Year 11 Urmston

He sat in his chair, hunchbacked, with his eyes fixed on the pages. To everyone else he was reading, but really, he was in a foreign world where he could taste the words on the tip of his tongue, hear them as they floated from the paper and chattered in his ears. He held the pages so close to his face, the ink began to bleed, it was as if he was trying to pull himself into the stories to escape from his life. How long had he been sat there? He didn’t know, but it didn’t matter, how much could he have missed anyway, its not like anything interesting ever happens in these parts

The window next to his chair faced a street, usually busy street, to be expected of course as it ran straight to the pub.

On this particular day, at this particular moment he had zoned out and glanced out of the window, into the real world. “how odd?” he thought. To his surprise the hustle and bustle, natter and chatter was nowhere to be seen. It was Saturday and he knew it must be midday because of the beams of lights that filtered through his blinds. It was the prime time for pub goers yet, he saw no one. It was too odd for his liking so as one does, he thought he’d investigate.

On his doorstep he was confronted by a huge nothing. No people, no noise, and no traffic. He looked left and the right, up and down the street and still nobody appeared. As he strolled towards the pub in an effort to quash any thought in his mind that all humanity had disappeared from the face of the earth as there was always people in the pub, he started to noticed what looked like rainbows in his neighbours windows. In all shapes and sizes, they came, painting, murals, even whole windows plastered with every colour he could think of. Suddenly a pang of embarrassment came over him as he glanced back at his bare window, the same embarrassment a parent who sends their child to school without a costume on world book day feels. He drew his eyes back from his characterless pane of glass in an effort not to bump into anyone, though he realised as he looked down the deserted street he was probably more likely to bump into a tumbleweed at this point.

“oh god” he yelped, trying to keep his lips closed, it was empty. The pub was closed. He began to panic. Everyone knew that it would take an apocalypse to close the pub, especially on a Saturday afternoon. Thudding in his chest, sweat on his brow, he keeled over, panting, trying to grasp at as much oxygen he could. He looked up to see a figure coming towards him. “Thank God!” he shouted as he ran closer, yet when he saw the mask on her face, the gloves on her hands, he began to back away. The panting started again. “what’s going on?” he cried. The figure spoke with a kind and surprising calm voice, “haven’t you heard…”

Blink

He blinked again and realised his pages were covered in tears. “wow” the thought to himself still trying to regain his composure. “what a great story, though I’m not really in the mood for a dystopia at the minute…”

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