plenty of those in the post office.’

Me: ‘People used to tell the time by the sun. True. There was a shortest day and a longest. The olden-times people used sums to work it out.’

Calum Ian: ‘We’ve got calendars.’

Elizabeth: ‘Which nobody can agree the date with.’

Calum Ian: ‘Because you got your count wrong.’

He takes out his can opener – twirls the head of it, squinting his eyes at Elizabeth.

‘Why’d you get to be teacher? It could just as easy be me, or Duncan. Or Alex sitting quiet there. Or her. But it’s forever you.’

Elizabeth puts her pencils back in her satchel.

‘It’s not even as if we learn anything. We’ve been at this same page for days. Weeks.

Elizabeth leaves the teacher’s seat and goes to sit beside Alex. Then she takes out her things and looks patient.

I know Duncan will never get up to replace her: he’s too shy. Alex is both shy and too young: he’s only six.

We hear Calum Ian’s chair screeching. He scrumples his pages then goes to the teacher’s desk.

On the whiteboard he writes his name, then underneath:

I AM A BOY NOT A FUCKING TEACHER

‘There’s no point pretending to be a teacher, because I’m not,’ he says. ‘There’s no point in any of us pretending because none of us are. The – bloody – end.’

After this he draws an arse on the whiteboard, and I have to admit this is kind of funny.

But when we start to laugh he gets furious; he rubs off what he’s written then shouts: ‘Shut your traps! Sguir dheth sin! That means you as well, Ugly-face!’

He’s talking to his brother, Duncan.

Duncan hides as deep as he can in his jacket, to match the quietness of the rest of us.

Now Calum Ian looks worried to have said what he did. He goes back to his seat, rolls down his sleeves – but they’re clarty, so he rolls them back up again.

‘Duncan could teach us the fiddle,’ Elizabeth says in a quiet voice. ‘We could get them out of the music cupboard?’

‘I’m going home.’

Calum Ian begins to pack his bag. Duncan begins to collect his things, too.

Elizabeth: ‘We could do messages?’

‘Another crap idea. Who’s looking out for them, tell me that? We send and send but we never get any back.’

‘And never will if we don’t keep sending.’

Fine, you do it then. See if I care.’

‘But we have to stick together. Remember the saying: “What’s going to work?”’

This is Elizabeth’s saying. She always does it when we’re struggling, or disagreeing, or needing a boost up.

When nobody adds on the next bit, she has to add it herself: ‘Teamwork! That’s what’s going to work, right? We’re all going to be a team. Right?’

‘Do your stupid sums for the team, then.’

After this Calum Ian gets up, scraping his chair, and leaves, with Duncan hurrying behind.

I look across at the drawing Duncan left on his desk.

It’s the same drawing he always does: of a face with black scored-out holes for eyes.

Elizabeth goes into one of her quiet moods. She walks me and Alex to the swing park, then leaves us.

‘See you at home,’ she says, her voice sounding like we’ve not to follow too soon.

Sometimes if I’m not concentrating I still think we’re living in our last house. We’ve moved twice now, usually when the mess gets too much. Elizabeth isn’t sure if this means we live like kings – having a new house when it suits us – or like orphans. I prefer the king choice.

It’s only Calum Ian and Duncan who’ve stayed true to their old home. This gets me the big envy sometimes, when I think of my old home, abandoned.

Alex and I sit on the swings for a bit, eating rice crackers with mango chutney spread on top.

The wind mushes the water in the bay, and the sun makes the mush glittery. The wrecked trawler out on the rocks of Snuasamul looks like the world’s biggest whale. I hold it between finger and thumb. It’s tiny.

Alex: ‘Do you think there’s a ghost on that ship?’

Me: ‘As usual – too much imagination.’

Alex goes back to nibbling his cracker. He frowns at his chutney then says, ‘Don’t want more of this. If you eat the same thing over and over you get a heart attack.’

‘Who says?’

‘No one. I just think it.’

‘Well you shouldn’t think it. It’s crazy! That’s only if you eat too many chips and you get a fat arse and you smoke. If this isn’t you, don’t worry.’

He still looks worried, though, so I decide we need to do something brave, just the two of us.

First of all, I command us in getting an offering. We pick some of the flowers we don’t know the names of, plus dandelions from the grass strip by the History Centre.

Then we go bit by bit closer to the side entrance of the big kids’ school.

No one likes going here. They made it different to the little kids’ school because of who they put in it.

It takes a while to get our confidence up: so we kick the rainbow-painted stones along the pathway, then run up and down the slopey concrete.

After that we go in.

The wind goes in first, fluttering leaves and bits of paper by the door. There’s broken glass outside one room. Dirty black stuff in spots trailing up along the corridor. On both walls are the message boards. Some of the paper displays have come down. I hold one up: there’s a bit at the top called ‘Our Wall of Achievement’, but the bit underneath has fallen away, so there’s nothing. I think this is kind of funny in a dark way, but Alex doesn’t.

He walks ahead of me, trying not to step on the black spots, or the rubbish.

He’s looking at me for braveness, but I don’t feel massively brave without Elizabeth.

Going through double doors, there’s another corridor. Skylights making it go bright, dark, bright. A broken window inside one classroom: maybe a bird hit it, or the MacNeil brothers throwing stones again? Rows of posters about bullying, some about road safety, some about littering. Along the corridor on brightly-coloured card, with a wiggly blue border, are the pictures of all the kids who went to school last year.

I’m there, in P4, alongside Duncan. Elizabeth is in P7. Calum Ian’s in P6. Alex, only in P2. We didn’t really know each other then, but we do now, for sure.

There’s a short bit outdoors between our school and the big school. We get to the playground. It’s marked up and ready for games: basket- and netball. The hill rising away behind, the rocks going silver with sun.

It’s like going underwater. We put on our nose-clips, wait behind the door. Then I count to ten and go in.

Top corridor, heading to the gallery above the gym.

We put our perfume-hankies over our faces.

Going inside we hear a noise like the world’s biggest bee. Millions of the world’s biggest bees.

I run forward, and throw our flowers onto the dried and drying pile of old flowers – then we get out fast.

As the door slams I hear the flies buzzing up into the air. They’re down in the gym. The noise is giant.

Back outside I smell myself for the stink that stays. It feels like we got away with it, just.

Elizabeth started the offerings. But she doesn’t always like us doing it on our own, in case the dead down there make us sick. Still, I figure as long as we stay up in the gallery, run in and out, we’ll be fine.

Alex doesn’t look too much happier now that we’ve done a brave thing. His hands shake, only this time I don’t think he needs food, or medicine, just fresh air.

Leaving him outside on his own I take a minute to go back to my old real classroom.

Its windows are broken, and the floor’s wet; there’s a shelf swollen from water. Some birds must have come in, because there are new trails of bird shit everywhere.

There’s a rack with books on it. New books on it, neatly placed. ‘Can I have a book for reading practice, miss? And for Alex? He’s just started out.’

When I relax into it the teacher is there. She’s sitting down, reading her own book. She takes off her glasses.

‘Go on,’ she says.

I sit in my old seat. Beside me is Anne-Marie. On the other side is David. In front is Margaret-Anne, and behind, Kieran. We take it in turns to read a bit of story. The teacher says, ‘Very good: now it’s Anne-Marie.’ Then it’s my turn to read, which I do while everyone else listens. I’ve always been a good reader in English, so it’s easy, and I enjoy it and probably read longer than I should because the teacher forgets to ask me to stop.

When I can’t read any more I close my eyes. I put my ear on the desk, ignoring the floor-noise, and try to hear them. I listen hard. Usually someone sniffing, or making a cough, or the sound when they move, a chair grating, a book opening, a pencil-scritch, anything.

But there’s just the wind.

Sometimes the quiet gets on your nerves. You can hear the whistle in your ears. The dogs and sheep are turned to dinosaurs. When it gets bad we turn on the CD player and listen to music. It’s one reason we collect batteries. The MacNeil brothers I’ve heard tooting car horns for the same reason, and once I stood beside the War Memorial above Nasg and screamed just to be rid of it.

I get up, walk around the class. Some of my art is still on the wall from last autumn. Paintings of what our summer holidays were going to be this year. We were going to Glasgow, me and Mum, then on to a big water park in England which had blue and red slides, and a kids’ club and face-painting, and bikes and lakes and all sorts of fun.

So this is what my painting shows: a water park in a forest. Except I never saw it in the end.

Alex looks fed up with me when I get back outside.

Alex: ‘You leaved me alone.’

Me: ‘You look like you’re facing your worst enemy.’

Alex: ‘A dog came and sniffed me. At least the dogs remembered to be my friend.’

Me: ‘Was it in a pack? Was it a collie? Remember Elizabeth told us to stay back from them.’

Alex: ‘Wasn’t.’

We walk along for a bit, but he won’t be encouraged. Soon he wants to just sit and stare at nothing. Knowing the warning signs I take four pink wafer biscuits from my emergency supply and stuff them in his gob.

After ten minutes he’s less grumpy. I take a wet wipe and wipe a window in his dirty face.

He says, ‘Sometimes I don’t know why I get scared. I know I’ve got an illness, but it can’t always be that, right? If I’m scared that’s when I start thinking about zombies.’

Me: ‘Well you shouldn’t, because there aren’t any.’

Alex: ‘Not even new ones?’

Me: ‘Not even.’

Alex: ‘Not even of people?’

Me: ‘Stop asking the same question differently.’

To cheer him up I show him the book I got in the library: it’s called Dr Dog, and it’s about a dog who’s a doctor and who has to cure the Gumboyle family. The book is good, and makes him laugh. Job done.

Elizabeth is nowhere around. But anyway, we don’t want to meet her because she’ll just take us New Shopping, which nobody likes.

Instead we go Old Shopping, normal shopping, this time to the post office. I decide it’s a mission, so we have to take out her list of rules to remind ourselves:

1 Stay together, and do not wander far.

2 Keep warm.

3 Put out something bright.

4 Look bigger.

5 Use the whistle for emergencies.

6 Don’t eat anything you’re suspicious of.

7 Stay away from deep water.

She always has rules, which I don’t mind, though Calum Ian got fed up with it, and anyway said he was too wise for instructions coming from her.

The post office door is blue, with peeling paint. For old time’s sake we knock on it. It’s open anyway, like all the doors around here; even the doctor’s surgery is open, though someone smashed the door for that.

Being in the post office gives me sad memories. Alex, however, likes playing with the ink stamps behind the counter, so I put up with it for him.

I borrow a sheet of first class stamps to take home for when we’re drawing. Meanwhile Alex stamps his hands, his cheeks where I wiped, his knees, his nose. Now he’s covered in POSTAGE PAID and looks chuffed.

Me: ‘You’re a weird kid.’

We leave the post office and go to the butcher’s, which sells butcher’s meat yes but also everything else. I mostly preferred the sweets. Mum likes the papers and rolls.

Each time you look at an empty shelf something new comes out. This is a skill I’ve learned. At first we didn’t see the batteries – but then we did. Next came the tin of stew. Next came the big sausage of dog food (for befriending, not eating, Elizabeth claims). Next came the serviettes and cup-cake papers (spare toilet paper). We used food colouring to mark the water we’d sterilised: that was Elizabeth’s good idea. Drinking red water isn’t so bad when you’re used to drinking juice. But Alex thinks too much colouring makes it look like blood.

Now the shelves are empty. Nearly. There are two farmer’s journals with red scribbled names on them. There’s swim-goggles, knitted jumpers, gloves. There’s a plastic cricket set no one ever wanted.

I tug on the string of the cricket set. It’s jammed. No, snagged at the back. Alex helps me push the shelf. It’s easy to do cos it’s empty and not stuck or nailed.

Dust, cobwebs, lentils. Then lucky kids on a mission: a packet of icing sugar! Squashed, yellow, but still sealed.

Me: ‘The latest gossip is – I got a plan!’

Alex: ‘I know your plan!’

We heave away the rest of the shelves. Some of the metal arms drop clanking. There’s more cobweb-dust – then treasure. A tin of Scotch broth (unbuckled). A tin of hot dogs in brine. A packet of pastry mix. A packet of balloons. A plastic box of paperclips.

The pastry packet is open, mouldy. But the tins are good. Eager beavers, we pull all the shelves. We can’t move the ones around the walls, they’re fixed.

Still, it’s been a good mission, one of our best.

‘We got so lucky,’ Alex says.

Calum Ian and Duncan are on the main street. We hide the things in our schoolbags, then shout on them. They’re on a mission as well: with the cars, sucking petrol for their bonfire. Duncan still has his hood up, zipped up high so it’s hard to see his eyes. From side-on I can only see his mouth: his lips are cracked and red from the petrol.

Calum Ian’s lips are red as well. He wipes his mouth and spits like a granddad. ‘A bheil am pathadh ort?’ he says, to Alex, joking, while holding up the plastic milk bottle he uses to collect. Then says to me: ‘You do it.’

He uses a stick to prise open the nearest petrol cap. When he gets the cap off I feed in the tube and suck, but I don’t have enough suck to get it going. Calum Ian gets it started – but when he hands it over it spills past my mouth and I’m nearly sick with the smell.

Gloic!’ Duncan points at me and laughs.

Calum Ian demonstrates perfectly how it should be done: suck, finger on the end, drop the tube down, pour. Once it’s started the petrol pours all by itself, and doesn’t even want to stop. It fills three bottles.

When he’s done Duncan uses gold spray-paint to write an

on the windscreen, for
mptied.

Seeing my bag he asks, ‘What you got?’

Trying not to sound boastful about it I show them our treasures. Both of them whistle, then look very interested. Calum Ian checks the dates on the hot dogs, then the broth.

‘Share and share?’ he says.

I look for getting something back. But all he does is take the hot dogs, and the broth, and the icing sugar, leaving us just with the balloons and paperclips.

Alex, looking disappointed, asks if he can dip his thumb in the sugar just once.

‘We’ll need it for emergencies,’ Calum Ian says, waving him away. ‘All right then – swap you for petrol?’

‘We don’t want petrol.’

‘All right. So have nothing.’

They pack our treasures away in their bags.

We follow behind, hoping to share back over as they suck more cars. It gets to me that I’m the smaller kid, and thinking of our reinforcement back at home I say, ‘Why’re you mean to Elizabeth at school?’

Calum Ian rubs his red mouth. ‘She’s fucking stuck-up.’

‘No she isn’t.’

‘Aye she is. She’s an incomer. Thinks she knows it all because of who her mam and dad were. But what did they do? Sat on their arses in the end. Never helped anybody. She only pretends being leader, I can tell it.’

You aren’t better.’

Gloic, you should stick up for the island folk.’

‘Stop calling me Gloic.’

Duncan gets between us. I think he’s trying to get us to stop arguing, but I can’t always feel he’s on my side if Calum Ian is standing near.

‘Just tell us your real nickname,’ Duncan says, ‘the secret one your mam used. What was it again? Then we’ll stop using that one.’

I think it might be a trick, so I don’t tell.

In the end it becomes a big deal. Duncan puts his hands together like he’s praying for me to tell any answer: and I get so annoyed at him for this that I say, ‘Your nickname is Scab Face.’

It makes him pull his jacket up high. He kicks at the wooden post of a fence, rather than me.

Calum Ian doesn’t stand up for him with his sadness, which makes it worse, really.

They put the plastic milk bottles they filled in a shopping trolley, then begin to push it home.

We follow them for a bit, and I say they’ll not be wanted if they come to visit later. Calum Ian makes an O with his mouth to show he doesn’t care. Duncan has gone back to being invisible.

‘Why’d you even collect petrol?’ I shout. ‘Your last fire didn’t work.’

Calum Ian: ‘So we’re going to make the next one bigger. Plus I got a better idea for how to start it.’

‘Your ideas never work.’

Now I get annoyed that they won’t share food or plans. So when they’re not looking I throw a stone which whizzes past Calum Ian’s head. He just waves back.

Elizabeth is waiting for us at home. We tell her about the badly shared hot dogs and broth and icing sugar. She doesn’t say much, just tells us how clever we were with our mission in the first place. Turns out, though, she’s been New Shopping – and on her own.

There are new sheets on Alex’s bed, plus tins of fruit and peas and carrots, and packet soups and biscuits. It’s a very, very good result!

We don’t ask where she went shopping, and she doesn’t offer to tell. We look through some of the other things: candles, raisins, ancient treacle, coffee filter papers, even two packets of Jammie Dodgers.

Alex: ‘Were these from a good house? I mean, were they opened already or near to—’

‘All houses are good,’ Elizabeth says quick, holding up her hand for no more questions.

‘Can there be poison that gets—’

Shut up, OK?’

For dinner we have to put all the food we might eat in a square for choosing. With the power of three we decide on chicken soup, beans on crackers, then raisins dipped in treacle. I like to spend ages reading the sides of the packets. Ingredients. Contents. Est weight. Best before.

Me: ‘You know why they call them ingredients?’

Elizabeth: ‘What’s your idea again?’

Me: ‘Because it’s the stuff that makes you greedy. In-GREEDY-ents.’

Elizabeth does a half-and-half smile.

I go on reading the packets as she makes our soup. Wheatgerm, rice syrup, flavourings, colourings, E116. This is how clever the world once was! Not just cream with chicken. Your statutory rights. What about statutory wrongs? Customer queries, call this number. I’ve tried to call these numbers before, on our spare charged-up phone, but there’s never any answer.

Just when I think Calum Ian and Duncan aren’t coming because of the stone I threw, they do come.

They smell of bonfire. We don’t ask what they’ve been doing. Their knees are scuffed and dirty and Duncan has black scorches on his shoes. In the shadows made by our torches his skin looks even bumpier.

We’ve all got scars: on our faces, on our backs and necks, from the sickness. I remember a lady on TV saying that the worse your scars, the worse the illness.

Duncan got the worst of all of us. After that it’s Elizabeth, then Calum Ian, then me, then Alex.

Adults and littler kids had the worst scars of all. That’s why they became so sick. That’s why we have two separate places to go and remember them. See them.

We eat dinner, which is great because it’s warm, then Calum Ian takes the best seat on the couch and says, ‘Press play, Bonus Features.’

Alex gets called Bonus Features because that’s what he thought the seventh Star Wars film was called. He’s in charge of our battery-powered DVD player. Tonight he does adverts, by using some recordings we found, and then we get a film: Tin Toy from the Toy Story DVD.

It’s very short though, and awful soon it’s over.

Elizabeth: ‘OK, batteries out.’

Both Duncan and Alex thump their arms and feet on the carpet.

‘No no no!’ shouts Alex.

‘You’re not the ruler of me!’ says Duncan. Alex becomes unmanageable for a bit. We try to ignore him but then Elizabeth remembers: his injection. He’s in a different mood from this morning, though, and he struggles and cries and Calum Ian has to get involved to hold him down, which only makes things worse.

Afterwards Alex rubs his stomach and cries.

‘I forgot not to be angry,’ he says.

For a treat he’s allowed batteries in his DS. For me, I decide to draw, so I tear a stamp from the book of stamps we found, and stick it in my drawing jotter. Beneath it, under the Queen’s head, I draw a fat body with an old woman’s stern hands and knees. Mum once said that the Queen had jewellery dripping off her, so on her wrists I draw pearl bracelets with richness oozing.

Alex: ‘The Queen lived on a farm in London.’

For some reason Calum Ian and Elizabeth find this funny. I find it a bit ignorant.

‘D’you think the Queen died?’ Alex asks.

‘She was old,’ Elizabeth answers. ‘But her doctors would be the best. So maybe she didn’t.’

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