The Golden Circle - Chapter 20
The Golden Circle
by Nial Thorne
Chapter 20: He will be courageous
Reading further constitutes an unambiguous gesture of assent to the statement: I am not a minor person, nor in the company of a minor person. The story is copyright © 2004 Nial Thorne. You may copy it for your own private use; all other rights reserved. See chapter 1 for more notes. Comments very welcome at Nial_Thorne@hotmail.com
Monday morning; and I would get my mentor on Thursday. I joined again with Hussein, David and Wajdi, enjoying their enthusiasm and happiness. It dismayed me to think that I had no idea when I’d meet them again.
“I won’t see you till after your indenture now,” said Max. “Your directions from Tom Baxter are for you to phone him as soon as you know who your mentor is. His number’s in your phone. Understand? No one countermands that order.”
“Okay.”
“Come here, Jack,” he said, and hugged me fiercely. “Good luck. Everyone’s rooting for you. I love you so much, kid.”
Carrie hugged me too. I walked to the strip with the feeling that there were actually people who cared about me.
Tony and Fred Roberts and his team were waiting for me. The ramchopper took off, and once again I was flung into the frantic routine of the Joining. There were three schools that day, and another two on Tuesday, and each of them was difficult in its own way.
Finally, in the middle of the afternoon, we were back in Chedley. Our ramchopper came down at the TerrAd camp outside the town. It was a grey, miserable day as we carried our bags and boxes to the waiting minibus.
“Nice to be back, Fred?” I said.
“Like fuck. I always hated this place. Too many crazies of the very worst kind. Er, if you’ll excuse me.”
“I agree,” I said. “It’s nice that my family’s moving. Trouble is, Fred, my mentor will probably be here. So probably I’ll have to spend most of the time here, and only get down to Parford at weekends if I’m lucky.”
Tony was passing round coffee.
“Yeah, well, we’ll be there, wherever you are,” said Fred.
“I appreciate it so much, Fred.”
“No problems, Jack,” he said. “We had to look after a minister in the old government once. He was a shit. Gold-plated, mind you, but inside, pure shit, know what I mean?”
“Jack’s too pure in heart,” said Tony, “but I understand exactly, Fred.”
I laughed. And then, queasily, we were off to Chedley High.
Standing by the entrance were Neal and my uncle Alan. It was only five days since I’d seen them, but it was a tumultuous meeting. Neal and I gripped each other, and my uncle, to my surprise, picked me up and swung me round and round, screaming.
The place seemed much the same, apart from a new board at the front.
Chedley High School
All these things he will share with me.
“Jack?” said Fred. “No embarrassment, please, or I’ll tell the general.”
“The general, hell,” said Neal. “How about me? To see that there is just—just like icecream in summer!”
Obviously, all the kids already had their Standard Clothes and their Golden Circles, so this was going to be a bit different. And some of them, like me, would be getting their mentors two days later. Mr Andrews was officially head now, and he greeted us warmly.
“You look fine, Jack. You too, Neal. Could you introduce us?”
I did the introductions, and explained that Fred and one of his men would have to accompany me all the time, which he seemed to accept. Then I asked him to assemble just seven bright kids, one from each year, in the main hall. From my year, I asked for Dezzy.
We did two Joinings, Neal with the three younger ones and me with the four older. Everyone knew what was going on, so it wasn’t hard to explain. Then I called for another eight, and joined them, and so on. In the end we had the entire school there, as usual, but this time I spoke to them before the final recitation. It occurred to me that this could be my last Joining, and I had to make it count.
“No one has been controlled children as long as we have,” I started. “We were the first: the first with Standard Clothing and the first with the Golden Circle. More than anyone, we know what it’s about. That why I know you’ll understand me, when I say that I want to talk about spooky feelings.
“I’ve had them. Neal has had them too. I’ve spoken with some of the people here, and they have had some of the feelings that I have too. I’ll say them, and you shout if you’ve felt this way.”
And as I listed them, people yelled out “Yeah!” after every one.
“That things are out of your control.
“That the control through the Circle seems to weigh down on you from above.
“That because you know the Circle is checking on you, you feel as if someone’s looking over your shoulder all the time, even at the most private moments.
“You can’t help listening for the ticking at night and holding your breath for the next tick.
“You imagine that the Circle might suddenly tighten round your neck and strangle you, or do something else to you without warning, and you sit there, waiting for it to happen.
“That sometimes the Circle seems incredibly heavy, or painfully hot.
“Sometimes you have an urge to grab the Circle and smash it or pull it off yourself.
“Sometimes you find yourself gripping the Circle and crying.
“Sometimes it’s difficult to concentrate on anything except the thought of the Circle and what it means.
“No one seems to understand the feelings you have.”
By now, the atmosphere was extraodinary: I could tell that anger and tears were both only just below the surface.
“The first thing I want you to know is, that these spooky feelings are not unusual. Most people have some of them. Sometimes they’re strong, sometimes they fade away. And what are they? They are the loss of freedom. They are what being controlled feels like, and that’s that.
“So, do we just have to put up with it?”
They were listening. They were listening hard; this affected every one of them.
“Not quite. There are things that you can do. The first is to recite the Joining. Not by yourself, although that helps sometimes, but with a friend, or two or three, just the way we did it today. Sit down, on the floor if you like, that’s what I do, make a private space the way we did, and recite it together. And think, think why we are doing this, think of how the important the task is. Think of how people respect you for what you’re doing, and feel proud of it, proud of the sacrifices we are making for everyone, even for all those grownups who don’t seem to care much. So if you start spooking, just ask your friends to join for a bit. Just say, ‘I’m spooking, man, give me some time.’ They’ll know what you mean. And if someone says it to you, you help them.
“Another thing: just talk. Talk to your friends, or just go to another controlled kid, say you’re spooking and you need to talk. If both of you feel comfortable with it, hug. It helps to be hugged by another controlled kid.
“And keep busy. Don’t moon around and let the spooky feelings get to you. Get up and do something. Play sport. Read. Join a club. Form a club. Play games. Play music. Help your parents in the garden. Anything.
“And keep this stuff to controlled kids. There’s no point talking about it to grownups; I’ve tried and tried, but they simply can’t understand. Some of them will be sympathetic, some will simply deny that you’re feeling any such thing. Go to your brothers and sisters who’ve taken up the task. That doesn’t mean you can’t get support from grownups. Of course you can, from your parents or whoever looks after you. Tell them you’re feeling low, or you could do with a cuddle, or you’d like something to do to keep busy. Some of them may understand a bit that being a controlled kid sometimes gets you down, but skip trying to explain the spooky feelings.
“Some of us, like me, are getting mentors on Thursday, because this school is the pioneer as usual! I don’t know who my mentor will be, and I expect most people are the same. That is scary for sure. Maybe you heard me talking about that on the TV last week, and about the silence control. But I think we also need to think that most of the mentors will actually not be freaks or weirdos, let alone axe-murderers. Most of them will be nice people who want to help someone. Most of them won’t use the controls viciously, and if they do, you can complain. Come straight here, and complain to Mr Andrews, who’s one of the selectors. We’ve been promised, again and again, that we will be protected. I know the people who made that promise. They are good people, and I trust them. Let’s take them at their word.
“But let’s not sidestep this. We are controlled children, and the mentors are part of that control. It’s not bad. It’s good. It may be difficult, and scary, but it’s still good. And this is a good thing we’re doing, something we’ll be proud of for ever.
“Okay. Now let’s show these guys the Joining. Let’s recite it, and make sure they hear it. C’mon!”
We recited it, and it was big. It was very big. And after that, I met the pyramid points and Mr Andrews, and Tony and I helped them to plan Chedley High’s neighbourhood team, just as we had done for all the other schools we had been to.
“Well!” said Mr Andrews, as we broke up. “Are you sure you’re actually Jack Marchmont? That mousey kid who sat at the back and never spoke to anyone, and read books about politics in breaktimes?”
“Have I changed that much?”
He laughed.
After that, we walked home through the twilight.
“I was ashamed,” said my uncle.
“Eh? What for?” I said.
“When you recited that list of symptoms, and all those kids said they had the same. And yet everyone just tells you to get over it.”
“I’ve given up worrying about that. After that discussion in the hotel last week, I just said: sod it, we’ll look after ourselves. We had to invent the Joining ourselves, and work out what to do with the bad feelings, how to get beyond them. We’ve been saying this to all the kids for the last ten days, wherever we go, and the neighbourhood teams are carrying it out to all the other schools. We can handle this, uncle, it’s okay. It’s just part of the task.”
“There’s the TV lorry,” said my uncle, as we entered the square. “Let’s get that over with and then we can relax for the evening.”
It was Paul Oxley again, with Don Dalrymple producing. I felt easy with these two, and we got things set up quickly.
“Anything off-limits?” said Paul.
“Can’t think at the moment,” I said. “Oh, yes: nothing about Neal and his possible mentor. And no actual addresses; I’m under death-threat alert.”
“Okay. All ready?” called Don. “Cue Paul.”
“I’ve been here before, but things have changed since then. The Jack Marchmont I’ll be talking to today is the author of Request to My Selectors, the organiser of the Joining the Future phenomenon, a boy who somehow seems to combine high-level and intimate contact with the government, with being its most trenchant and up-front critic so far. And yet, on Thursday, just like any other controlled child, he will get a mentor.
“Jack, how do you feel about this?”
“Mixed feelings, Paul. I wrote the Request, so obviously I’m a supporter of the idea of the mentor, actually a keen supporter. But like many children, I’ve no idea who my mentor will be. There’s no denying that it’s scary.”
“Last Monday, you were fairly withering about the silence control and the possibility that it might be misused by abusers.”
“Actually, it wasn’t abusive people that worried me so much,” I said. “It’s more—well, think of all the people you know. How many of those would you want to have that kind of control over you—for the next six years, in my case? Okay, there’re a few. I think everyone knows a few really good and wonderful people. After that, there are some more you could put up with. And after that, there are people you dread having too much to do with—not because they’re abusive, but because they’re strange, worrying, weird, they have peculiar ideas about all sorts of things. They’re okay people at a distance. But a mentor is not at a distance. A mentor is right up close, and for a lot of the time.”
“I see what you mean. Won’t the vetting procedure rule these people out?”
“One person’s meat is another’s poison,” I said. “I’m sure the vetting will most of the abusers, although there are sure to be mistakes. But I can’t expect them to exclude people just because Jack Marchmont doesn’t like them or because he thinks they’re weird. So I could end up with someone like that. People tell me that, well, I should make the effort, and I will. I promise I will. But you can’t stop me worrying.”
“When we last met,” said Paul, “I asked you if you had a special connection to a particular person, and you said no. Can you add anything to that now?”
“Oh, how tactful, Paul! I don’t mind saying this, because it’s pretty widely known. For a short while I was very close to Captain Ewan Hart, who’s an officer in the TerrAd here at Chedley, and also works for the central government. We met here, and got close. For a while the plan was for us to nominate each other for the mentor selection, which, as you know, Paul, would make it very likely that we’d be selected for each other. However, in the end Ewan said he’d rather we didn’t do that.”
“But last time, you said there was no special connection between you.”
“There wasn’t,” I said. “You interviewed me the day after it ended.”
“I see. But that day you also recorded the Request. Is that why you were weeping?”
“I’ll pass on that.”
“The Request was written in response to Captain Hart breaking off with you?”
“Either you nominate someone,” I said, “or you say what kind of mentor you want. I couldn’t nominate, so...”
“You wrote the Request. Bad for you, good for everyone else.”
“Nice of you to say so. But it could be good for me too. How can I tell? I don’t know who I’ll get.”
“I suppose you could get Captain Hart after all,” he said.
I laughed nervously.
“Unlikely. All told about a thousand people put in to be mentors here in Chedley. In any case, to be hitched up with someone who doesn’t want you could be uncomfortable. No, I think I can skip that possibility.”
“I asked at the school who was your mentor. They said the decisions are sealed till tomorrow and even the selectors couldn’t get at them!”
“The procedures are pretty strict, I think,” I said.
“Tell us about this Joining the Future business, which we saw on TV last week. Max Margrave said you devised it to help his children.”
“Yes, I did to start with,” I said. “But people from the Children’s and Public Education ministries helped to draw up the final scheme. It wasn’t just me.”
“But you wrote the text.”
“Yes. The idea is it comes from a controlled child—that’s me—and is passed from child to child. Being a controlled child is something to be proud of, I’ve said this several times, and that’s something I want to pass along to everyone else, and to get us to support each other.”
“It places a lot of emphasis on not being afraid,” he said. “Do you think that some children get afraid of all this?”
“Of course. They’re children. What the rest of us need to do is to help them along to fight the fear and get rid of it. That’s what we’re trying to do: to stop the fear, to accept our role, to be proud of what we’re achieving.”
“General Baxter has said that he was present when you invented it.”
“Yes, he was,” I said.
“According to one informant, you made a foolish spectacle of yourself and insulted a senior official.”
“Er, well, naturally I take the view that I didn’t.”
“Do you have anything to add to that?”
“Not really,” I said. “It was a very nice evening, and I was honoured to be invited.”
“Do you have any comments on Mr Douglas Parton-Gray?”
“No.”
I could see Paul grinning at me from out of shot, and I suppressed an urge to give him the finger.
“So, what are your plans after the indenture?” he said.
“Well, Paul, that depends on my mentor. The rules are that I spend the next month with him, without contacting my parents—well, my uncle and aunt in my case.”
“What happens if your mentor prohibits you from working with the government?”
“Then I don’t do it,” I said.
“Could the government overrule your mentor?”
“I’ve no idea what the legal position is, or even if there is one as yet. However, the government itself has said again and again how important it thinks mentors are.”
“Will they want you to continue?” he said.
“I couldn’t say.”
“What’s your opinion of Max Margrave? You were pretty scathing about him last week.”
“No, I wasn’t, Paul. I disagreed with some things he said and I said I was very doubtful about some of the things he decided. That’s completely different from being scathing about him. In fact Max has been a very good friend to me and I like him a lot. I feel privileged to know him. He’s a great revolutionary leader and a kind and humane person.”
“What do think of General Baxter?” he said.
“I don’t know him as well as Max. But I’ve met him twice now, and each time I was impressed by the way he understood and controlled all the things he had to deal with, and by how polite and careful he is with everybody. He’s been very kind to me personally, and I’m very grateful.”
“And Captain Hart?”
“At this point I don’t feel I know him well enough to comment.”
“Thank you, Jack. And very good luck on Thursday.”
“Thanks, Paul. It’s been a pleasure.”
“He was pretty aggressive,” said Tony, once the TV crew had gone.
“I’ve had worse,” I said. “He wasn’t difficult.”
“You were quite forthcoming about Ewan this time,” said my uncle. “I was surprised.”
“I may not have a chance to comment on it in the future if my mentor wants me to stop this stuff. So I wanted to get something fairly bland on the record. All I said was, we had a thing, it came to an end. That’s it. If Ewan wants to say something else, my story is at least there.”