Submitted by Armadillo_Signal t3_119ut50 in WritingPrompts
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Armadillo_Signal OP t1_j9o4e5y wrote
hello, whats wrong with the prompt
Blair17621 t1_j9o894p wrote
Just explaining to people how the sub works I think
Yuriy116 t1_j9obcld wrote
"That's no moon..."
0lazy0 t1_j9p1r49 wrote
This is on every post, you’re all good
MaR_KeR t1_j9pa65k wrote
It happened only two months ago. I saw it with my own eyes. I was finishing up with my work and took a quick look outside the window. As I was inspecting the buildings and traffic, a sudden flash of light replaced the darkness.
All the cars had stopped moving and many people were looking up with a shocked face. I needed a few moments to adjust back to the dimmer sky after the bright light had disappeared.There it was: the moon. But not quite like I've seen it my whole life. It had colors. Green. Gold. Blue.
I rushed home, because I had a telescope, so I really wanted to check out that new object, which had just appeared. After I had set up everything, I was ready to take a closer look. There it was, in all its beauty. I still couldn't make much out of it, but I saw moving dots that had me wondering.
Suddenly, however, all the lights went out for a few seconds. I quickly looked up, and to my surprise, the moon was back up again, in all its' whiteness.
The next day, the media was a mess. Everyone was talking about this incident. There were scientists all around the world researching information about this mystery. On the other end, there were protests and fake news everywhere saying that this was the government tricking us.
After a few weeks, NASA has announced that there will be an expedition to the moon on which 100 enthusiastic civilians can participate. Long story short, I made every requirement for my application, and I was actually selected. There was a month of training for the mission, and after that, 40 rockets had been launched from Earth.
The trip took only a few days, but as we were getting closer, each of us started having weird visions. I was lucky enough to only have a few hallucinations, but other members of the crew saw... things. Things of pure evil, as they have been described. It got to a point where people started taking their eyes out with their hands.
My condition was getting worse as well: I felt a headache. Soon I was in a lush environment with green and even golden trees. Rivers as beautiful as one can imagine. Strange, stone-like creatures were roaming around the terrain. They looked happy... Soon, black dots appeared in the sky. The stone man looked up, and after that, they started killing each other and hurting themselves. Black liquid poured from their bodies as they fell to the ground. Minutes after they got up, they started destroying and consuming everything in their path. I was standing there, oblivious to what was going on. I started taking steps back slowly; however, one of them heard me. The last thing I remember from the vision was getting torn in half by a stone creature.
When I opened my eyes, to my horror, I was tied to a chair. I looked at my arms, and my veins were dark black. I yelled:
-"What the fuck??"
-"Don't you what the fuck to me; you just ate one of our crew members!" exclaimed the captain.
-"Wha-, That-, I-, (a sudden feeling of rage filled my body) I DIDN'T"
-"Yes you did, and now please calm the fuck down; we have a long path ahead of us; we are canceling the mission!"
-"We can't return I had a vi-" (my sight had disappeared, I only heard the sounds of flesh tearing apart ahead of me. After that, I felt a sort of connection in front of me. Like I felt that other person standing there. In fact, I felt it everywhere around me—40 different piles of energy heading towards our home...
SamuelVimesTrained t1_j9pu05c wrote
More… what happens next… please?
WretchedWren t1_j9s4n0a wrote
I don't know what to do. I have to take this secret with me to the grave for others are depending on my silence. And yet the pressure of my silence is burning a hole through my head. It is literally killing me.
See, I alone know the truth of what happened on the 22nd of September 2029.
The world knows that date. It was a normal Harvest Moon, some press making catchy articles to drive ad revenue but really nothing special. More eyes turn to full moons though, and no one who looked could miss it. I was in Ogden Utah at the time, winding down on the back porch after another stressful training day on the base. The moon was just rising over the Rockies, just to the right of De Moisy Peak, looking oversized with the reference points of the mountain profiles. It had the reddish hue that early evening full moons had and drew my eye readily. I was watching it measurably creep upward when the pale red seemed to flicker, leaving blues and greens instead. It took some seconds for my mind to register the shocking change, but it finally started sinking in.
I scrambled out of my chair and inside for my binoculars, my fallen and shattered glass unnoticed on the concrete. The binoculars confirmed the radical color change, but no greater detail. I could barely stop staring at it, unable to comprehend what it meant, but I finally pulled out my phone and started checking news sources. Nothing. Social media was trickling, then flooding. Lots of pictures. Some memes already. Plenty of people asking questions. Some were even intelligent questions.
It lasted 25 minutes.
The color flickered again, and the moon returned to what it has always been. Almost always.
The news finally got the story and puzzled hosts and reporters do what they do: ask silly questions of the wrong people. It took a few days to confirm that not a single major telescope got pointed at the moon until after the color vanished. There were millions of images from phones, thousands from cameras with lenses, a few from amateur telescopes. None with real detail.
Artemis was nearly ready, and the decision to go gained even more pressure and momentum. My training schedule ramped up even harder.
Most people know me by name, since I was the science officer for that return landing to the moon. The only survivor from the surface.
The flight itself was incredible, but I don't remember the sensations of it any more. 32 years since helping to finish erasing that memory that started with the enormity of what we found.
I don't know how to continue. The habit of keeping silent has formed a wall within me that is tangible. Like a physical restraint keeping my fingers from typing out the words that reveal the truth. Who would believe me anyway at this point. Nutjobs. Wackos. The kind of people that would go camp at the gates of Area 51 after seeing Independence Day 4.
The public record states that contact was lost with the HLS Lander at an altitude of 391 meters above the surface and was never reestablished. The public record states that for 26 days NASA and ESA worked tirelessly night and day to try to figure out how to contact us, then when our liftoff didn't happen, how to rescue us. The Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter kept up a steady stream of imagery of our landing site, but told them almost nothing aside from the fact that the HLS Lander didn't crash. The crew in the MPCV was a helpless link to whatever hope was held. They expected that we would work to conserve whatever oxygen and water we had and the longest possible scenario was one survivor lasting 26 days before hypoxia and death.
After 26 days, focus shifted to recovery and finding out what happened. The MPCV and its two crew members were brought home shortly after. 35 days after contact was lost, NASA got an unmanned capsule to the moon, at the same coordinates of our landing site. Contact was also lost with that capsule at 391 meters altitude.
At 42 days, my HLS Lander lifted off of the surface of the moon and entered a ballistic return trajectory to earth. No contact was ever established and the lander was never going to survive reentry. A scrambled Dragon capsule on a Falcon Heavy managed to rendezvous and dock with the lander, burning all of its fuel to barely get the lander into a stable orbit, although highly elliptical. A week later, another Dragon was able to dock and a rapidly developed adapter allowed the crew to interface with the lander hatch.
I was inside, still alive. The body of my fellow crewmate strapped to his seat beside me.
We made splashdown a few hours later.
I had to lie. Every electronic device in the lander was fused to slag, there was no possible way to corroborate any story, true or false. The truth was absurd. And dangerous. I was debriefed for months. I held close enough to the truth to stay repeatable without revealing anything. You know the official conclusion that was reached. "Through an extraordinary display of ingenuity and resourcefulness one and the humbling and heroic sacrifice of the other, " etcetera.
There were suspicious people of course. The math didn't lie. I had survived 52 days on oxygen that would have been exhausted at 26. There was no explanation given or found for where the oxygen had come from. Theories and fan fiction abounded that maybe there actually was oxygen and habitable conditions on the moon. But no one of any real scientific mind believed that.
There was just that 25 minute glimpse of lush green and verdant blue on the moon to suggest all sorts of ideas.
None came close to reality.
No one suspected that the moon had been colonized. Or holographically masked. That glimpse everyone saw? A bug had crashed the software maintaining the holograph. And they neutralize any craft which pass within it to protect themselves.
They are peaceful. Fleeing their own past. A remnant of a remnant that was saved.
In the decades since, scientists have decided that moon dust is impossible for electronics to survive in, and no mechanical solutions to explore have been found. Political will has fallen, and no one even thinks seriously about returning to the moon any more.
It's for the best.
Slappy_G t1_j9s5v0d wrote
Really well done response here, as well as references to actual space tech. A+
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