Minea Jennings: an average woman.. under her circumstances.
When her world sinks into an endless and inescapable winter, she is forced to
see the actual meaning of the word "Apocalypse." This woman is about to
realize that everything is not as it seems, especially if she doesn't
open her eyes.
Grandma Jean shivered with icy dread as her sky-blue eyes stared outside of
the frost-bitten window, which was partially non-existent on the side that was being buried in snow. Our world was one, huge snowglobe, which God wouldn't stop shaking.
She moved slowly, her brittle bones visible through her thin skin, and she sat
down next to me on my bed. She felt my head and said, "You're fever is still very high, child."
I coughed and stared into the black, empty fireplace. I reminisced about Christmas and
holidays past, celebrated with blazing hot fires and spice-filled air.
About warmth I would give anything to have back.
My grandma was a small woman, but she was practically the epitome of the
word "Stoic." She marched into the snow every morning to search high and low for
what little food the winter hasn't stripped from our already barren earth. She stood in line
at the shelter each sunday, and she never complained when all the government has to offer
our civilization is canned beans and hard bread. She laid flowers on the frozen children
who had failed to see morning.
I hope they've found warmth.
My grandma's fingers combed gently and smoothly through my long blond hair,
and she hummed against the howl of the constant, murderous blizzard outside. My eyes
traced the wrinkles that has time sewn into her porcelain skin. She is all I have left.
Lips blue and thin, she still smiles. Even when we lost my family to the winter that
swallowed our earth whole and spit us out. This world hasn't seen a season other than
winter in almost three years.
I have been sick for a week and a half now, my infected and swollen wound on my leg
still stung from when I hurt it trying to climb the side of a mountain to gather dry firewood.
All of the days seemed like they were blurring together. Our clock was one big ball of ice.
But lets face it: I'm not going to get any better. I knew it, and even though she
YOU ARE READING
The Dreamer of Destruction.
Science Fiction"Our world is one, huge snowglobe, which God wouldn't stop shaking." When Minea's world sinks into an endless and inescapable winter, she is forced to see the actual meaning of the word "Apocalypse." This woman is about to realize that everything...