Invasion! Earth vs. The Aliens

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Invasion! Earth vs. The Aliens Page 18

by Robert Reginald


  Except in one corner, where a multitude of crows hopped and fought over the remains of the men the Martians had consumed, there wasn’t a living thing to be seen anywhere.

  I could hardly believe my eyes. The machines were gone. Save for the mound of grayish-blue powder in one corner and some leftover bars of aluminum in another, the place was just an empty circle in the sand.

  Slowly I thrust myself outside, and finally stood staggering in the open air for the first time in two weeks. I could see clearly in every direction. The aliens were gone! The pit dropped off right at my feet, but I found a slope that would take me to the top of the ruins. I trembled in anticipation of my escape.

  Even so, I hesitated for about ten minutes; and then, with my heart pounding in my chest, I scrambled to the top of the mound under which I’d been buried so long.

  I carefully looked in every direction.

  No Martians!

  When I’d last viewed this area, it’d been a neatly paved street of comfortable houses interspersed with well-trimmed shade trees. Now I stood on a mound of smashed bricks, plaster, clay, lumber, and gravel, over which had grown a mass of red, cactus-shaped plants, almost knee-high, without a shoot of green anywhere to dispute their hegemony. The surviving trees of Earth were sere and dead; in the distance, however, I could see a network of red thread intertwined around some still living branches. How long the latter would survive was unknown.

  The neighboring homes had all been wrecked, although none had burned; some of their walls still stood intact, sometimes as high as the second story, with smashed windows and shattered doors. The red weed had spread riotously through their roofless rooms. Before me was the great pit, where the crows now fought over the scraps of man. I could also see and hear other birds hopping among the ruins. Far away I spied a gaunt cat slinking along a wall, but no traces of any living man whatsoever.

  The day seemed, by contrast with my dark confinement, dazzlingly bright, the sky a brilliant blue. The alien invasion had at least rid us of smog and other pollutants!

  A gentle breeze moved the red weed in a pavane that parodied popular dance: every inch of unoccupied ground waved at me, gently swaying back and forth, back and forth. I was mesmerized by its stately pantomime of planet-cide. The perfume of its little purple pustules penetrated my befuddled brain.

  And oh! Oh! The very sweetness of the air!

  CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX

  FIFTEEN GLORIOUS DAYS, FIFTEEN FUN-FILLED NIGHTS

  I am weary of days and hours,

  Blown buds of barren flowers.

  —Algernon Charles Swinburne

  Alex Smith, 17 Bi-January, Mars Year i

  Marin County, California, Planet Earth

  For the longest time I just stood there, heedless of my own safety. A Martian could have walked by at any time and harvested me. While imprisoned I’d only been aware of my immediate surroundings. I hadn’t had any notion of what’d been happening in the world outside. I’d expected to see some ruins, of course—but I suddenly found myself occupying a place that was literally “not of this Earth!” This wasn’t the world I’d abandoned two weeks earlier.

  It was the first time that I felt that we were no longer masters of our world, just mere animals among many others, all now crushed under the Martian heel. Our lot, it seemed to me, was to lurk and to watch, to run and to hide, whenever our masters walked among us. The rule of man had passed.

  But soon this feeling also passed, and I became aware of a terrible hunger gnawing at my insides. In the distance I could see a house that was relatively undamaged. I went creeping towards it knee-deep (sometimes neck-deep) in the red weed, hardly able to stand upright at times, seeking that little piece of paradise. There was a fence around the place, but when I tried to climb over it, I was just too weak. I finally found a gate where I could tumble into the yard. I broke a window. Inside I discovered a few odds and ends stashed away undiscovered in a bottom pantry (everything else had already been looted), mostly canned goods and some pop. I grabbed a can of salsa and popped the top.

  It was hot!

  It was really hot! I was crying as I shoved spoonful after spoonful into my gullet.

  But hellfire and damnation, it tasted like manna from heaven!

  I don’t think I’ve ever had anything better.

  And the warm soda?—hey, I chugged half of it in one swallow to wash away the burning sensation of the Mexican food.

  I found a few cans of fruit, vegetables, soup, and beans, all of it still good.

  But I also found I couldn’t eat very much of anything. My stomach had shriveled during my captivity, and I feared overtaxing it with something that it couldn’t digest.

  I fell asleep propped up against the cabinet right there on the kitchen floor.

  When I awoke, it was dark, and suddenly I really had to poop! I ran outside without even checking for aliens, and did my American duty all over the red weed, yes, sir, I did!

  Then I went back and ate some more. And slept some more. And pooped some more! And ate some more again!

  I spent several days there rebuilding my strength, and throughout that sojourn, so unlike my recent confinement in Hell, I gradually regained my strength and natural good spirits.

  I had no idea at this point what day it was. I’d lost track of time during my captivity. I think I spent fifteen days there, but I’m not really sure. The last few episodes tended to blur together in my memory. I was trying to forget everything about Reverend Lesley.

  On the third day of my release, I put together a makeshift pack, adding the lightest cans I could find for my trip. I exchanged my clothes with some that I’d found in one of the bedrooms—they didn’t fit well, but then neither did my own duds anymore. I still wanted to see the big city—and what had happened to it. I hadn’t been cured, dear friends, of my deadly itch of curiosity, oh no!

  A block or two down the road I splashed through a brown sheet of shallow water covering a place where a park used to be. I was surprised at this variation from the dry California landscape, but I soon discovered that the red weed tended to create standing pools of water wherever it grew. Liquid, almost any liquid, made the weed grow at an extraordinary rate, until it became huge in size. The resulting mass would quickly choke any waterway or drainage area, thereby creating mini-swamplands which allowed it to flourish even more. The weed was transforming the landscape in more ways than one.

  In the end, though, the red weed succumbed to disease almost as quickly as it’d spread initially. Some kind of canker, the botanists said, something that devastated its vascular system, choked the weed back on itself. The red growth rotted like a thing already dead, its fronds becoming bleached, then shriveling and turning brittle. In the final stage they’d break at the least little touch. The water that had stimulated its early growth then carried its vestiges out to sea. Or so we believed then. But as always with the Martians, we never investigated far enough, we never probed beneath the surface, we never asked or answered the real questions.

  And the chief of these was “why?”

  On my journey I had to drink some of the muddy water. When I exhausted my cans, I also tried gnawing on the roots of the red weed; they were pulpish and watery in nature, and tasted like a cross between turnips and jícamas that have gone a little past their prime, leaving a slightly bitter flavor in one’s mouth. Still, they stayed down and provided nourishment, and once I got past the slightly unusual taste, I didn’t hesitate to use them to supplement my diet.

  The swampy areas were sufficiently shallow for me to wade across them without difficulty, although the weed itself tended to impede my progress. There were wet patches everywhere, even on some of the roads, and I had to be careful that I didn’t slip. I was still very weak from my long ordeal. I managed to find the state highway again by noticing occasional houses and the lines of power pools and lights, and so made my way down towards Sausalito.

  Here the scenery changed once more, from the strange and unfamiliar to the sta
ndard urban wreckage I’d seen everywhere else that the aliens had visited: patches that exhibited the devastation of a tornado, interspersed with houses whose blinds were neatly drawn and doors primly closed, as if their inhabitants were still sleeping within (maybe they were). Ironically, this landscape seemed almost stranger to me now than the places that had been terraformed—or, more correctly, Marsaformed! The weed was less abundant here, for reasons I didn’t understand, and the tall trees along the lane were completely free of the alien creeper. I hunted assiduously for food in these places, but they’d already been ransacked thoroughly of anything worthwhile. I rested for the remainder of the day in a real bed, being too fatigued to press on.

  All this time I saw no living humans and no sign whatever of the Martians. I did encounter a couple of hungry-looking dogs, but both bolted on sight. It doesn’t take long for the veneer of civilization to vanish, even among our beloved pets. Later that day I saw two human skeletons—not bodies, but skeletons picked quite clean—and in the woods nearby I found the crushed and scattered remains of several cats and rabbits and even the skull of a sheep or goat. But although I gnawed the bones in my mouth, there was no nourishment left in them. I was growing hungry again: the Martian vegetation didn’t provide much nourishment to the human soul.

  In the hours before sunset I struggled along the road towards Fort Baker, where I saw further signs of the sting-rays at work. In a nearby house I found—oh glorious day!—a sack of sprouting potatoes that helped assuage my hunger. I ate them raw with a little salt. From Fort Baker one could look down upon the Golden Gate Bridge. What I spied were blackened trees, darkened ruins, and the remnants of a flooded ditch, red-tinged with the weed. I heard nothing but silence. How swiftly the world had fallen beneath the sway of the invaders!

  For a time I wondered whether mankind itself had been wiped from the Earth. I stood there alone, potentially the last man left alive.

  I stayed in Fort Baker overnight. The next morning I slowly trudged across the great bridge that spanned the Golden Gate, avoiding the wrecked and tangled cars, trucks, and vans. The only men I encountered were long dead. I stopped at mid-span, and gazed back into San Francisco Bay, filled now with the wreckage of great and small ships, blotted with dark oil stains and patches of the crimson kelp.

  The air was crystal clear. I thought I saw a strider perched on Treasure Island, but it might have been the wavering of the light. Then I turned widdershins and gazed out to sea, drowning my eyes in the great ocean expanse laid there before me, wanting to lose myself in the endless waves of blue. I almost ended it there. I even stood on the railing, holding onto a guy wire as I swayed in the breeze.

  Then I sighed and stepped back down onto the roadway. I looked back into the harbor. The central span of the Oakland Bridge was gone. I saw no smoke, no smog, no nothing. Man had been vanquished in little less than a month. But suddenly I laughed out loud, almost hysterically, because I realized that, in spite of everything, the Golden Gate Bridge was still standing! I was still standing. Surely that meant something. It had to. I would see what I could see, and hang the bloody consequences!

  So I entered upon the great city of San Francisco, Babylon-by-the-Bay. And the first thing that I saw there was the skeleton of a man, his arms separated several yards from the rest of his body.

  “And a very fine morning to you too,” I said.

  I didn’t care now who heard me—or what.

  As I plodded on into the city, I became more and more convinced that the extermination of mankind had already been accomplished in this part of the world, save for a few stragglers such as myself—and we wouldn’t be far behind. The Martians, I thought, had moved elsewhere, had left this country desolate, were now seeking their prey in some more distant community. Perhaps they were destroying Berlin or Paris or Washington, D.C., or maybe they’d moved east over the mountains into Nevada.

  I again laughed out loud at the thought of the aliens encountering the gamblers of Reno or Las Vegas, of being confronted at the city gates by a crowd of feckless, useless individuals calling themselves men and women.

  “Double or nothing?” one of them might say.

  “Double or nothing?” I screamed to the wind.

  “Double or nothing!” one of the Martians might have said.

  Who the hell knows?

  Who the hell cares?

  CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN

  THE KING OF S(N)OB HILL

  Whoso diggeth a pit shall fall therein;

  And he that rolleth a stone, it will return upon him.

  —Holy Bible, Proverbs 26:27

  Alex Smith, 20 Bi-January, Mars Year i

  San Francisco, California, Planet Earth

  I found refuge that night in a hotel on Nob Hill, sleeping in a clean, made-up bed for the first time in weeks. I’d ransacked a couple of rooms for food, until I found some cans of pineapple, a rack of drinks, and those endless packages of salted nuts. Gad, if I never see another roasted peanut or almond again in all my life, it’ll be too damned soon. And there was enough booze in those little storage cabinets that they so tastefully provided the guests that I could have swept my sorrows away for weeks. I sipped at a few of the mini-bottles before giving it up. Ultimately, they just made me sick.

  I was careful not to use the flashlights I’d uncovered or the candles, fearing that some Martian might come knocking for dinner during the night.

  Something drove me to prowl the huge place, floor by floor and window by window, peering out every so often for some sign of the invaders, but I managed finally to stop my wandering and settle down for the night. The hotel was so big that it ironically made me feel less secure. Thus, despite my fatigue, I slept very little, tossing and turning with wretched, repeated dreams of Lesley and Becky and the monsters chasing me around in circles. But as I lay in bed early the next morning, I found myself thinking clearly once again, something that I hadn’t been able to do since my last argument with the minister.

  I had to get on with things—whatever those might be.

  The death of Reverend Lesley and the fate of my wife still preoccupied me whenever I had a spare moment. I also needed to know the current whereabouts of the Martians if I was going to survive.

  Regarding the good Reverend, well, what can one say? It was she or I. If I had to make the same choices all over again, I’m quite sure that I’d do exactly the same thing. Lesley was unable to cope with the alteration of her world. She was one of those individuals who based her image of herself on her accouterments: in this case, her position and her church. Take those away, and the structure of her personality suddenly collapsed. God had unforgivably dealt her a losing hand. The Martians just didn’t fit into her worldview. Neither did I.

  And Becky?—well, she was either alive or dead. I had no way of knowing what’d happened to her. I probably shouldn’t have left her with her aunt, but I did, and now I was paying the price: guilt, guilt, guilty as charged, Your Honor! There was absolutely nothing I could do about the situation now. I still remained an observer at the very heart of the matter. For some reason, for some strange and awful reason, I was the one person in the world who was in the right place at the right time to record the invasion of the Martians.

  So I needed to know where the aliens had gone, or even if they were still around. I needed to find out because, well, because I needed to, that’s all. I wanted to know. Even today, I still want to know. Why, why, why? I try to frame questions that are simple enough to answer but complicated enough to hold my interest. And always I come back to the basic question of “why?”

  I got up and staggered into the bathroom, making use of the facilities. Better that than a ditch! The water was mostly off this far up from the street. I just got a trickle from the faucet. The haggard image glaring back at me from the mirror was the face of a stranger: salt-and-pepper beard (it itched abominably), lined forehead, gaunt face, matted hair shooting every which way, and old, even ancient eyes.

  “Here’s lookin’ at
you, kid,” I sighed.

  I managed to locate some clean clothing in one of the dresser drawers. Like the previous set, they didn’t fit me exactly, but I didn’t think the aliens would mind. Then I went down to the ruins of the hotel restaurant to scrounge a breakfast. Surely there must be something left down there.

  I was opening cupboard doors and storage cabinets and bins, looking for anything that hadn’t spoiled, when I heard a noise just behind me.

  “Hands up!” came the command.

  Slowly I complied.

  “Now turn around.”

  I very carefully obeyed. Standing in front of me was a forty-something woman with short, dark hair, a Giants baseball cap, and a really big gun pointed right at my heart.

  “What are you doing?”

  “Probably the same as you,” I said. “I was looking for something to eat, if you really want to know.”

  “I don’t, especially. If I give you some food, will you go away?”

  “Well, here I am, practically the only man left on Earth, so far as I can tell; we haven’t even been introduced yet, and already you want me to leave. How about putting that gun down?”

  “I don’t think so,” she said.

  “At least tell me your name. I’m Alex Smith, by the way.”

  “Umm, Nomsah. Nomsah Vassilidis.”

  “Now that’s an odd one. I know, because I study names. That’s just not something you hear everyday.”

  I looked at her more closely in the dim light.

  “Haven’t I seen you somewhere before?”

  “I’ve heard that line too,” she said. “No. I think you can have a couple of mini-boxes of cereal and maybe a can of peaches, and then you’ll be on your way, sir, or you’ll be very, very dead, sir. I’m good at predicting things, and this is one future I can assure you will actually happen. I’m not interested in playing games.

 

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