TW: Gore/Suicide.
“It has been eighteen months since my last traveling companion was speared through the chest by a white tail deer. I told him to wait before tracking an injured animal when hunting with a bow. He didn’t listen and the deer charged him, pinning him right up against a tree. I followed the boy’s scream through the woods. I knew he had to be injured, but I wasn’t expecting him to be gored by a deer. He was lying against the tree, coughing up pink, frothy blood with terror and shock in his eyes, blood pouring profusely from his wounds. There was nothing I could do for him. He was going to die. We both knew it. If bullets hadn’t been a thing of the past, I would have put the boy out of his misery. The best I could do was hold his hand and stay with him until he passed on. Watching someone die is an emotional experience, but by that point in my life, it was what it was. I left his body where it lay and tracked down the deer.
“He was the last person I have seen alive in the last twenty-three months, since the day my wife died from an infected cut on her leg. He was a teenaged boy who lost his parents to starvation. He was wandering the desolate landscape trying to stay alive for the sake of staying alive. I guess that was all we were doing together, but it was better than doing it alone. A year and a half of solitude is a long time. A stimulating conversation to remind me that I’m more than an animal driven by the instinct to survive would be wildly welcomed, laughter and the warmth of comradery even more so.
“I could very well be the last man alive. I have no way of knowing for sure. I’ve traveled the U.S. extensively, looking for others, hoping for a small community wanting to repopulate the nation and reestablish a functional society. I’ve sent out radio messages at every radio station I’ve come across. I’ve sent out word on trucker call boxes across the country. Neither have yet to result in a response. Yet here I am on old KLSK Flagstaff, Arizona, putting out the word that I am here, as I have been for two days now, trying to reach someone, anyone. So, if you are in the area, and you happen to be listening, stop by. Say hi. I have whiskey. Now, for my listening pleasure, here is Linkin Park with Given Up.”
Charlie calls up the heavy-hitting song and hits play. He slaps the mic, and it swivels out of his face. As guitar riffs flood the room, he grabs his whiskey and pushes away from the desk, rolling to the other side of the room, crashing into the cabinets behind him. He lunges to his feet and pours the whiskey straight down his throat, a trick he learned in college during his beer bong days. He begins kicking over and throwing everything not nailed down, screaming along with the vocals. As the song comes to an end, Charlie hurls the desk chair through the sound engineer’s window, glass shattering everywhere. He stands there looking at the destruction he caused with a smile, breathing heavily. Slowly his countenance fades.
For a moment he felt better, but the release of pent-up anger was fleeting. Now he just feels sad, depressed, fatigued. He takes a long chug off the bottle of whiskey and moves over to the window, glass crunching beneath his boots. He pulls a large chunk of glass from the window frame and examines it closely, as if he’s trying to unlock the mystery of its composition. Without taking his eyes off the piece of glass, he backs up to the desk and climbs up on it, sitting with his legs crossed. He sits his bottle of whiskey down and grabs the mic. Switching back to on air, Charlie begins to speak.
“After the bombs were dropped and millions of lives were extinguished, I thought I was lucky. I thought I was even luckier to avoid the fallout and radiation sickness. I felt lucky to have survived the cannibals and the gangs that emerged when food, water, and manufactured goods became scarce. Even as the love of my life lay next to me dying, I felt lucky that it was her and not me. How horrible is that? A better man would have been willing to trade places with her. All I could think about was that I didn’t want that suffering, I didn’t want to die. I thought, better her than me. Isn’t that terrible?
"Was I truly lucky though? Almost two years later and do I feel lucky? No, I no longer feel so lucky. I feel I have been set up by some higher being for some sort of sadistic punishment that I can no longer bear, fated to walk this desolate world alone.”
Charlie pauses and takes a swig of whiskey. He looks at the piece of glass again. He looks away and thinks for a moment. Then he continues to speak.
“Even the simplest organisms strive to survive, if for any reason to reproduce. I don’t even have that motivation anymore. Why didn’t my wife and I do that? Why didn’t we just settle down and have children? At first, there were some remnants of society left, a society we didn’t see fit to raise a child in. I guess we felt it necessary to find a place where child rearing was less dangerous. I don’t know. What I do know is that the thought of the responsibility of repopulating the Earth falling squarely on our shoulders was the farthest thing from our minds. Now, with her passing, it is too late. I could keep going, but to what ends,” Charlie says, once again looking at the piece of glass in his hand.
“I’ve been wandering the world for too long. Hunger and thirst are my companions. Exhaustion is my closest friend. Death nips at my heels with every step I take. I feel I’m just prolonging the inevitable,” he says, as he calls up Green Day’s Good Riddance and hits play. He takes one final swig of whiskey for courage. He puts the glass on his wrist and closes his eyes. A loud knock comes from the studio’s back exit. Charlie opens his eyes.
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25 comments
I really enjoyed this story, as it piques one's interest, with the unfolding being unique. To be honest, though, I think some parts could have done with some expansion. I mean this kindly, and it is, most likely, from my greed of wanting more. With you leaving it on a cliffhanger, I hope to read its sequel sometime. Brilliant work!
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Love this story. The ending is perfect. Well done GW...
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The figurative opening of eyes as hope arrives and the survival instinct kicks in once again. I like the ending as is. A sombre story but a good one, Ghost.
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I also wonder who is at the door. Great story here. The expansion could have been a flashback for readers to understand what happened, not more doom and gloom about the current surroundings. I think the picture is vivid enough.
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I want a follow up! Lol. Who’s at the door?! Great job as always. Look forward to reading your stories each week
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A woman. They travel to Costa Rica where they join a small colony of people and start a family. Thanks for reading.
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Love it… keep it in mind for another prompt that could fit that bill… then put a promote saying this is a sequel to this story!
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That's good advice. I'll do that. Thank you.
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Yes very nice .... why Ghost Writer ??? Be proud this was a nicely written piece.
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Ghost Writer, this story is a hauntingly beautiful exploration of loneliness and survival. The line that struck me the most was, "I have no way of knowing for sure. I’ve traveled the U.S. extensively, looking for others, hoping for a small community wanting to repopulate the nation and reestablish a functional society." It perfectly encapsulates the heartbreaking yearning for connection in a world stripped bare, and I loved how it subtly conveyed both resilience and despair. Your portrayal of Charlie’s spiral into desolation, capped with tha...
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Wow. You're as good at giving feedback as you are writing. I really appreciate you taking the time to read and comment.
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You are very kind to say that. It was my pleasure to read this story!
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Knock knock. I heard you had whiskey?
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LOL - I thought about taking it a little farther and having someone say that.
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Great minds... :)
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Well done!! Now I really want to know who was at the door!!
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Saved by a knock at the door. He better have some whiskey left:)
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Great ending to pull Charlie out of his spiraling angst and loneliness. You capture the rawest of emotions in his soliloquy: Even as the love of my life lay next to me dying, I felt lucky that it was her and not me. How horrible is that? A better man would have been willing to trade places with her. All I could think about was that I didn’t want that suffering, I didn’t want to die. Well-conceived and well-enjoyed!
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Thanks Harry!
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I felt the guy's despair and loneliness and the beginning of the loss of his humanity. Not having others around will do that. I did wonder, if everything is gone, how can he make radio stations work and where did he find the booze? (just minor technicalities, I'm sure) :-)
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Thanks for reading Judy! He just Happened to find the booze at the station and Charlie's last name was Macgyver. He fixes plot holes ;-)
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LOL
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Ha ha ha ha
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I like the scene and where this goes at the end. If humans don't have babies we'll just disappear. The never ending conflict between our individual search for meaning and our biological purpose. Good twist with the knock on the door at the end. The middle contains a lot of exposition, maybe the story could add some tension by knowing the purpose of why he's giving the speech. "I'm done and this is my last speech to the world..." or something like that. Or introducing the MC, he always wanted to be on the radio and now is his chance. just ra...
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Thanks for reading Scott. I feel the story is missing something too. I just can't put my finger on it. I'm going to take your suggestions into consideration. I'm seeking to show a man's sense of loneliness and purposelessness as the last surviving human through a drunken broadcast that leads down a rabbit hole of despair. I'm not real sure if I've captured that. Good luck to you this week as well!
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