I had been sitting at my desk when it happened. When the sky split open like a fissure and reigned down monsters we thought only lived in nightmares or existed in fairy tales. I had been young, working two jobs to support my nine-year-old son, battling with my ex while trying to appear like my life wasn't falling to pieces.
It seemed like a lifetime ago. My everyday problems back then paling in comparison to what life comprised of now.
Sometimes, I found my mind wondering back to those simpler times when the routine of wake up, school run, work, school pickup, eat, sleep, repeat felt almost enticing. A time when I didn't have to have one eye open while I slept.
They called it the fall. The end to our way of life. The fall of humanity. The slaughter of mankind.
No movie, book or computer game could prepare us for the savage slaughter on day one, or the struggles continuing every day after.
We were too arrogant as a species, thinking we could survive anything. We learnt in a day how very wrong, and how very stupid, we humans were. For all our doomsday preppers and apocalyptic genres, you couldn't prepare for something that happens within minutes.
Now, almost four years later I sat atop a half broken building, surveying the dead and decaying city below, watching a couple of survivors race across the street - one wounded and both low on ammo. I had been tracking them for a while, trying to see whether they were part of a larger group, and how dangerous they may be.
This had meant to be a simple scouting mission. An easy run which should of had me back home before nightfall. The routine no different from normal. However, my gut instincts indicated otherwise the moment I left the tower. A pack of ferals were hunting the pair, their razor-sharp claws covered in a toxic poison which slowly paralysed the victim. If the wounded didn't get the antidote soon, the other survivors best chance would be to leave him behind.
A cruel thought, but not uncommon.
It wasn't unusual to see kind of behaviour anymore. Humans had an overriding sense of self-preservation which affected even the most kind-hearted person when in the face of death.
I had three choices; one, I could intervene and help save both men, the wounded posing a danger as he could slow me down before we reached safety. Two, I could save the healthy man and use the wounded as a distraction. Or three, I simply turn away and search the area on my own. If they were part of a larger group, they wouldn't be hard to find.
The bloodcurdling cry of the Ferals drifted from downwind, smelling the fear rolling off the two men. The hunt coming to an end, victory tasting sweet. The beasts were too close to bother with a rescue now, one of our rules in the tower being never risk your life so save another if it can be avoided. Heroes die quicker than survivors, and we were too low on survivors.
I turned to leave when one of the men cried out, his voice gluing me to the spot. I knew his voice. It had been more than three years ago, just after the world had ended. It couldn't be. He couldn't have survived this long on his own, could he?
I crept back to the edge, keeping low to not be seen and drew out my gun. I quickly screwed on the silencer, knowing my shots needed to be close, but guarenteeing the sound would not draw any unnecessary attention. I attempted to focus on the survivors, needing to see his face to be sure it was him, but the hat and mask covering his face proving difficult to be sure. I cursed under my breath.
The building at the end of the street exploded, debris reigning down as the Ferals charged the men, four in total. A tracking pack, but there would be many more on the way. The men had reached an empty parking lot, the wounded falling to the ground and pulling out his gun while the other resumed a defensive stance. I could taste their fear and defeat; they knew they were about to die.
YOU ARE READING
When Fate And Worlds Collide
FantasyMonsters? Check Werewolves? Check Vampires? Check Impending doom and annihilation of the human race? Double check For Aiyanna, her world changed the day of the fall, when the monsters of our nightmares no longer lurked in the dark and now hunted the...