The Minimalists
The man woke in a pile of charred wooden beams, and smashed and
splintered furniture. He ached all over, cuts and bruises covering
his body, his clothes ripped to shreds. After pushing some scraps of
wood off of him and brushing dust from his eyes, he carefully stood
up, waves of agony pulsing through his body. Half of his home was
completely gone, scattered for a quarter mile in every direction, and
he could see daylight through what was left of the walls. He inched
toward the open doorway, the door long since ripped from its hinges
and effortlessly thrown far away. He stepped outside and looked at
the sky. It was orangish red, and smoke billowed from the murky
horizon. The sun was setting. He sat on the ground, covered in dew,
and gently laid on his back. Closing his eyes, Evan exhaled deeply
and thought about what had happened.
Evan had been a high-ranking executive at a prestigious
corporation, earning six figures with consistent pay raises. He
worked hard, often working between 10 and 12 hour days, and usually
at least one day every weekend to get where he was. He had a
beautiful five bedroom home, a luxurious vehicle, and more land than
he knew what to do with; not that he could do anything with it with
how often he was sitting behind his desk at work. He had no wife, no
kids, not even a girlfriend, and at 26 years old, he was doing very
well for himself. He was happy, or at least he thought he was,
if not a little lonely.
At 4:38 PM, the alarms and sirens had begun to wail, and
emergency alerts were sent to everyone's cell phone. A dozen
missiles had been detected soaring towards various, evenly spaced
locations throughout the country, and they were unlike anything the
military has ever seen before, with dozens more expected to follow.
They each had a payload equivalent to the power of a nuclear warhead,
but they weren't. Of course, nobody knew that at the time. The
missiles made contact, and annihilated everyone within a 15 mile
radius of them. They could be heard as distant pops, followed by
enormous invisible shockwaves tearing up houses and trees and
throwing them farther than the eye could see, not that anyone was
watching them.
When the alarms went off, Evan sprinted down the seven flights of
stairs from his office to the ground floor, jumped into his car and
sped to his house. He had barely gotten into his living room when the
shockwave pulverized his home, turning the beautiful structure into a
pile of rubble in moments. He had no idea how he survived the blast,
he could only imagine he was the luckiest man on Earth in that
moment. Or was he? He was unconscious for hours, and when he saw the
results of the explosions, he wept. He cried harder than he ever
remembered crying. He had lost everything he had worked so hard for
over the last eight years of his life. He had no friends, other than
coworkers, his family had passed away two years ago at the hands of
three burglars armed with assault rifles. He quickly moved away to
California eight years ago, 1000 miles away from what he considered
home, to start his life over. He purchased his home well away from
the city, which he was now thankful for, and lived in solitude,
trying to rebuild his life. He wept silently, as everything he had
was gone within moments, for the second time in his life. He fell
asleep.
He was woken by the sound of a black limousine parking next time
him, followed by two armored vehicles. A tall, pale man stepped out
of the car, dressed in a black dress shirt and blue jeans. He was
clean shaven, with well-kept dark hair, and he was in decent shape
for a man who seemed to be in his late 40's to early 50's. He
purposefully walked toward Evan holding a single sheet of paper, and
placed the paper carefully on his chest.
"This needed to happen. You needed this, everyone needed
it. Read this, and try to understand. Things are going to get a lot
better in the coming years, Evan." the man said, with a deep
sadness in his voice.
Evan was terrified, he couldn't bring himself to respond. The
man walked back to the limousine, got in, and the driver took him
away, the armored trucks following. What the hell is going on?
He thought, grabbing the paper. His hands shaking violently, he read
it.
"If you are reading this, you are one of the lucky few. We have
all gotten complacent, spoiled ourselves with material possessions,
and taken life for granted. People have been murdering, raping, and
robbing for decades, centuries. Technology has made us weak minded,
and we have all become dependent on it to live our daily lives. That
is now over. Governments across the globe have agreed, and decided
that it was time to change. This was not a terrorist attack on our
country; this was a cleansing. Of the seven billion people populating
this planet, only a few hundred thousand remain. We will no longer
destroy our world. We will no longer pollute it. Things are going
back to the way they were when humans first began. We must do
better." At the bottom of the letter, it was signed "The
Minimalists".
After reading the letter, Evan was sick with disgust. How could
governments around the world do this? How could they kill almost
everyone? He couldn't understand. He crumpled the letter and threw
it as far as he could, given how much pain he was in. He was angry.
They had taken everything not only from him, but from everyone. Not
everyone was a killer, or a criminal. Not everyone littered, or
contributed to the destruction of forests and oceans. It wasn't
fair. The sun was almost past the horizon now, and it was dark. He
laid on the cold, hard ground again and fell asleep.
When he woke in the morning, Evan started walking. He had no idea
where he was going, but he knew he had to walk, to leave everything
behind and start over yet again. Using the sun as his compass, he
walked East and kept walking for as long as he could, day after day.
After a few weeks of walking and scavenging for food, his body was
thin, and he had grown a long and messy beard. Eventually, he found a
large valley, seemingly untouched by the destruction of the attack.
He had no idea how far he had traveled, but he had gone far enough,
he thought. After walking down into the valley, he saw a small group
of five people huddled around a small fire. They were cooking, it
seemed, and they saw him approaching. Two adult women his three
children behind them, terrified. He held up his hands, and yelled
"Please, don't be afraid, I'm not going to hurt you!". The
women relaxed, just a little, and after a few minutes he finally
reached them.
The first woman who spoke was short, with long brown hair down to
her lower back. She had a weary expression on her face, and dark
circles of exhaustion around her eyes, as did the others in her
group. "Were you attacked too?" she asked, her voice shaky and
scared.
"Yes, I was... It was terrible ma'am, there was a huge
explosion, and fire everywhere. The entire city I worked in was
destroyed, everything is gone. The only reason I lived was because my
home was many miles away from the explosion. I'm..." he paused
for a moment. "I'm Stewart. You can call me Stu." He held his
hand out to her, and she shook it with a light, dainty grip. It's
time to start over, he thought. "I'm Loren, and this is
Sarah." She pointed to the woman next to her, who was also short,
and had short, blond hair. "The little ones are Kylie, Emma, and
Peter". Loren forced a sad smile, and turned toward the children.
They were all very young, under the age of seven or eight, and they
looked tired and were covered in dirt.
Evan sighed, sadness creeping into him again at the reminder of
everything he lost. Loren hugged the children close to her and asked
"Do you know why this happened? Are we the only ones?". He
thought of the letter he had been given, of the tall man riding away
in the limousine, and decided not to tell her about it. He had
thought a lot on his journey here, of God knows how many miles, and
decided that maybe the tall man was right. He didn't think so many
innocent people should had been killed, but maybe we all really did
need this. People didn't need electricity or computers thousands of
years ago, it was something to make life easier. He thought that
maybe it was better if everyone started over, used the knowledge that
we have, and lived their lives humbly and peacefully.
"I have no idea, but I heard on the radio
on my way home that the attacks were all over the world... billions
of people have been killed Loren. The attackers called themselves The
Minimalists, they said they were 'cleansing' the Earth, trying to
bring things back to how they were when humans first began. They said
they were only going to save a few...". Evan saw Loren start to
cry. She told the children to go to Sarah, who was sitting in front
of the first a few yards away. He hugged her, and asked if he could
stay with them. She nodded, and he let her go. They walked to Sarah,
who was sitting by the slowly dwindling fire and watching Kylie,
Emma, and Peter play nearby.
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