Chapter 1 – Apocalypse
John Nielsen had been a cheerful nineteen-year-old, on his computer finishing up his endless schoolwork when the Pulse hit. As the clock struck
The scene could very well be directly taken from a
At this point, another car came in to join the fray. As it neared the accident area, John expected to hear the screeching of its brakes, but those did not come. Instead, what he heard were screams of agony and shouts of panic as the red Mitubishi Lancer tore into the crowd of onlookers around the hill of vehicles, mowing many of them down as if they were grass. John witnessed all of this from the relative safety of his home, and stood there gaping in shock, horror, fear. He reached out for his cell phone, just as the driver of the Mercedes Benz lunged towards the woman he had been eyeing and ripped out her throat.
Now utterly speechless, John felt the blood in his hand withdraw, letting his cell phone fall to the tiled floor. “This is
It was then John recalled someone. He raced for his cell phone.
Then he remembered he had dropped his cell phone earlier, his sleek black Samsung SGH-820D now lay in two parts, hardly of any use. John cursed. He had to contact her soon, to ascertain her safety, or her life. Then, as if she heard him, the home phone rang. He ran towards it like a bullet train and plucked up the receiver.
“Hello?” John asked anxiously.
“John! I’m so glad to have gotten through to you!” Sally Perkins screamed in a voice rife with fear and anxiety.
“Are you alright?” John inquired, “People are going crazy on the streets! I’m telling you don’t go out on the streets! You hear me?” In the background John could hear the shattering of glass and the banging of furniture, so maybe staying at home was not the safest bet either.
“It’s my brothers!” Sally screeched, seemingly oblivious to what John had just said, “Something must have fried their circuitry up there, they are acting all crazy and violent and…and…” Her sentence was left hanging in the air for several agonizing moments.
Now really worried, John shouted into the phone, “Sally! Sally! Are you OK?!” Her response came two painful seconds later, “John I think it’s the cell phones. My brothers were using them when they just went bonkers. You gotta help me John! I don’t know when they’ll bust down the door and get to me! Come quickly! I’m -”
The phone line went dead.
“Sally! Sally!” John screamed into the phone despite knowing his effort was futile. Cell phones, he thought, whatever the case he had to get to Sally’s place, and fast. He grabbed his car keys and headed out the front door, only to run into his neighbor Mr. Lee, or rather, a warped, violent version of Mr. Lee, fists clenched and drenched in a dark red liquid.
Blood.
John decided he did not intend to find out whose blood that was and how it got there. All he wanted to do now was to get to Sally, and this Chinese man was in the way.
“Er, Mr. Lee”, John tried, “You mind letting me over? I’m kinda in an emergency”. To this he got a toothy grin and a lunge towards his waist. A second late in dodging and John would have been looking at his severed torso from the ground up. Violent Mr. Lee roared, a primitive instinctual roar that reminded John of wounded lions, and charged forward to try and bisect John again, only this time John was standing in front of a wall. The Asian man’s attack, although full of force and brute strength, suffered in the strategy department, and soon Mr. Lee found his own blood staining the wall he had just ran into. Then his world turned black.
John stood rooted to the ground. Mr. Lee, his neighbor for six years, had tried to kill him. For whatever the reason, he would never know, for the man was lying in a heap on the ground before him, body twisted in a painful angle. As John’s eyes scanned the lifeless pile, he saw something that made his blood run cold.
A cell phone.
Mr. Lee’s right hand held a shiny blue Motorola Krzer, one of the more aesthically-pleasing cell phones in society’s heyday. Right now, its reflective surface was cracked in six different places, and the ear piece was dangling on a wire, snapped shut by the lid of the cell phone, which also seemed to be coming off as well. Sally was right, John thought, the cell phones must have something to do with this crazy mess.
Sally! He remembered his original course of action, and hurriedly ran down the stairs and into the carpark.
After four minutes of running and seven near-death encounters with the phone-crazies, or so he refers to them as now, he arrived panting and bloodsoaked on the bonnet of his little silver Hyundai Getz. He had been attacked by a variety of different people: a bunch of uniformed teenagers, a Malay woman complete with a baju kurung, an Indian man brandishing a tuning spanner and a Chinese construction worker who seemed to be in need of some sleep. All of them had been holding cell phones when they attacked John, and all of them had done so in the savage, primitive way that Mr. Lee had done so only a short while ago. It took all of John’s mastery and knowledge of his block’s layout to avoid and lose the phone-crazies. Even if he wanted to defend himself, he was simply no match for the brutality and savagery of the insane people. All he could do now was to run away, and get to Sally as soon as possible.