AmyRoberts
Experienced
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- Dec 21, 2016
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"War of the Worlds"
Open to writers who are familiar with
"War of the Worlds"
from Epix.
PM the Hostess first!
Open to writers who are familiar with
"War of the Worlds"
from Epix.
PM the Hostess first!
Denver, Colorado:
Constance "Connie" Roberts had grown up joking that if extraterrestrial life was ever to come to Earth, she hoped it would happen in her lifetime. She'd never imagined that it would actually happen, though.
It was three days ago that the people of Earth had finally learned that they weren't alone in the universe. Astrophysicists working at a radio telescope array in the French Alps had discovered an alien signal coming from deep space.
It had at first been thought that the signal was an attempt to communicate with the people of Earth. It wasn't. By the time the Humans studying it realized that the signal was actually a scan of Earth -- the first step of an invasion -- it was simply too late to do anything to save the majority of the Human Race.
The signal or scan was followed by the arrival of thousands, even tens of thousands of objects crashing into the surface of Earth. The general public -- which was only peripherally informed of what was happening -- didn't know the objects were coming until they began striking the ground all about and within the largest of cities and towns. Most people initially thought the objects were meteors.
But the militaries of the world -- which had been tracking the objects for most of their day of arrival -- knew they weren't natural but were instead alien made. The objects both slowed in speed on their approach to the planet and then changed their courses, with the majority of them aimed at the largest of Earth's metropolitan areas.
Once they were on the ground, the objects were found to be perfectly spherical, two meter diameter metallic balls. They emitted a magnetic field that was anything but natural, and testing over the subsequent hours proved them to be made of 4 previously unidentified elements. Soon, a mysterious wave was detected coming from the balls, too. The spheres and their activity were beyond the knowledge of Earthly scientists.
There was from the very beginning, of course, fear that an alien invasion was underway. And 12 hours after the arrival of the first spheres, the first official warnings of an attack were broadcasted to the general public via -- what else -- Twitter. Dozens, hundreds, thousands, and then tens of thousands of Facebook and other social media platforms shared the message; the mainstream media caught the story and began reporting it.
A neuroscientist in London had found that the alien Wave was similar in effect to a series of experiments one of his colleagues had been performing, an experiment that caused catastrophic and deadly results in the brains of his primate test subjects.
The conclusion seemed obvious: the Alien Waves were designed to disrupt -- even cease -- the proper operation of brains ... of Human brains. The neuroscientist sent a warming to his son, a member of the British government, who himself sent out a Tweet of warning to the world: Hide!
All across the world, people who understood the details of subsequent warning messages scrambled to find a place to hide: underground, inside thick metal buildings or containers, underwater, anywhere that the Alien Waves might not reach them.
Few actually succeeded. No one was counting survivors, of course, but one day if anyone did, they might learn that less than 1% of the world's population made it to save, effective shelter.
One 26 year old in Colorado did. When she finally emerged cautiously from the old mine on her family's property outside of Denver, Connie gripped the butt of her treasured, antique Colt .45 in a trembling hand. She told the ranch's four permanent work hands to get to their families and -- if necessary -- bring them back here to the ranch's only presumed place of safety.
Only one had made it, though, Javier, who'd been fortunate in reaching and returning with his wife Maria and their three young children, Joseph, Julia, and Emilia. When the 5 of them exited the hole in the Earth, they found 8 others -- two ranch hands and their respective family members -- laying about the property between where they'd parked their cars at the bottom of the hill and the mine's entrance. They were, of course, dead. Connie hurried to them, checking them; each's eyes were wide open as they laid where they fell as their brain's simply shut off.
Connie looked about for her parents, John and Carla Roberts. They'd gone to town after the warning, thinking they would have time to both purchase end of the world supplies and get back with them. They hadn't. They were no where to be seen, unlike the hands who had died attempting to reach the mine.
Her two older brothers, William and James, were missing as well, but that wasn't a surprise. Both had been down south in Texas, buying new stock animals for the ranch. Cell service had ceased or been overwhelmed between the warning of the attack and the arrival of it, so Connie didn't know whether the brothers had gotten to safety or not.
She suddenly realized that -- with the exception of Javier, who of course wasn't family -- she was alone for the first time in her life. Even when she'd been away at University, Connie hadn't truly been alone. She'd been less than an hour from home and continued to see her family almost weekly, sometimes even more often than that as they would sometimes meet halfway between home and school for dinner or just a talk over Dunkin' Donuts coffee and hot chocolate.
"We need to take care of our friends, Javier," she told the hand. "We need to show them respect."
It had been just after 10am here in Colorado when the attack occurred; now, at almost 6pm -- and without the use of the heavy equipment which wouldn't start -- they began the laborious process of hand digging a mass grave for the 8 who had tried to reach safety but didn't. When they finished, both Connie and Javier spoke over the six headstones made of 1x6 inch boards that the pair cut and wrote names upon.
When they finished, they checked the various vehicles for operation and found that only the oldest of them -- a restored 1969 Ford pickup truck -- would start. Javier left his family behind with Connie as he went out to look for her parents and members of his extended family. As he was leaving, neither Connie nor Javier's wife, Julia, would know that they'd never see the man again.
"Let's get some food in us, shall we?" Connie asked Javier's children with a feigned tone of uplifting joy. They found the power out and -- presuming it would never return -- ate a good portion of what was inside the fridge. The freezer was raided of ice cream, and the two adult women mapped out a plan to use the propane barbeque and wood chip smoker to cook and dry the meat before it went bad.
"We'll be fine, Maria, trust me," Connie reassured the other, slightly older woman. "We have food, we have water, we have shelter, and we have fire. And we have guns if we need them, which -- hopefully -- we won't."
Connie hadn't been much of a movie goer so she hadn't seen many of the dizzying array of end-of-the-world horror movies or series. But she'd liked to read, and now she wished she hadn't read all those scary stories about how desperate and violent survivors became after tragic, worldwide events like what was now unfolding in real.
All they could do now was wait and see what came next.