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Embarrassing
Huh?" Nick was hoping to  noted with sigh of   relief the lack of the post-apocalyptic mise-en-scène.

Feature zombie  films that had  trained him to expect, the worst.





He was wrong.....

Overturned cars an  scorched burnt buildings.

Busted windows falls shards of glass hanging to break.


  Empty to the facade of  hell on earth.

Nick   walked toward the main street and saw that Mother Nature had started to reclaim part of the city.

He walked toward the coffee shop on the corner and noticed that the sign was faded and swinging in the breeze.

"Maybe they still have some of those crunchy, inedible, rock-hard granola bars, he thought.

It in good condition."

He grinned as he noticed a fat rabbit crouched in the thick grass that had taken over an empty parking lot.

Harvesting more carrots into it's hideaway home underground.

He took it as a good omen.

Top the rabbit's attention only focused on  mysterious one human over there.

Haven't seen any in while staring little intense wagging it's furry tale pricking it's whiskers.

Nick  was on the other side bowing  for the rabbit.

Thanking the creature  he is not alone in this deserted city.

Peered through the glass door making sure it was empty to begin with.

Looked like a low budget  bar.

Red  outdated  comfy stools  right by the receptionist front desk.

Flattened once you seat on them.

Once you get off it pops right off or back high.

The sizes graph lowest to highest in order fashion for all sizes for each preference everyone may have.



Floor looked  furnished. Flying pillar fan rotating blades repeating at the top of the ceiling.


Flat screen TV shutten off, in the cut of the far left end of the ceiling wall.

Went the pull open the glass door.

Smiled seeing the “hippy bars,” as he called them, were there by the register.

He sauntered towards it.

  Grabbing as much  granola bars, stuffing lots in his pockets, as much as  he pleased.

Given himself  the urge  the tear  one open  to test it out.

It tasted like cardboard—just as he remembered.

Despite the flavor, the bar whetted his appetite,  gluttoned  choke down four more. 

He suddenly noted something in the distance, behind him.

An  stack of newspapers by the front door, rustling near the whistling blown wind radius.

Dangling half way from both side of the  out an inside    of the cafe. 

"The  New York Times and the Chicago Sun Times News,"  it says, barely shown so much feet away it's been from Danny, himself.

Nick's mouth was munched.

Crumbs of the bar  he'd shoved in his mouth,  spreads all over his cheeks an watering  lips.

Haven't finished chowing down it fully. 

Nick's mind  kicked in some memory.

Remembered what newspaper were referred as.

Knew what they was for.

"Yes, give me my answers at last," he muttered.

He ran  over and grabbed one  squatting down to read them in the dusk  light.

“WHITE HOUSE EVACUATION,” read the New York Times. It was a full-page story, but Nick's attention was drawn to the local paper: “Riot Attacks Presidential Bunker” stretched across the page, which was dated December 17, 2012.

Danny scanned the paper again and again.

The stories all centered around one incident.

The president of New York City  had been moved to a bunker, and a mob of relentless citizens had managed to discover the location and attempted to take the bunker by force. 

“The visitors landed on the roof of the Library of Congress at approximately 6 pm.

There has been no word on whether their requested exchange between their representative and the representative from NASA has taken place.

The SETI (Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence) Institute and the United Nations are both involved, but we do not yet know the extent of their participation.”

Nick abruptly scrutinize the words over, unable to process what he's was absorbing.

He scrutinize more intensely. Extraterrestrial intelligence. Again. Once more Extraterrestrial intelligence. ENTRATERRESTRAL INTELLIGENCE! 

He needed more. He couldn’t understand.

As someone who worked as a reporter just out of college, Nick knew a hastily cobbled together story when he sees one.

No quotes, poor word choices, and lousy sentence structure riddled the piece.

Definitely something you didn’t usually see in the New York Times.

He threw the newspapers down in frustration.

He needed older prints—ones with a bit of backstory. That would have to wait until morning, though.

He didn’t feel confident enough to travel on  about in the darkness.

The sky went from orange to white to indigo to black.

Nick crawled behind the register and curled up under the counter behind a curtain.

He lay awake for what felt like hours, just listening for any sound indicating someone else was out there.

And then wondering if he really wanted to hear someone else—and what it would mean if he did.  Wouldn't make a difference? Could he even trust them? Will it be wishes of hope not being alone with someone else with him will be what he regret?


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