3rd Person POVIt was 7:30 in the morning, and Jordyn, Mary, David, and Jaden were walking towards school when suddenly a large sound struck. "It's just a sonic boom." They thought. Until they looked up.
There was something up in the sky. Something tat seemed, like a rock. It glowed a bright orange, engulfed by flames. Hundreds of thousands of feet above, the "rock" looked small, about the size of a ping pong ball. And it was coming towards the ground.
"If we're able to see it when it's that far away'" David said, not wanting to finish his sentence.
"We have to find shelter from whatever that is." Jordyn said as she frantically looked in the vicinity. "There" she said as she pointed towards a tornado cellar.
They saw the cellar, and ran. It was good they were all athletic. Once they reached the cellar, Jaden pulled it open, waiting for everyone to get in before going himself. Even though there was no one inside, the space was small, and the four had to sit close together.
They waited for about ten minutes, until they heard screams, and a loud sound, louder than the "sonic boom" from earlier.
As each of them looked at one another, Jordyn stood up, and put her hand on the cellar. Reluctantly, she opened the door, to reveal a horrible sight. Seeing their friend stop at what she had seen, the kids stood up and went out, to see what she had seen.
All the street lights, the houses, everything was just, gone. It looked like the pictures they show after a massive disaster, but in real life. The worst part, there was no one to be seen.
A few streets down, they could see this giant hill, one that wasn't there before. This hill was the asteroid, but it glowed an eerie green. Right as they were about to see what had happened, a military truck pulled up, with a man telling the kids to get in. They looked at each to see if it was a good idea, and they got in, the uncertainty of what happened ringing in their heads.
YOU ARE READING
The Titans
Teen FictionFeel Free To Comment or Message Me any suggestions or opinions on the book. Thanks! Where it once used to burst with sounds of life, now remained quiet, reassuring them that there was no one, that everyone was gone. They were the last kids on the ea...