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M. Banner - Desolation

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M. Banner Desolation
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The greatest solar event in history turned off the worlds power and destroyed much of its technology. The suns barrage continues today effectively bringing humanity back to a new Stone Age. This is a time of desolation, where every day is a desperate fight for survival. Food and water are disappearing, and many will kill to take these from you. On a beach in Mexico, a small town in Wyoming, and a rural ranch in Illinois, epic battles between good and evil will be fought. Meanwhile, a 150 year old secret may lead a lucky few to a place that holds the promise of a new future, unless the sun sets on humanity first. * * *

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M.L. Banner

DESOLATION

DESOLATION (n)

A state of complete emptiness or destruction.

Synonyms: bleakness, starkness, barrenness, sterility, isolation, & loneliness

Anguished misery or loneliness.

Synonyms: misery, sadness, unhappiness, despondency, sorrow, depression, & grief

Prologue

How our world ended10 Days After Event (A.E.)

In a matter of minutes, for most of us, the world changed from one of privileged ambivalence to one of daily survival of the fittest or the luckiest. A few of us even expected this apocalyptic replay. History treated the giant solar storm known as the Carrington Flare of 1859 as an unnoticeable blip, largely ignored on its lengthy timeline of misery: the earth lost only a few lives and most telegraph lines. History now bears witness to what is simply known as The Event, when ten days ago a similar sized solar storm changed everything. In an instant, the entire worlds technology was zapped out of existence. All our knowledge is but a fading memory, once stored in physical books, later transferred to servers and democratized for every person through the likes of Wikipedia, but now erased forever. Computers and other internet devices have been rendered as lifeless as the corpses that are piling up in every city. There is no power running to our homes, and likely will never be again in our lifetimes. Without power, we are cut off from life-giving water; hope for a few may bubble up from the grounds natural streams, but will probably shrivel up in time. All vehicles, except the rare antique coaxed into temporary service, are dead; transportation for those who survive in the coming days will be as it was for our earliest ancestors, on foot. Our global communications and instant access to information have been reduced to the distance our voices will carry through the airs random currents. The worlds losses have already been enormous; my fear is it will get worse.

The story that history will likely never fully remember is the rapid deterioration of the earths magnetosphere, our only defense from the suns invading army of solar storms. Like the Spartans who succumbed to the short spears and arrows of Xerxes Persian horde at Thermopylae, we too will be no match for the suns infinite volleys from her unending quiver. Solar flares are her arrows poison tip, assailing the earths dwindling inhabitants with ten times her normal radiation, bringing with it a slow extinction to all who draw breath. The shafts of each arrow are her coronal mass ejections of plasma and electromagnetic material that continue to produce electrical discharges to anything conductive, making even the seemingly benign deadly.

Yesterday, one of my captors was electrocuted simply by sticking his head into a metal trough filled with water. His herky-jerky death throes generated laughter from men who wear machismo and lust for murder like old clothes.

In spite of three generations of Thompsons prepping for the end, I wasnt fully prepared. This has put in jeopardy my future and that of my friends, Bill and Lisa King, and their kids. My heart breaks at the sadness they must feel upon realizing the permanence of their separation from their youngest daughter, Darla, or their only son, Danny. Assuming they are not already dead, realistically, there is too much distance and too much violence separating them in the Midwest from their parents and older sister, stuck in Rocky Point, Mexico during a family vacation. I am tortured daily by the King familys desolation and my inability to uphold a three-generation-old vow to protect them. How could I be so foolish to think the other cartels wouldnt find out I was dealing guns to El Gordos Ochoa cartel? El Gordos men abducted meI guess for my protectionand have treated me well, but I am still a prisoner here, indentured to fix and post-prep his ranch against the sun for as long as he wishes. But, the longer I am here, the more my prospects for continued survival, and those of the Kings, diminish.

The prospects for the rest of the world are bleaker. Unless the sun abates her war on us, our entire environment will completely change. Certainly, this is a world-wide calamity that will kill most of the worlds population within a generation.

But there is Cicada. Started almost 150 years ago by my great-grandfather, Russell Thompson, it may offer earth its only hope for survival, assuming it is able to endure the desolation of the collapsing world around it.

These are the new realities of our existence. The quicker we come to terms with them, the quicker we can focus on living or on dying.

Maxwell J. Thompson

Max put down his pen and grimly examined his hand-written pages. He folded them and put them in a small bag containing the only belongings he could call his own, in hopes of one day adding these pages to those already written in the leather-bound journal his great-grandfather started. He would have to get back to Rocky Point. Not just for his sake, but for the Kings. That would be his primary focus now.

Part I

10 Days A.E. (After Event)

The fallen angel becomes a malignant devil.

Yet even that enemy of God and man had friends and associates in his desolation;

I am alone.

Mary Shelley, Frankenstein

It always strikes me, and it is very peculiar, that when we see the image of indescribable and unutterable desolationof loneliness, of poverty and misery, the end of all things, or their extremethen rises in our mind the thought of God.

Vincent van Gogh

1.

Deadly Waters

Rocky Point, Mexico

A loud screeching cut through the raw morning air, rousing Bill and Lisa King from a fitful sleep of restless nightmares.

The uproar was one more in the endless list of sounds they had never heard before, which made up their life after the apocalypse. It wasnt the frightening death-throe-screams that followed distant gunshots across the towns estuaries, or the constant electrical buzz that filled the atmosphere all around them. This sound was a monstrous and powerful outcry immediately outside their beach home.

Bill sprang out of bed, a .45 in his hand, ready to bring death to some poor S.O.B. who was probably just hungry and looking for food.

What is that? he bellowed.

Dont know, but its close, Lisa shouted barely loud enough to be heard, flying to the window, scarcely touching the carpet.

Impossibly, the roar grew louder. Its deep, penetrating tones were undaunted by their walls and attempts to muffle the assault to their eardrums. It sounded like some angry mechanical leviathan, tearing at the sand and coral with its metal claws.

Standing at the window, Bill pried open the blinds, his jaw dropping farther with each inch revealed. The source of that racket was worse than the prehistoric monster he imagined.

Its a cruise ship? He blinked, transfixed in disbelief. His wifes eyes mirrored his distrust.

The dark behemoth was a passenger ship but no less terrifying than a T-rex might have been, made malicious by the green auroras illuminating its hull, as though it were belched out of the depths to destroy them. It crept up onto their beach, slowly pushed by some invisible force, intent on burrowing a bloody trail to town.

The screeching persisted for what seemed an endless amount of time, until the beast ran out of inertia. The high incoming tide deposited it less than one hundred meters from their property.

When the dreadful noise ceased, the relative quiet made the constant thrumming sound of the wind-driven sand drubbing the homes windows and outside walls sound louder. The hulk lay unmoving, as if asleep, and they stood motionless for fear of waking it.

The light from tonights auroras was bright and pulsating, outlining the massive vessels form. Out of the water, it looked much taller, not listing as expected but sitting upright almost as if it were properly parked in the port five miles up the coast. Each spectral blast of green revealed more of the ships evil presence. A fire on the port side, evidenced by blackened scarring, made it appear that the devils own giant hand had reached out from the ships bowels, leaving molten prints burned into its hide from the first row of balconies up to the silent chimney stacks. When the pulsating light ebbed, shadowing the ship in a momentary darkness, it almost looked like a normal cruise liner awaiting tourists that would never come. For a ship normally carrying a couple thousand crew and passengers in its belly, there were no signs of life.

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