Topic

Disaster & Apocalypse

End-of-world stories: the last people, the long collapse, the day after.

Disaster & Apocalypse

Up the Steps

28. You stand at the bottom of the steps, each worn smooth by over a century of devotion. God's love is manifest in all things; so you were taught and so you believe. Yet the steps rise before you in seeming indifference. They do not care how, or if, you get to the top. Neither…

by F. Brett Cox

Disaster & Apocalypse

High Concept

When we finally met aliens, most of us expected they would be different. Why wouldn't they be? Different environments, different evolutionary paths--it just made sense that they wouldn't be like us. Violence as an art form, though. Who would have thought aliens would come up…

by Dave Henrickson

Disaster & Apocalypse

Easy as Pie

"You can't be right," she said. They were sitting at their kitchen table, the remnants of their meatloaf dinner already wrapped in tin foil. His gray hair was lit by the sun's rays streaming through the window. She sliced off another piece of peach pie and held it out to him,…

by Elaine Midcoh

Disaster & Apocalypse

Star Crossed

Palmira dessert is four hours and eighteen minutes away, according to Google Maps. I check it as I drop our bags on the backseat of the car. We're not taking much, just a few of our favorite things: my books, his medals, our memories. Dan stacks the last gallons of gasoline in…

by Andrea Carolina Rivera

Disaster & Apocalypse

The Last Gay in the World

The last gay in the world lives in a glass cage at the Global Catastrophes Museum. I visit every day; I have a season pass. Her cage is on the second floor, in the back, past the gift shop where my mom bought a life-size poster of the Father General last time she visited. The…

by Finnian Burnett

Disaster & Apocalypse

Last Teen Standing

Three students. That's how many of us show up today. Last week there were four. Class gets smaller every time, but we still gotta come. I don't remember being this excited back when school was all moldy demountables with creaky ceiling fans. It's the practical, hands-on learning…

by Samara Lo

Disaster & Apocalypse

Multiverse Apocalypse: A Villanelle

The end of the world is a rolling snowball, a speck of dust accumulating debris until it's so massive it has its own inexorable pull. And what do you call that but fate? Nicholas stands atop the hill across the street from the house where he grew up. Where he sledded as a boy;…

by Timothy Mudie

Disaster & Apocalypse

Last Day

I'd have loads of sex, I said. I'd make amends. Get blitzed. Pig out. Dance naked on a rooftop listening to Bruce: You ain't a beauty but hey, you’re all right. I’d burn it all down. I’d fight. Hide. Jump into the sea. Go out on my own terms. But you shouldn’t trust…

by Cooper Tamayo

Disaster & Apocalypse

The Brink of Disaster

The world was ending; this was no time for sentiment. I had the last working car in the neighborhood, one hour to get to the designated army base, and no room for passengers. "Please, take my baby with you!" cried my neighbor, holding aloft her snot-nosed toddler. "I'm sorry…

by William Shaw

Disaster & Apocalypse

Chocolate

After the bombs dropped and the sickness came, when everyone was smashing windows and building barricades out of canned goods and hoarding gasoline in old cans, my mom said that old man Carter robbed a candy store. When people first heard about it, they thought he was crazy.…

by Gwen Whiting

Disaster & Apocalypse

What Happened to Moschops

Dobodo glided down the corridor of the science vessel Stardust. His amorphous form could bend and stretch in the tubes, but his quarry's could not. The specimen, linked to him with an electron tether, was unlike any organism they had yet encountered. Dobodo knew that his…

by Adam Knight

Disaster & Apocalypse

Conclusion

"It's the dollar, that's the problem," Mary said. The ladies nodded in agreement. They had just finished their spin class and were having their coffee. But only one because it was so darn expensive here. The city paid for the facility, you think they could lower the cost of the…

by Chris Scott

Disaster & Apocalypse

Moose Trap

**********Editor's Note: Crude, adult language in this story************ I'm poking the moose carcass with a branch when Masha's call blinks onto my eyeQ. "Hey, sexy," I say, undoing my breath mask. "How's work?" "Why are you in the woods?" Her voice is terse. "Your map's all…

by Rich Larson

Disaster & Apocalypse

Claire de Lune

"Every night we pray for the safety and long life of Professor Darwish whose tireless eyes warned us in time. And we thank the many scientists and engineers who built the rocket that pushed the Icy Destroyer of Worlds away from Mother Earth." Here I pause for the children to…

by D.J. Rozell

Disaster & Apocalypse

2020

"Thank you for coming. We wanted to talk to you about your submission. We have some notes. Is that all right?" "I mean, sure. I'm still at the beginning of my career. I can only stand to improve." "Now... we like the story. We do. Lots of drama. Lots of diverse and interesting…

by Sean Vivier

Disaster & Apocalypse

The Hungry Unseen

The Sun shone bright on the frozen Earth. Aerosols, planted a generation ago by the hand of man, formed a reflective blanket in the upper atmosphere, preventing light and warmth from reaching the surface. Towering ice peaks plunged to meet tundra valleys. Some things crept,…

by Sandra Kleinschmitt

Disaster & Apocalypse

Cataclysm Conjugated

Future Questing for a toilet bowl, I will hike naked through a smoking crater. My small town will have fallen deeper than any canyon, coughing smog, wallowing gutturally. Main pipes will have warped and twisted and the reservoir will have splashed and evaporated in the pit like…

by James C Cato

Disaster & Apocalypse

At the Station

They could have let her off with a warning. That's not what they did. The station was a madhouse, alive with noise, confusion, and air too thick to breathe. There was the press of hundreds of citizens desperate to leave the City in time. Handwritten signs read "Hold on to your…

by CTE Peacock

Disaster & Apocalypse

Cold War

The broadcast was painfully brief considering the weight of it all. "Citizens of earth," the address began, crackling into existence unprompted across all of your screens. The nature of the interruption was clarified further as the archaic footage fizzled down into recognizable…

by Ike Lang

Disaster & Apocalypse

Static

The dog barked again in the night. I went out into the yard armed with a stick, but couldn't find it. The spectral dog has been haunting my dreams. Who did it belong to? None of the neighbors had kept a dog. The road beyond the communal gardens was clear. It had been empty for…

by Lavie Tidhar

Disaster & Apocalypse

Evacuation: Earth

Evacuating Earth was arguably the most difficult thing ever undertaken by humankind. I say arguably because we only had recorded history to go off of which picks up sometime after we knew about fire and the wheel, then tapers off just after moon landings and cellular phones. All…

by Andrew Dunn

Disaster & Apocalypse

Other Life Forms Are The Most Of Our Problems

"Crikey, it's a bit grim here in Canberra, innit?" said the PM as he bulled into the meeting room, peeling his facemask off sweaty skin. The men in the room nodded from where they sat clustered under the coldest vent. "How long have we got?" The deputy PM checked his phone. "The…

by Anya Ow

Disaster & Apocalypse

Punxsutawny Phil 2.0

Yup, it's Groundhog Day here once again at East Coast Sector 3 Shelter H, and we're gearing up for our annual Groundhog Day extravaganza. The Mayor of Pittsburgh is here, and his beautiful family, along with a host of wealthy dignitaries from the business community and sports…

by Kurt Newton

Disaster & Apocalypse

Lonesome Town

You break the glass of the gun display. A tinny siren rings out in the broken-down gun store, no one is there to hear it other than you. Gently brushing away the glass you pick up two guns: a revolver that looks like it would be at home on John Wayne's belt and a more modern…

by John Eric Gritland

Disaster & Apocalypse

It Matters

As I waded in the surf of the flooded human city, I saw below me hundreds of thousands of humans struggling against the waves. Many were already dead but humans are notoriously hard to kill. They fought and struggled to their last breath. I respected them for that. I certainly…

by Neal A. Cline

Disaster & Apocalypse

It Matters

As I waded in the surf of the flooded human city, I saw below me hundreds of thousands of humans struggling against the waves. Many were already dead but humans are notoriously hard to kill. They fought and struggled to their last breath. I respected them for that. I certainly…

by Neal Allen Cline

Disaster & Apocalypse

Snowfall

The young child pressed her face against the triple-paned window. "Mommy! Mommy! Look! It's snowing outside." She jumped and screamed with excitement. Her mother joined her. Sure enough, the flakes swirled and billowed and floated to the ground. It had been years since she had…

by Richard Bertram Peterson

Disaster & Apocalypse

Space Tears

Atomic explosions are beautiful from outer space. There's a bright, searing flash then a bulbous growth of angry clouds that flatten out like Portobello mushrooms. I watch from a tiny window in the deserted storage bay. Children aren't allowed on the observation deck, including…

by Lora Kilpatrick

Disaster & Apocalypse

The Nineteenth Hour

A suited figure careens past the observation deck and slams onto the main galley, hydraulic joints hissing and buckling as they absorb several kiloNewtons of force. Mag-boots allow the creature to walk at an angle parallel to the horizon, like some cosmic deity. Light blooms…

by Connor R. Smith

Disaster & Apocalypse

In the Days of King Aris

Aris was not used to being anything other than the center of attention. Being the King meant he was usually the most important person in any room but today he had been bustled into a corner with a glass of wine Men and women in white coats sat around the control room reading…

by Martin Harrison-Smith

Disaster & Apocalypse

Before and After

Before they came our buildings stood tall, our trees were green, and Lady Liberty's face shone brightly towards the Atlantic. Before they came the world was connected and a child could access all information in the palm of their hands. Before they came father fought with mother…

by Alek Gearhart

Disaster & Apocalypse

Earth's Lament

"Yes, they are getting out of hand and will likely do themselves in sooner rather than later--and take not a few others with them then they go," Earth sighed and looked around. "And you, Dear?" Jupiter asked. "Will you be okay?" Always solicitous, he refilled her glass without…

by Avery Elizabeth Hurt

Disaster & Apocalypse

In the Blue Buzz

I went to the gym on the day before the world ended. No one greeted me at the door when I came in, but I scanned in my member number anyway, surprised that the place was open. The bank of elliptical machines was empty except for a young woman in a college sweat shirt and pink…

by James Van Pelt

Disaster & Apocalypse

Ten Minutes till the End (of the World)

"Do you think there's intelligent life on other planets?" Her question, so cliched at any other time, makes my throat constrict around a sob. But I'm not going to break down. I'm kept together by force of a lifelong habit that's too late to change. Instead, I hold her gaze and…

by Euphoria Kew

Disaster & Apocalypse

Twenty Things You Did While You Were Sleepwalking

1. Sobbed in my arms as if the world was ending, then forgot all about it in the morning. 2. Washed the dinner dishes piled high in the sink despite it not being your turn, wrist-deep in foamy water until the skin of your knuckles cracked red and raw. 3. Tried to call your…

by Avra Margariti

Disaster & Apocalypse

The History of the World in Four Sentences

"The history of the world?" the old man growled, his ruined teeth a horror show in what little moonlight filtered through the dense leaves and branches above. "What'dya want that old chestnut of a story for?" The child--the last born human, though neither she nor the old man nor…

by Liam Hogan

Disaster & Apocalypse

Norwegian Wood

George walked the long, curving street, head up, watching the shadows. A midnight stroll wasn't safe--too many animals that used to avoid the suburbs had lost fear--but at night he could convince himself the neighborhood was the way it had been a year before. He pretended…

by James Van Pelt

Disaster & Apocalypse

In the End the World Will Break Your Heart

On the second-to-last day before the end of the world, I went to work. I sat through four conference calls, only one of which required me to speak, and took a nap in a bathroom stall. I hated myself that day, and when I got home Alex was pissed off that I left laundry to mildew…

by Kurt Hunt

Disaster & Apocalypse

Conduct the Stars Into Silence

First Movement You are eight years old and lying outside at night, staring up at the stars. There is no light pollution because you are far from any city, and because the electric company shut off the power three days ago. Inside the rusted travel trailer the heat was…

by Lynette Mejia

Disaster & Apocalypse

The Day the World Broke

We're eating our last meal tonight--a grim Last Supper, except there is no Savior at the table. Everyone is quiet, even Emma, but for once I wish she'd talk. Aunt Nellie pops a bottle of champagne in the backyard as all the adults look on, clapping weakly. Aunt Nellie laughs,…

by Autumn Owens

Disaster & Apocalypse

All Our Futures

All our futures arrived at once. Through a scorched sky, Morlocks flew anti-grav jetpacks above the ruins of a nanotech Statue of Liberty, aggressively buzzing the Apes, who returned potshots from phasers and plasma rifles as holographic adverts extolled the benefits of moving…

by Liam Hogan

Disaster & Apocalypse

Crank

Jimmy has no arms, see? Never had any. Was born like this. Almost every baby born after the war is missing parts. Some don't have limbs, like Jimmy. Some have bits of the face missing. Some lack internal organs. Those are the lucky ones. They don't live too long after the cord…

by Artur Karlov

Disaster & Apocalypse

Love in the Time of Darkness

I hate dawn now. He tweets early every morning, and then the squads go out. I've seen them in the blue fogs, here in Georgetown, near the canal, near the Potomac, men in black clothing, masks over their faces. Neos, they're called. Now I'm looking out this dirty window, high…

by Janet Shell Anderson

Disaster & Apocalypse

Playmates

"I'm doing my very best, you know," Caretaker says, its synthesized voice cool and melodic and carefully betraying no trace of annoyance. Sybil only shakes her head. She is tucked up into the furthest corner of the concrete bunker, her skinny arms wrapped around her shins, nubby…

by Rich Larson

Disaster & Apocalypse

The World Ends In Hugs

The world is supposed to end tomorrow. I'm not worried. Just another in a long string of prophecies made by ancient peoples who got the math wrong. The world will no doubt eventually end, just not tomorrow. I'm an anthropology professor, and tomorrow I'm giving a guest lecture…

by Craig W Soffer

Disaster & Apocalypse

The Library is Open

The library was open, all the good that it did. So far, only three flies had entered that morning. Shawna knew it was almost pointless for her to unlock the front door and turn the front window sign to OPEN, but she found comfort in the routine, even though she spent most of her…

by Beth Cato

Disaster & Apocalypse

Passing in the Night

Strange the night was. Strange that he should be awoken. Strange that anything at all should come so near. Capt. Tiberious stood on the bridge and looked out. There was nothing. Why have we slowed? he wondered, Why wake me? Still he peered into the empty starlit void. Just one…

by Pmmg

Disaster & Apocalypse

The Winter Gardener

A fine day down here means sky like a baby-blue bowl blurring into the horizon in all directions and no wind to speak of. Six degrees below freezing. Cass heads inside to tend her garden. Six months ago, the hydroponics shed was entirely covered in white. That thought is never…

by Sean Williams

Disaster & Apocalypse

Fine Dining During the Apocalypse

Spices and creative thinking in the kitchen offer the diner looking for the best culinary experience no reason to despair in these new and challenging times. The stores have long ago been sacked, of course, shelves cleared, and many burned to the ground, but they were obvious…

by James Van Pelt

Disaster & Apocalypse

Paper Hearts

The little girl holds the delicate tissue paper carefully between thin, soot-stained fingers. The scissors are old and dull, handles missing their plastic covers. Blisters have formed on her hands where they've pinched, though she barely notices. Pain is an old friend now, and…

by Lynette Mejia

Disaster & Apocalypse

A Brief History

It was a sight to see, the final act. Artists raced, stealing hearts and minds like starving thieves; their works no longer fruits but diabolical tools. Priests and scientists alike fought over short-lived miracles, in desperate attempts at salvation. Some continued with more…

by Kenneth P Regan Jr.

Disaster & Apocalypse

Search History

Weather Ottawa long term Good gifts for friend's 25th birthday Toronto sickness Bus schedule 9 Rideau Centre Toronto sickness symptoms Good cheap bars Ottawa-Gatineau Funny birthday greetings Hair on big toe normal? Toronto sickness anemia Who won first Oscars? Drinking games…

by KT Bryski

Disaster & Apocalypse

Bureaucracy

The sky had a brilliant purple color and the air seemed somehow fresher, more fragrant than usual. The temperature was exactly right--not too warm, not too cold. All in all it seemed like a perfect spring day. How ironic that in a few moments this world was about to be…

by Myrto Lida Zafeiridi

Disaster & Apocalypse

Rainmaker, Stormbreaker

"Catherine," Father says, leaning against the machine. "Do you remember when we could turn off the rain?" I step around beside him, careful not to tread on the headstone at my feet. The leaves of the beech tree are all a-patter overhead, the sky a swirling mass of dark grey…

by JT Gill

Disaster & Apocalypse

The View From Here

Out his window is Texas. Red earth. The location of Houston where he had once owned a percentage of an oil refinery (did he still?). This refinery he had only seen once, from the window of his chauffeured car as he drove past it on his way to somewhere else, a collection of…

by Darragh Savage

Disaster & Apocalypse

Extra Pickles for the End of the World

I work a register over at Burger Brothers, the one behind the crater from the orbital bombardments three years ago. I've been working there for a while. Since before the gangs, before the fires, before the zombies, and before the bugs. I'd really like to quit, but I'm waiting…

by James Reinebold

Disaster & Apocalypse

Holiday Playlist for the End of the World

"Santa Claus is Coming to Town" No, he's not. But something else is. "Baby, It's Cold Outside" And getting colder. As the temperature plummets, people huddle in the streets, murmuring and pointing at the silhouette that dances along the horizon. The silhouette doesn't care to…

by Gwendolyn Kiste

Disaster & Apocalypse

Writing Advice

Never start with the weather. But what if the weather is the whole story? Solar weather to start with, but also the weather as I write this? Wind rattles the windows. It whistles, moans, and whispers like sheets sliding on sand. Rain taps its fingernails against the glass.…

by James Van Pelt

Disaster & Apocalypse

After the End

After the end, you don't have to go to school anymore. No more sitting in Mrs. Jenkins' fifth-grade class, holding your breath whenever she starts calling on people for answers. And maybe it wasn't that you didn't have the answers, maybe it was that she made you stand in front…

by Damien Angelica Walters

Disaster & Apocalypse

The Last Liars

We broadcasted the radio and TV programs, our messages of welcome we thought would show humanity's kind depths, our documentaries of triumph, the math that was our most complicated, and pointed them towards the stars. But Lucha Libre leaked out and so did MTV. The stories we…

by Brenda Peynado

Disaster & Apocalypse

Bear-bear Speaks"

Bear-bear is silent, and stays silent, no matter how hard the woman squeezes his paw. She feels the weight of him in her backpack purse now, heavy as the world. His muteness bothers her more than the hollowness she once knew in her gut, or the billowing ash that burns her eyes.…

by Beth Cato

Disaster & Apocalypse

You Always Had a Thing for Silver Linings

When the sky first changed, I thought it was pretty. Champagne gold, like a gift. Like a Bond villain decided on the color. The more I look at it, the more I think it's actually the vomit of some alien race that decided to use Earth as a trash can. Could be. No one expects to be…

by Kate Sheeran Swed

Disaster & Apocalypse

The Lies

Bri told me the lift ships to Terra Station took off Tuesday and Friday mornings from Campbell Field. They made the cabin look like an old-time luxury liner, like a zeppelin crossing the Atlantic, with wooden wainscoting and brass fittings. She said stewards in white jackets and…

by James Van Pelt

Disaster & Apocalypse

Economy

After the bomb, we learned to walk slow. Slow as acceptance. Laborious and dragging. Heavy as longing. In just a few generations, the big people died off. Big lungs, big breaths, blood hungry for oxygen. We little ones survived. Sipping the sparse breath between. We got smaller.…

by Karin Terebessy

Disaster & Apocalypse

Listen

Listen. They lined us up then, along the edge of the pit. We stood shoulder-to-shoulder, shivering because they had taken our coats. We stood silent, heads bowed, staring down into the freshly turned earth. We breathed in the crisp winter air, and waited. They called us…

by Edward Ashton

Disaster & Apocalypse

500 Seconds

The sun disappeared just now, like a light bulb popping in an empty basement, leaving darkness so complete a brain invents color to compensate. There, then gone, in the space between seconds. Did you feel it? I did because I see the plan. I know the same way I knew that mugger…

by Brent C. Smith

Disaster & Apocalypse

Apocalypse Foxes

At the end of the world, your grave is written not in bitter libations or raven words or elegies breathed across broken glass. Under the dusk of a dreary sun you gather your bones close; across the husk of a weary world you leave behind shadows, but no footfalls. And in the…

by Yoon Ha Lee

Disaster & Apocalypse

From the Ashes

"I don't like to come here." Grace's words echoed against the gray shells of brick and stucco. "I don't really, either," said Ryan, his voice soft and husky all at once. Their boots crunched through ash as if it were snow. I trailed them by about half a block, anxiety increasing…

by Beth Cato

Disaster & Apocalypse

Tommy

The police had been again in the night. Tommy's bedroom was right near the stairwell, so he could always hear their footsteps thundering up before the sound of glass smashing and the screams. In the morning he went into the corridor to see which door it had been. There were…

by H.G. Parry

Disaster & Apocalypse

Chocolate Chip Cookies for the Apocalypse

I call Dani at three in the morning. "They came for my family," I say. "Finally." She's silent on the other end of the line. "I mean, I knew I wouldn't be on the list. And I knew all of them would. But still." There's a lump in my throat. Everything feels too close. Too tight. I…

by Claire Spaulding

Disaster & Apocalypse

Things To Do If We Survive

Dig graves. Get a car working. Travel north. Find food, all we can. Gas masks, fire extinguisher, knife. Stay off the main roads. Tell you I love you. Find a house. High ground. Strong walls. Doors. Get a gun. Ammunition. Learn to hunt. Plant a garden. Find chickens. Cow? Goat.…

by Loreen Heneghan

Disaster & Apocalypse

Cold Comfort

Hello, and welcome to LifeVault, the world's only remaining digital preservation site. Now, you can access your documents and photos from anywhere without fear of identity theft or summoning the Stained Ear. Our patent-pending Nostalgorithms are tailored to recognize only you…

by Evan Dicken

Disaster & Apocalypse

The Reunion

We agreed we would meet up for the ten year reunion and so, without even a phone call, each of us made our way back. I waited for Martha at the airport in the rain. There were trains waiting beside the platform, bright adverts in their windows encouraging me to climb on board…

by Louise Hughes

Disaster & Apocalypse

The Last Repairman

***Adult Language in the tale that follows*** "Please." The man was a wreck. Those parts of him that remained organic lay desiccated, fused to machined parts in not much better shape. An arm--entirely composed of bone, a little meat and ulcerous skin--made a pathetic attempt to…

by Dave Beynon

Disaster & Apocalypse

Eat Up

We ate meatloaf with carrots, celery, and a layer of ketchup that peeled like a second skin. It was reheated and dry and smelled of warmed lettuce. "Eat up," my dad said. My mom grunted in approval. I ate, imagining it was pizza. We dined on canned peaches and soup; Mom heated…

by Timothy R. Knuck

Disaster & Apocalypse

The Astrologer's Telling

I have loved the stars too dearly to be fearful of the night --Sarah Williams, "The Old Astronomer" They left when Behein began dying in earnest, but long before it went entirely cold. After the sky had gone dark, but before the last of the sturdy and shade-loving trees in her…

by Therese Arkenberg

Disaster & Apocalypse

Light and Ash

The Chinese are coming. The Chinese are coming. Paul Revere never had a chance with Taiwan, and the island falls within a week. No nukes--just tanks and landing crafts and bodies on the ground--your old-school stuff. A red tide out of the East, five gold stars glinting on each…

by Alan Bao

Disaster & Apocalypse

Goodnight, Raptor

Benjamin sat on the sidewalk with his favorite dinosaur book, the one about Velociraptors. Up in the sky, the clouds of silver nanobots flew higher and higher until he couldn't see them anymore. It was very quiet now. Benjamin held his book tight so it wouldn't get lost or eaten…

by A. Merc Rustad

Disaster & Apocalypse

Through Dry Places, Seeking Rest

After sunset, my reflection appears in the black depths of the kitchen window, thin and pale and drunk. The ruins of the gas station are burning in the hills, a sheet of wet gold floating on my chest. I can almost smell the smoke. My eyebrows are dark and straight with frowning,…

by Megan Arkenberg

Disaster & Apocalypse

Wedding Day

During the wedding in Niantic Falls, people tried not to look at the white light in the sky. The overcast heavens reflected on the lake like a massive gray mirror, but the grassy embankment where the wedding party assembled seemed as bright as emerald. Even the pale lawn chairs…

by Brian Trent

Disaster & Apocalypse

Green is for Silence, Blue is for Voice, Red is for Whole, Black is for Choice

Hush Leda sleeps within a nightskin. From the outside, it appears featureless, a chrysalis connected to the machinery below with tubes and wires. When the stitches dissolve, she knows it's time to emerge. A week? A month? She doesn't know. Time slips while inside the nightskin.…

by Damien Angelica Walters

Disaster & Apocalypse

The Decent Thing

Squirrel died in the snow. I heard the shot and came running. I found him gurgling and clutching his throat. He'd been hit right in the throat, right above the breastplate of his armor. He was looking at me, pawing the dirty snow with his free hand, and I knew right then he was…

by Dex Fernandez

Disaster & Apocalypse

The World Will End in Fire

"I'm tired, Viva," I said, blowing into the cup formed by my hands. She said, "Me, too," as she tugged the flaps of her hat low over her ears and looked away from me across the field that would yield no crop but winter now. Her breaths came out in little puffs of steam. "Have…

by K. C. Norton

Disaster & Apocalypse

Final Inspection

It was the start of third shift and Quality Assurance Specialist Wilfrid Sachs was, as usual, typing out his resignation letter on his clean suit's wristpad. ...being long past retirement age, and health no longer allowing me to fulfill my job appropriately, I must again resign…

by Afalstein JD Kloosterman

Disaster & Apocalypse

Pictures in Crayon

At recess the Arks dot the sky like unwinking stars. Ally and her friends aren't supposed to talk about it, eyes wide above the breathing masks that muffle their voices, but they do. Where they'll go, what they'll bring. Every kid Ally knows has a suitcase packed, just in case…

by Elizabeth Shack

Disaster & Apocalypse

When The Trumpet Sounds

I sneezed. My daddy held his hand over my mouth. "Hush, son, hush, all right?" He buried my face against his shirt, which smelled stale and faintly of rice, beans, and collard greens. "I love you. Try not to sneeze for a while, ok? Not 'til we're up there and then it's ok." His…

by Sean Melican

Disaster & Apocalypse

Rocket Dragons

"Happy B-Day", the old man said to the girl as he handed her the package wrapped in cloth. "Oh, thank you Grampy," said the girl. It was her twelfth season and she knew that getting a present on her B-Day was a custom left over from the old days. It had been three seasons since…

by Larry Kincheloe

Disaster & Apocalypse

The Mountain

They came to the mountain because that's where their prophets had told them to go. If they went to the mountain, the prophets said, they would be safe and they would be saved. And so they came in droves. They drove cars, they took trains, they rode buses, they hired horses, and…

by Andrew Kozma

Disaster & Apocalypse

Final Corrections, Pittsburgh Times-Dispatch

In several items yesterday, the Visitor was variously described as having six legs, eight legs, or "an unholy agglomeration of writhing, thrashing appendages, unable to be counted." The correct number of legs is eight. In our cover story, it was reported that electronics in the…

by M. Bennardo

Disaster & Apocalypse

Live-Tweeting the Apocalypse

***Editor's Head's Up: A bit of adult language in the following story*** Eric Bullen @EricBullen: So this is the end of the world. Where are all the superheroes when you really need them? Marie Sainte-Beuve @MarieSainteBeuve: I'm sorry, but before anyone destroys the Earth I…

by Ian Creasey

Disaster & Apocalypse

The Show Must

The soles of the dance shoes on Joan Jansen's feet were scored and coated with countless layers of rosin. She bent the shoes up and down, stretching the fabric, and inside, her feet. What else could she do? That was her routine. It wouldn't do her any good to pull a muscle or…

by Matt London

Disaster & Apocalypse

Nevermore

The crow tightened his grip on the silent power line. He was not going to fly. He was not. He was not. An instant later, he opened his wings, launched from his perch, and flew the next slow circle of his route. The transmitter embedded in his back had long since given out, and…

by Renee Carter Hall

Disaster & Apocalypse

The Tides

"When I was little," Dad says, softly chuckling, "the Moon was so small I thought I could put it in my pocket, like a coin." I don't answer because there's no time to talk. The tide is coming. Every day, we scavenge the beach for bent rails, rusty beams, broken metal sheets. And…

by Ken Liu

Disaster & Apocalypse

Last

He waited until Eta Carinae was in the viewport, roiling on its stellar winds. It was blinding. "Four hundred times the size of the old sun," he said. "Which, of course, fit upwards of a million Earths." She champed at the plastic in her mouth. "And at peak population, Earth…

by Rich Larson

Disaster & Apocalypse

Contagion

Public service ads produced by the Big Three had been running in all the major media: television, radio, magazines, and web sites. Each of the Big Three took a slightly different approach, targeting different consumers, but the basic message was the same. The Brent virus was…

by Bruce Holland Rogers

Disaster & Apocalypse

Twenty Ways the Desert Could Kill You

1. A poisonous snake could bite you, and you could die. 2. You could prick your finger on a previously undiscovered poisonous cactus. 3. The cactus isn't poisonous, and neither is the snake, but the snake's venom is a powerful anti-coagulant. You could bleed to death from the…

by Sarah Pinsker

Disaster & Apocalypse

The Pretty Woman Without Mercy

Knight would love to say that he went into the woods to be like Thoreau: to learn self-reliance, economy, solitude, all those noble things that noble people learn. No, he ran for it. He fled. His old mentor Pablo used to say that the thing that you run from the hardest is always…

by Steven Mathes

Disaster & Apocalypse

Hoist With an Ark to the Stars

The world may have been ending, but that was no reason to throw trash on the floor. The bin was only three feet away. That's thirty-six inches. Simon Sacks could have landed a rocket the size of a flea on a Martian dog's ass, but the chief engineer of the Ark project couldn't be…

by David Glen Larson

Disaster & Apocalypse

You've Ruined This For Me

The skies were burning outside my window but I paid them no heed. During a break up, it is amazing how long it takes for information from the outside world to seep through. My phone had been ringing for days but I was in no mood to talk. When I finally noticed the storm outside…

by Ewan C. Forbes

Disaster & Apocalypse

Saurus

"What is it!?" Boy's eyes sparkled. "Is it anything?" "Let me sit first, won't you?" I steadied myself with my good arm, and sat heavily on an Elder stone. "Let me see." I took the rectangular block from his grasp with both hands. It was lighter than I expected. "Do you need to…

by John Van Pelt

Disaster & Apocalypse

Inconstant Nature

"I see the acid-elms have a new predator," says Zina, pointing out a vine that's strangling them. "Good," says Olesia, "Death to traitors." This sets Zina to laughing, until the laughing becomes the girl's trademark hacking cough. Olesia waits, and waits, and waits to the point…

by Colum Paget

Disaster & Apocalypse

Free Lunch

It took a moment to place the sound, because no one should have been making it in their house. It was the soft, rhythmic squeal of a mattress and the wheeming of a woman approaching a stifled climax. The sound sent an icy blast through Phoebe's stomach. She had begun to suspect,…

by Will McIntosh

Disaster & Apocalypse

California Gurls

***Editor's Note: There is language here that may not be appropriate for young, or PG, readers*** The first time I hear "California Gurls" by Katy Perry, we are heading south on Magnolia Drive toward Montauk Bluffs because we think there might be guns down there. "Girls," you…

by S. A. Rudek

Disaster & Apocalypse

Ten Speeds at the End of the World

They announced the end of the world on Friday afternoon. Of course the apocalypse couldn't come on a Monday. Tara and Luke were carpooling home together, which was lucky. The commuting traffic was always ugly but at the news everyone seemed to try to get on the road, going…

by Guinevere Robin Rowell

Disaster & Apocalypse

The Ritual of Names in Prague in the Last Days of the New Empire

The bells of Strahov Monastery hadn't rung, I'm told, for over eighty years. Termites got into the thick wood beams some twenty-odd years before the building was boarded up and abandoned. Or maybe it was carpenter ants. Or maybe it was just dry rot. The details don't matter.…

by Bernie Mojzes

Disaster & Apocalypse

Reading Time

We began to burn the books, and Dad tried to kill himself. Almost all of the extra furniture had been burned over the previous month, leaving the upholstery and padding from sofas and chairs heaped on the big bed in what used to be just Mom's and Dad's room. Me and Taylor stayed…

by Beth Cato

Disaster & Apocalypse

Hints of the Apocalypse

Transcription of Orkney artifact 345NG, recovered at -10M, 3K SW from primary blast center. Handwritten on loose-leaf paper. Minutes of the February meeting of the Orkney Boarding School Fiction Society, as recorded by Secretary Ewan Charlet, President Sophie Marwick presiding.…

by K.G. Jewell

Disaster & Apocalypse

Like the Fourth of July

The Children of Chiron sat silent in prayer as they waited for their holy leader Joshua to enter the temple. The red-robed zealots bowed their heads as they genuflected, making the crowded hall look like a roiling sea of flames. Rebekah looked around at the undulating crimson…

by John Paolicelli

Disaster & Apocalypse

outer rims

*out'er rims*, n. *1*. areas of continents flooded in 2014 by rising sea levels due to climate change; the resulting regions. Why she brought the kids one last time would be the question always troubling her, never finding its reasonable answer. She told herself she wanted them…

by Toiya Kristen Finley

Disaster & Apocalypse

Trust

You've got to hold to your priorities, Michelle Fletcher. That's what you tell yourself as you scrub and scrub and scrub at the crusted black grit in your one saucepan. You've got to remember what's important. Your nails are short and bare of polish, ragged and splitting where…

by David D. Levine

Disaster & Apocalypse

Snowfall

And on the last day came the snow. Not the pristine blanket of yuletides past, but the gray of ashes, of the spoiled and the lost. It blew against the windows and collected on the bare soil outside, and by noon it had risen to my waist. By one we'd placed the last of the wood on…

by Jennifer Mason-Black

Disaster & Apocalypse

Not with a Bang

"You're welcome, caller," Elizabeth says, and disconnects the line. She leans back in her chair, her hands kneading the aching muscles in her neck. One of the temps comes round with a tray, and she grabs a coffee from him with a grateful smile. The red light on her console…

by Michelle Ann King

Disaster & Apocalypse

Buy You a Mockingbird

It's time for bed. Yes, I'll tell you a story. But then you have to be a good girl for Mommy and go to sleep. Promise? Once upon a time there was a woman who worked in a lab. Yes, like me. And she had a little girl just like you. Now, one day the woman used a machine in her lab…

by Eric James Stone

Disaster & Apocalypse

Lottery

�Daddy, watch me do the airplane thing!� Robert shushed Dinah and told her to keep still. She was jostling the other people in line. They�d been here for eight hours, but he hadn�t heard a single complaint from anybody. What did they have to complain about, really? Up ahead…

by Nathan Wellman

Disaster & Apocalypse

Finding Joan

Joan put a hand into the beam of her headlamp, carefully inspecting the white LED light on her pale, pale palm. Was it fading already? She checked her fanny pack to be sure she had a spare battery. Sometimes she thought it would be easier to do her foraging during the day. But…

by David D. Levine