short story one
A ravaged city whose roads were obscured, and in some cases, blocked off from collapsed buildings slept soundlessly through the night. This city had collapsed months ago from a war that stretched across the entire continent- some have said it was a global war. The only thing that hindered the war escalation was starvation, and both sides being short on supplies. The food and weapon shortage was due, very simply, to the vastness of the war, for which this particular city was a microcosm. The pain experienced on all sides- extreme starvation and lack of supplies and shelter- eventually lessened the pain of opposition. One pain lessened another. Nobody knows the stimulus for such a war, as there have been more religious answers than scientific, more songs and poems than theories. Some have said God caused it, others have said God allowed it. And then, there were those few who said that they did it. Whatever the people’s speculations, they have remained such at least for the time being. The survivors’ top priority was not necessarily to know why the war happened, but how to live through it. They slept in buildings which were remnants of the war’s active hatred, dominated by soot and brokenness. They were lucky, however, to find a building that wasn’t completely leveled to the ground.
On the ground were pieces of blackened concrete, cruel fragments of steal beams and twisted rebar, and an occasional corpse which was just as black and marred as the structures. The Survivors also could not travel far, for a haze blotted out vision of more than three meters, thus compounding the possibility of getting lost. The haze also brought a stench that wreaked of sulphur and death, which etched away at their sanity.
However massive this war was, there was a few, a mere handful, who led the rest. One of these few was a sixteen year old boy by the name of Aurelan. His mother and father had both died when he was very young, which was twelve years before the war. His uncle took care of him in this city, though he died in his office from a suicide bomber during the war. Aurelan was struck with the deepest sadness and depression. At the time, he felt like his uncle was all he had left. But through the war he met three others, and that quickly became his family. Together, they would survive this beast.
They lived off the remaining food in supermarkets, who also brought food back to the other survivors. They felt it a calling to, if just for a few hours, sustain others‘ lives. Aurelan could not see another person die. It would be too much for him to take.
On one particular day, something quite different happened. Something that nobody had foreseen, something that broke all prior arrangements, plans, and objectives. It was something extraordinary.
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The early morning light illuminated the blanket of haze, making it a toxic green in color, and somehow making the stench of death worse. It was as if the heat put the death-blanket at liberty, spreading the smell. Aurelan put a bony hand over his head, blocking out the dimmed brightness. Him and his friends had gotten so used to things being dark that even the slightest bit of light hurt their eyes to look at. Aurelan rolled over away from the light with an irritated groan. Somebody stood up, a rustle of clothing, dust being brushed off. Aurelan cracked an eye. It was Toro, his tall gaunt figure looking like that of a ghost in the haze.
Aurelan laughed a little, and shading his eyes from the brightness, “ Early start?”
Toro jumped, “Heh…you scared me.” He turned, “ Yea…I..Im starving.”
“Me too brother.”
“Coming with?”
Aurelan groaned and rolled back on his back, “Yea, just give me a sec. Can you wake Stacy and Jim?”
“Yep, where did you see them last?”
Aurelan pointed up to a pile of rubble just a few feet behind him.
“Ok um, ill wake them.”
Aurelan laughed, “Not what your thinking man.”
Toro smiled, and as he disappeared in the haze climbing up the pile of rubble, said “Ok, if you say so.”
Aurelan was left seemingly alone, encapsulated by the green haze. He took hold of a large piece of concrete and hoisted himself from the ground, feeling groggy and weak from hunger. He had spent three months living like this. All around him, dust, haze, rotting corpses, broken buildings. The chaos of the war left nothing untouched. Aurelan wondered how much longer the four of them would be able to survive.
He then heard faint voices which the haze made into dull murmurs from its thickness. Not much later, the three of them returned, Toro leading them.
Aurelan addressed all three, “ Well, who’s hungry?”
Jim jumped out at (and nearly fell from exhaustion) Aurelan and exclaimed, “I am!”
“Stacy what about you?”
She gave a glum look
“That’s an answer enough…Toro, you ready?”
“yep.”
“Good, then lets go find ourselves breakfast. Also remember to take back enough to feed five other survivors. These people they’re just as starved as we are, if not more.”
They made their way down into the road, weaving in between the rubble and sharp metal objects. They would have set markers up to help guide them to and fro from the supermarket, but they were afraid they would be followed. They did not want another group to use the markers to take away the food that Aurelan and his friends found. They had to use piles of rubble and buildings as landmarks, an effective improvisation.
Nobody spoke as they walked through the toxic mist, and they stepped silently, so as to make as little noise as possible. They didn’t want to be tracked, or noticed. Once the other survivors found the location of the supermarket, its food would be gone in an hour, and the four would have to find another place to find food.
Approximately twenty minutes later, a dirty supermarket sign broke through the haze, and the contours of the building became recognizable.
“Step in silently” Whispered Aurelan
Stacy walked in first, followed by Toro, then Jim, and finally Aurelan, who looked around outside the door for any sign being watched.
The inside of the supermarket was filthy, covered in ash and dust, with a scent that was even worse than the haze outside. However, it was their only bet. Besides, the four were only after the bagged and canned goods, the ones sealed away from the elements. Jim found himself in the chip aisle of the supermarket, while Stacy and Aurelan checked the canned fruit. Aurelan wasn’t certain where Toro had gone but the last he saw him was next to the canned beans.
Aurelan grabbed a can of pineapple off the shelves and cleaned the dust from it with his shirt. He then walked over to a corner of the shelving unit and started banging the can against it. Toro walked next to him with a mouth full of beans, and said, “I think I’ve told you before…they have can openers for that”.
Stacy and Aurelan both laughed. “That you have. Do you have one on you?”
Toro grabbed another handful of beans before reaching into his pocket and saying, “Sure enough. Here you go pal.”
“Thanks”
Aurelan took the can opener, and pressed it into the aluminum and turned the crank until the lid separated from the rest with ease. Stacy walked up behind him with a can of fruit salad, “Can I see that after you?”
“Only if you remind me to use that next time instead of the corner of an aisle. “
Stacy laughed. Aurelan handed her the can opener, then heard footsteps coming from another aisle. Jim walked towards them all with three bags of chips in his hands.
Toro mumbled through a mouthful of beans, “You really intend to eat all of that?”
“You kidding me? Of course I will. Im starving.” Jim opened up a bag and dove in.
Aurelan suddenly heard a light thrumming noise from outside. At first he dismissed it as his own food depraved mind playing tricks on him, but as it got louder… he couldn’t ignore it.
He turned to the others, who were too busy talking and eating. “Guys do you hear that?”
“Hear what?”, Toro said, clearing his mouth of the beans
Jim gave him a puzzled look.
“You guys stay here ill be right back.” A couple of “ok’s” sounded behind him as he walked towards the humming noise.
He slowly emerged from the dirty supermarket, first checking the buildings outside for any sort of device that could be making the noise. His eyes quickly went from building to building, pile of rubble to pile of rubble. Then, in a moment that sent shivers down his spine, his eyes fixed on the misty sky. A luminescent object stood hovering, shining blue over the thick green of the air. Then suddenly the object disappeared, then reappeared on the ground in the form of a human. The humming stopped, and the form started walking towards him, its blue radiance piercing the grays and the distasteful greens. It opened its arms, and a distinct voice cut through his Aurelan’s shock, “You can put that can of fruit down, the starvation is no more.” The figure’s mouth did not move. Aurelan stood still shocked. Moments passed, then suddenly a dozen questions came pouring out from him, all the while the fear of dying at that very moment from this thing dominated his mind.
“I…im…im sorry, but who are you?”
The radiant blue figure laughed without opening his mouth, “Im God.”
He could not speak…he was dumbstruck.
A scream sounded from behind him. It was Stacy. Aurelan walked swiftly over to her saying, “Look I think its ok…its ok.. I don’t know what the hell is happening either…just, uh…” Toro and Jim followed her, eyes going wide and legs buckling.
The figure’s head turned toward Aurelan, “Tell your friends im here to save them. It might spare them some of the fear. I would tell them myself but I can only communicate this way with you.”
“Why me?” asked Aurelan out loud.
“Your questions will be answered….eventually.. but for now, I think your friends could use some assurance.” In all actuality, Aurelan didn’t even know if he could trust this…this being… at this point, but he did so anyway.
“Guys…look, he says he is here to help us…He..” Aurelan looked back at the radiant blue form, “He says he’s God.”
Jim struggled to lift himself up from the ground, “God? H…How?” After a few moments of studying the being, Jim spoke again, “Ok, so he’s God.
Toro and Stacy walked slowly up to it, shielding their eyes slightly from the being’s brightness. It opened its grand, long arms, “Tell your friends im here for them, im here for all of you. And in just moments, this world will become a utopia and you and your friends will never go hungry again.” Aurelen shed a bitter tear, on the verge of believing, but not wanting to believe. Aurelan told his friends what he had said.
Toro dropped on his knees before its blue, God-like radiance. The being took a knee and embraced him”. Tell this one his two younger brothers are safe in my arms..” Two younger brothers? Aurelan had no idea he ever had two brothers. “Hey… Toro he says your brothers are safe with him. And that you shouldn’t worry.” Toro broke down in tears. Stacy stood next to it, studying it,…calculating…trying hard, as it could be seen on her face, not to lose control.
“Enough crying on ash and dust, I would rather see my people crying tears of joy on plush grass under the shade of great oaks. Aurelan are you ready?”
“I am…so many have been affected by this war…so many have suffered”
“Their suffering and your suffering will be no more”
The being levitated from the ground then ripped the top section from the bottom part in a discordant noise of steel tearing under force. Once it was completely off, he levitated higher in the air with it before he tossed it away from the four. It disappeared into the blanket of haze. God’s light grew brighter than it ever had been, and in a great voice, one that silenced every single noise in the back of Aurelen’s head, roared out at the skies. Aurelan, being the only one that could hear it, cringed from the being‘s voice. The other’s reacted as if they heard nothing at all.
Instantly, the thick green blanket above the skies peeled back, revealing the authentic blue sky they had missed so much. The stench was replaced with the smell of flowers. The buildings disappeared completely. Green grasses covered the ground, and trees replaced the piles of rubble. Never once before had Aurelan been bombarded with so much emotion at one time in his life. He was shocked, overjoyed, afraid to believe, and questioning all at the same time. However, as he looked across the newly formed horizon, he could not help but feel that his great being changed worlds on a regular basis, and if that he was willing to help them, he was trustworthy.
A voice penetrated Aurelan’s mind. “This is not a free ride out… you still have a duty, and there is a point to all of this. I want the beginnings of my new army as comfortable as they can be. Though for the time being, recover.”
And God blinked out of existence, leaving the four shocked beyond all thinkable measure.