Chapter 185: Story 185: The Last Horizon
The world had changed overnight. One moment, it was the bustling city of Arcadia, and the next, it was chaos—a fiery apocalypse unfolding before their very eyes. The mushroom cloud rose into the sky like an angry god, darkening the heavens with ash and fire. The horizon, once filled with the silhouettes of skyscrapers, now shimmered in the heat of destruction.
Max tightened his grip on the steering wheel, knuckles white from the pressure. The open road stretched ahead, seemingly endless, as he sped away from the smoldering ruins of the city. The highway, once busy with cars and life, now felt eerily empty. A few other vehicles remained, their occupants fleeing, just like him, toward an uncertain future.
Beside him, his daughter, Emma, sat quietly. Her face, pale and expressionless, stared out the window at the growing storm of devastation behind them. She had been silent for hours, ever since they saw the first explosion. It felt like a dream—a nightmare that refused to end.
"Are we going to be okay, Dad?" Emma finally asked, her voice trembling.
Max didn't know how to answer. He didn't know if they'd be okay. No one knew. There had been no warning, no sirens, no messages. Just a flash, and then the world was set ablaze. But as a father, he had to be strong, for her.
"We're going to be fine," he said, though the words tasted like a lie. "We just need to keep moving."
The road ahead twisted and turned, and every now and then, they passed abandoned cars or overturned trucks. The air smelled of burning, and the darkening sky made it hard to see more than a few miles ahead. It felt like the end of the world.
A loud rumble echoed through the air, and Max glanced in the rearview mirror. Another explosion, this one farther from the city but still close enough to send shockwaves through the atmosphere. The highway shuddered beneath them, and the sky ignited in flashes of orange and red. The heat was almost unbearable, even from a distance.
"Where are we going?" Emma asked, breaking the silence again.
"North," Max replied. "There's a shelter up there. We'll be safe." He didn't know if that was true either, but it was the only thing keeping him from breaking down. Keep moving. Keep running. Don't look back.
They drove in silence for what felt like hours, the road stretching on and on, as if time had slowed to a crawl. The once vibrant horizon was now nothing but a vast wasteland, shrouded in the fiery remains of the city.
Max glanced at Emma, her small frame dwarfed by the enormity of the situation. "We'll make it," he whispered, more to himself than her.
But as the fiery cloud expanded behind them, swallowing the sky and blotting out the sun, the road ahead seemed more uncertain than ever.