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A Letter (standard:adventure, 1223 words) | |||
Author: Jughead | Added: May 12 2002 | Views/Reads: 3483/2277 | Story vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
A letter which may never reach the recipient | |||
Dear Iris, Hope pushes me to grab a piece of dirty paper as well as a pen that has almost run out of ink to write this letter to you. Even though you may not get this, I am positive that somebody else will. I just want to share my traumatic experience to someone who will listen, because I am lonely here. Everybody has died and I am trying my very best to survive. I do not know whether I will end up just like the people around me. However, I will hand everything to God, because I know that He has made some good plans for me. Do you still remember out promise about taking a leave from work and having a vacation to a ‘special' place like Sahara Desert? Well, I have almost fulfilled my wish, but not in a happy-holiday mood. Here I am, in an unknown desert, with neither oasis nor any plant beyond my sight. I am suffering from the horrible hear of sun in the day and the extreme cold at night, but deep down inside, I feel cold. A sea of corpses lies ahead of me. All are in miserable state and some have decayed. A sight of them will haunt me to the incident three days ago, which had taken people's lives, properties and love. The remains of Boeing 212 Boulevard Airbus are so badly burnt until I cannot tell whether it used to be carrying over one hundred and fifty passengers on board. Why didn't I listen to your advice to take the next flight? Why must I be the only survivor? There are no answers to my questions above, except a fact that is left on my mind up till now—it is too late to regret what has happened. I have to face the reality and go through all the obstacles before getting back to my wonderful normal life. How everything had started. All I can recall now is that we had a nice journey on board until the plane jerked a little about five hours after it had dived the sky. As usual, the chief stewardess announced through the speaker that seat belts must be fastened and that nobody should get out of the seats before the weather got better. I did not pay much attention to the announcement, as I was tired out of the long flight hours. Out of a sudden, the airbus jerked to the right and began to tilt down in full speed. The passengers panicked— the adults ran to the side doors of the plane with their life jackets on, but it was impossible to get out of the plane since there was no further instruction from the aircrew; the women and children were crying and shouting for help. It was a useless attempt since everybody on board was in danger; nobody was going to rescue them. I myself was still sitting on my seat, both hands clutched tightly and eyes shut forcefully. Cold sweat began to trail down on my neck. I spent the last few minutes of my life trying to imagine what would happen next, but I as too anxious to think of anything, even my family. Flame had entered the plane out of the blue, engulfing some passengers in the Business Class a few rows ahead of my seat. I knew that it would not be long before the plane exploded. A few minutes later, the airbus blasted. Screams could be heard everywhere. I did not know what happened next. I squinted my eyes after looking directly at the bright sun. Where am I? Is this the Heaven or the Hell? I could feel the pain all over my body. I turned my head to the right. It was a difficult attempt, but it did not matter just as long as I knew where I was and how my condition was then. A few metres away from me, a little girl in pink dress, was lying motionlessly on the ground. Her right arm was gone, but strangely her left hand was still holding a mini Teddy Bear tightly. Tears began to flow from my eyes, making their way to my chin. Usually, I would have wiped them away because they gave me some funny feelings. This time, I let them off. A little girl, not more than ten, brought smile and her only possession to her death, despite her lost right arm. I had survived, with aches all over my body, but no smile was shown on my face, only tears trailed down on my cheeks. What a shame! After learning the lesson of the day, I went into a deep sleep. I had a horrible nightmare—I had died on the same spot where I was, but my soul was still wondering around. I could see a group of rescue team walking towards my corpse. One of them felt my breath and shook his head towards his teammates in misery expression. The team began to move my body into a large black plastic bag. I had tried shouting at them that I had not died, but they seemed blind and deaf. I approached one of them and touched his shoulder, but he did not turn around and look at me. Before I realized that I was just a soul, I had wakened up. My breath came in fast and continuous pace, but I was glad that it was just a bad dream. There was no way that dream would come true. I must Click here to read the rest of this story (30 more lines)
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