There are 291 articles on this title. You are reading the article ranked and rated #2 by Helium's members.
"One Nation" - Part I
They told us it would save lives. They said it would make us safe. They lied.
Who could have thought it would turn out this way? With all of us locked up in prison camps, identified by number, waiting to die. We had no names. We had no choice. We had no escape.
The blaring scream of the pre-dawn horn ripped through the night. They'd gotten that idea from us too. I almost had to laugh at the thought; we were literally prisoners of our own genius.
But we were not without our own resources. They were depending on us all giving up hope. That's just human nature; when the chips are down, and you've been beat, you just get along as best you can. You give up, or you go on.
The problem, though, with humanity is what they call the anomaly'. Not all of us are so easily herded. Not all of us gave up.
Even after they'd leveled our cities, toppled our governments, and taken away everything we'd ever held dear; even after they'd separated our families, executed our friends and loved ones, and stripped us of all that we'd ever known, some of us would not break. Some of us would never surrender our hearts and our minds to their dominion.
I was one of those anomalies. I took my place in line, shuffling my chains in step with the others as we marched into camp yard.
They did their very best to weed us out. They used collaborators, psych tests, and even tried genetic screening in an attempt to find every last human "predisposed to rebellious tendencies". But they could not get us all.
It was only one or two, here and there. Maybe one in a thousand. But we were there.
We didn't know exactly how many of us there were. We didn't even know one another from the generic faces in the crowded sea of bland, miserable, humanity. But every one of us knew our enemy's weakness. And every one of us waited, living out the endless grinding agony of our days, for our chance to exploit it.
It was our last hope.
While the rest of the survivors looked back in sadness to the wonder of days gone by, regretting our terrible mistakes, some few of us looked back for another reason. We listened to the stories of how easily they'd overwhelmed us, and we saw that they'd used our own tactics. We listened as the old ones spoke of the first prison camps, and we recognized our own propaganda. We trembled as we heard of the first cleansings', and we saw the ageless face of our own genocides.
And here we were today, lined up in perfect rows, hands over our hearts, as the rising sun crested the horizon
Below are the top articles rated and ranked by Helium members on:
by Scott Stadt
The Well
The cold white walls made some form of work more antiseptic at times. Not that there was any reason to worry about
by Bryan Belrad
"One Nation" - Part I
They told us it would save lives. They said it would make us safe. They lied.
Who could have thought
by Lee Meccia
Ghost in the Machine
The machine sat in the barren wasteland that had once been urban America. Once a symbol of power and
by Tsing Tao
Incident on North Stone Road
Chapter I
I've got some time to kill while I'm waiting here for Lilly to decide whether she's
AD 2700
The rest of the City beyond my apartment is a rising stack of glass helixes and pregnant ellipsoids, twisting up to
View All Articles on:
Short stories: Science fiction
Add your voice
Know something about Short stories: Science fiction?
We want to hear your view.
Write now!
Featured Partner
MENTOR - National Mentoring Partnership
MENTOR has partnered with Helium, giving you the chance to write for a cause. Browse MENTOR's featured titles, p...more
hide