Awakenings (Finish The Story Entry)

in #finishthestory6 years ago

Opening by @f3nix

The hoverbike lay abandoned on its side, the engine still warm. The fine black dust carried by the incessant wind was a snake that crept in every small recess.

From the top of the dune the Tesseract 19 could be seen with the naked eye. The column pierced the black sea of ​​graphite and challenged the dark crimson sky. The awareness of his distance made him wince. That construction was enormous. That impenetrable artifact, Moloch's sharpest tooth.

Intertwined with dust, the warm wind brought an imperceptible howl: the bark of the monolith, an omen of death.

The man waited, a stiff exoskeleton bent over the black sand. The helmet lay abandoned beside him. Soon the team would have arrived.

"Soon you will arrive too and everything will be accomplished, one way or another."

He thought of her smile, her courage, her strength. "My life, how could I've been so reckless to have you involved in all this?" The tears were already kneading blackened as the memories of their happy normality swept over him.

"I can not let them find me like this". He stared at himself from outside: another tower on a dune, far more uncertain than the one that howled his feral wish.

These and other demons echoed within the chambers of his soul, when his eyes met a green sprout. The man stared that little miracle that, against every odd, was striving to affirm its existence. In the midst of that sea of bottomless ​​despair.

The tear finally found its way lingering and bathed a leaf. The man managed to pull himself together and, now smiling, he put on his helmet.

"This Moloch will tremble, time has come for an awakening."

My Ending

He walked the fine line in his mind, all to aware of the edge he could not cross. He had to wait, and greet them with a smile, and that, he would.


The Moloch of the eastern plains had protected them, held back the powdered sea of another dimension, the assault of tearing particles consuming the landscape, but at what cost.

He had promised her, all those years ago, as he knelt down on the floor beside her, cradling her cracking, shaking body.

He had murmured that promise many times since, in those moments late at night, when her silent breathless sobbing had woken him, shuddering between the sheets. When he got up to find she hadn’t made it to work, curled up under a blanket, unable to face the world. At some point, she had believed the words he was never sure if he had really meant.

“The Tesseract-19 will stop him”

Whispers in the dead of night, planted a seed he hadn't the heart to uproot. From it, her hope, her smile, her courage, had blossomed, and led them here.


Distant plumes of black sand, churned up like the breath of a beast beneath the dunes, puffed across the horizon, torn away as though erased in anger by the tumentoulous wind.

The team were moments away.


“Is this the spot?”

She strolled over, her helmet tucked under her arm, the folds of her light exo-suit outlined in black dust.

He nodded in response. He was here, this must be it.


From the moment they had joined, Elli had wanted to be on the final team. He had resisted, feigned, redirected, but three months ago, she had come to him, her hand resting on her stomach, and he saw it. That sparkle he thought the Moloch had taken from her.

He knew then, she couldn’t see it fail, and neither could he; they couldn’t pay the price of protection ever again. He’d signed them both up for this the next day.

Five others had folded their names on the slips of paper.


The jagged towering Tesseract, a plinth in the distance, was still too close for his comfort. They had no way of knowing if this time, it would work. The others, the other plains and districts, had failed.

The news broadcasts that had followed, more children, dragged away from their howling parents, echoed in the harsh cry of the wind.

Elli was setting up the Pentatope, aligning the palpitating prism between the planes.

Pole had pulled his helmet back on, lifting his hoverbike from the advancing sands. Someone had to be there, in the Tesseract, to activate the 19- cell honey-comb alternation.

They had wanted to draw straws, but Pole had insisted. He always said it was the Moloch who took his wife’s life, she may have wafted out the ember, but the Moloch had put out her flame.


They waited, the six of them, the line of black sand from Pole’s bike, a burning fuse rushing away into the distance.

The Moloch’s sharpest tooth, snapped off, would bleed the most profusely.


The Pentatope twisted into life, writhing between the dimensions, resonating on the screaming wind.

The moment it happened, the Moloch would know; if this failed, It would come for them

It would sense the mortal heart beats, hammering out across the dunes of black death. All seven of them.

This was a very fun one to write, trying to go a completely different way to the first time we had this theme, hopefully picked up on a few more of the technical things, although yes, another one without a whole load of explanation or a definitive ending. Slightly over the word count but somewhere around 570 so not too bad this time.

How would you have finished this story? Like this? Something totally different? Let us know by giving it a go! Wabna see the other endings - make sure to head over the the @bananafish page where all the entries will be resteemed.

This is my entry to #finishthestory - run over on the @bananafish - this week hosted by our full time 'nana navigator, the prince of potassium potential, the one, the only prophet man himself @f3nix

Photo Credit by Pixabay User Pexels who has a crazy insane amount of pictures

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Write a story, with the specific intention of scaring Calluna

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He had murmured that promise many times since, in those moments late at night, when her silent breathless sobbing had woken him, shuddering between the sheets. When he got up to find she hadn’t made it to work, curled up under a blanket, unable to face the world. At some point, she had believed the words he was never sure if he had really meant.

I really liked this image. There's a depth of emotion here through that imagery.

I see that we all concur with that.

more children, dragged away from their howling parents, echoed in the harsh cry of the wind.

I like the way you weave the howling in the story into the wind. Resonates so with current events. Makes the point more poignant.

Also see that you picked up on the dimension--had to educate myself for that one.

Effective end that gives us insight into the wife, and the relationship.

The ending very much reminded me of the first rebel scene in Anti-Citizen 1 in Half-Life 2 where they pulled a Breen Monitor down. All the passions stirring as victory over an oppressive signifier had been overcame. This is some good build-up here, the ending payed off as aforementioned. Upvot'd and resteem'd.
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At some point, she had believed the words he was never sure if he had really meant.

I see that both me, @dirge and also @agmoore agreed in finding the focus on the couple's dynamics interesting. That sentence hit me, in particular. The sci-fi details were also a plus. I remain wandering about the Pentatope, this mysterious dimensional key. In ancient greek, it would mean "five places".. uhmmm 🤔

Thank you :)

I discovered the pentatope in a deep dive on research on Tesseract's. The standard 16-cell honey comb Tesseract has an alternation in 19 cells, which i figured could be a tesseract-19. The pentatope (or 5 cell) corresponds to the 16-cell in the a and b series respectively, so seemed the best fit for working like a key. That said, hours of wiki, probably got myself rather confused.

Also, totally didn't get the sprout/plant part. Somehow i read it as spout, with the sea part, and was envisioning a puff of green rising from the sea of black sand in the distance, as like, shudders from the inter-dimensional monolith. And spent a good few hours trying to figured out the 'bathed a leaf' in the end, figured it was something lost on me, focusing too much on the details with a mind wipe out. Concluded it was to with turning over a new leaf, a new start. Damn it, first one back and done it again!

Your mind processes are a trip on their own ;-)
Thanks Cal for the pentatope hint, I'll research on it I got curious.. I've to say that the level of research impressed me.

I like the way in which information is naturally disseminated in the flow of history, in a suggested and not explicit way. I can guess that the price requested by the Moloch is the sacrifice of children, like many mythological monsters, like the Minotaur, and that Elli is pregnant and the couple does not want to give in to the blackmail of the monster.

He had resisted, feigned, redirected, but three months ago, she had come to him, her hand resting on her stomach, and he saw it.

I think, perhaps mistakenly, that this is the description of the moment when he discovered that Elli was expecting a baby.

P.S. the fantastic / science fiction details are pure gold

Liked the development of the love story. And the female action hero!