Thursday, July 11, 2013

One of my short stories



Our Planet

My young days were spent at my Grandpa Christopher’s farm. We would spend all summer there my brother Daniel and I while we had school holidays.

There was always a lot to do from early morning till late in the evenings. We would milk the cows, feed the chickens, and ride the tractor while grandpa would till the land. In the afternoon, we would go swimming in the little pond down in the forest and play cowboy and Indians in the barn. 

Being on the farm kept us close to nature with all sorts of flying insects and crawling bugs and Grandpa used to always say, “learn to share your planet”.

Then we grew up and went to college and earned our university degrees and joined the corporate world.

It was a rat race and we soon forgot all about nature and were immersed in the daily routine of city life. No space for anyone in this life, no animals, no pets and not even a fish aquarium. 

We were so very busy earning our living, fighting the corporate politics and traveling to and from work that we had little time for anything else.

Our apartments were fumigated regularly as the kids were afraid of bugs and the wives would raise merry hell. Parks were no longer safe as muggers and drug addicts had taken over. There were no more zoos after the last incident of some drug crazed maniac feeding substance to the animals and killing half the population.

Weekends at the farms were a thing of the past as our children had the least amount of interest and would rather spend time on their computers and internet and hi fi gadgetry.

We truly were living a mechanical life almost as good as robots.
We had no time for others and others had no time for us. Life was one big highway to office and back and we forgot all issues like kindness to animals, partying with friends, days out with the family and get-together with relatives. 

The corporations began to dump their waste into the rivers and seas and soon with the chemicals and nuclear waste, a change was being noticed. 

Our bugs became more and more resistant to the insecticides and the fumigation companies began to use more and more lethal chemicals. These too ultimately reached the oceans and mutated our fish making them inedible. 

The food chain began to get affected, and soon our poultry and livestock supply began to die. They became affected by the feed and there after we moved to genetically grown animals and this created all sorts of other issues that people stopped eating meat.

But as if that was the least of our problems, nature has its funny ways and soon the oceans began to evaporate causing the harmful particles to go into the atmosphere and upon condensation converted to acid rain on our fields of agriculture contaminating our food supply. Man started fighting for food and countries went to war for uncontaminated food stock from the godowns built under the earth.

Then one day, the bugs came, swarms of locusts started from the south and meticulously covered miles and miles of land as they moved up the countryside devouring all in their way. Reproducing furiously, they grew in size as the days went by and people had nowhere to hide. Soon the black ants joined the wave along with carnivorous cockroaches and there was a dual land and air attack and the globe was being run over.

All telecommunications were down, no army forces could do anything, the bugs had eaten into all the wiring of the nuclear bombs and eventually mankind had no chance. 

The darkness is coming they said that morning, and soon the skies turned black and there was this strange clicking sounds coming nearer and nearer.

And as the darkness came upon us, I remembered Christopher, my grandpa and his words, “learn to share your planet”.

-     The End -