main menu | youngsters categories | authors | new stories | search | links | settings | author tools |
QUENCH (standard:science fiction, 997 words) | |||
Author: Gavin J. Carr | Added: Feb 04 2005 | Views/Reads: 3459/2255 | Story vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
They could do nothing against the invaders. They had appeared unexpectedly: a fleet of starships one hundred and fifty strong, souls as frigid and empty as the void from which they had come. | |||
Click here to read the first 75 lines of the story Three men: Wilburg, a bricklayer before the war; Enrichson, a history teacher; and himself - John Richards. And what qualified him to lead this motley group? Three years in the army when he was eighteen. Three years as a Steward in the officers' mess followed by twenty as a drifter. Absurd. The whole thing - simply absurd. He stopped and straightened. Now that the laughter had passed he felt empty and strangely depressed. How could they surrender when the invaders didn't understand the concept? They were alien; completely different. In a year of fighting he still didn't know what they wanted or why they came. Was it something they had done? reflected Richards. Some inconsequential thing that no human would ever think of, but had provoked outrage in the invaders? Or was it just sheer aggression; the mindless need to destroy what was different? He would never know. This was the end; he could feel it in his blood; nerve endings singing to the tune of impending death. Enrichson continued punching the keyboard. ‘If I can get through to the satellite then we can get a visual of the ship.' ‘What good will it do?' said Wilburg. ‘We can only watch. We can't stop it.' ‘Then what's the harm?' said Enrichson. His face was crimson with anger, his glasses slipping from his nose, greased by sweat. ‘Not knowing what's happening. That's the worst bit,' he shouted. ‘I can cope with all the...crap they throw at us. I just have to know it's coming.' The screen flickered and they were looking at space. The picture was grainy, but they could still make out the gargantuan form of the starship moving away from them. The ship - by far the largest they had seen - was cone shaped. There were no markings, just an expanse of gunmetal grey that appeared to stretch on forever. As they watched, the widest part of the cone began to change; opening like the jaws of some predatory creature. ‘How can it be possible?' Enrichson whispered, awestruck. ‘Something that big...The gravitational pull should be enormous!' ‘Look it's doing something,' said Wilburg. The ship's jaws had extended fully now. The vessel began to manoeuvre portside, heading towards the sun. Richards suddenly realised what he was witnessing. Of all the horrors the war had produced this was surely the worst. How could they? He thought. Not just the death of us, but the death of everything. They were really going to do it! The vessel had completed its turn and inched forward, swallowing, quenching the sun. The whole thing was done as easily as a man snuffing out a candle flame. In the bunker, Richard's laughter echoed off the concrete. Outside, the birds were screaming. END Tweet
Authors appreciate feedback! Please write to the authors to tell them what you liked or didn't like about the story! |
Gavin J. Carr has 22 active stories on this site. Profile for Gavin J. Carr, incl. all stories Email: gjc183@hotmail.com |