"We interrupt this program for an emergency broadcast."
"Do not turn the channel, repeat-"
Chatter box disturbed by an electric reluctance.
I
was in my room when word of the event came about. Some were amused,
many were frightened, and I was infinitely fascinated, consumed and
often distracted by its significance. Even so, despite all analysis and
rationality, I was on the same wavelength as the rest of the world:
"What IS it?" To describe it perfectly would be difficult, but it could
be visualized as a crown of teeth opening all around the perimeter of
our local Universe. On the Internet they're saying the galaxy
super-cluster cores have finally combined at the center, forming a
degree of super massive black hole still incalculable in nature and
effect. The Suns and Moons and planets have all simultaneously decreased
the time their orbits take to complete. Curiously, the complexity of
star radiation signals has increased, with their focus honed to
exchanging with other stars. Days and nights have grown noticeably
shorter in the last forty years, considering it only took what is
estimated to be ten for it to transpire. What the news had to say wasn't
interesting. I already knew what the greatest scientists of our time
thought; The Big Bang has finally accumulated an unimaginable level of
super density in the very spot it unleashed the known world. Telescopic
satellite imagery baffled us, yielding compelling proof of matter
literally shrinking as it approached the center of the Universe, showing
microscopic beads where vibrant flowering pools once splashed and
overlapped. In the opposite direction, galaxies on the perimeter of the
void are spinning in the cosmos as quickly as the black core. We are at
the center of this radius. Half of Humanity's galactic dwelling is
quickly being sucked into a spiraling abyss, and the other half is going
to be accelerated out of the known Cosmos. God has played dice with our
rocks of moss, and we're quickly realizing who the real dragons of this
Eden are.
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