When the Daleks
Came
by
Drew Payne
Chapter
Seven – The Watcher
Joshua sat on the ridge of ground, hidden behind some green foliage, hugged
his rifle to his body and watched the view before him.
The ridge he had chosen was one of the lower slopes of the hills that overlooked
his parents’ farm. He had been returning home, after the fall of Alleyn Vale,
but he had stopped there. For the few moments he’d been sat there he’d seen
no movement in the farmhouse. All the transport vehicles, including his land-skimmer,
were still parked outside the farmhouse’s complex of buildings, but there
was no sign of movement. None of the farming droids were hurrying around and
the farmhouse itself seemed closed up and empty. Hopefully his parents had
fled and left the farmhouse alone. Hopefully, he told himself, hopefully…
They had destroyed those first three Daleks, when they had landed in Rankin
fields, weeks ago now. A mob of people, armed with every kind of weapon available
to them, had turned upon those three Daleks and by sheer force of numbers
and anger had destroyed them. When, days and days ago now, the full invasion
force of Daleks landed on Karbala Minor they were not as easily stopped. Those
Daleks had simply ploughed through all of the defences that were put up before
them.
He was one of the large group of people who tried to defend Alleyn Vale.
The Military had all been withdrawn to defend Millennium City, leaving them
to their own devices. They had a long, quiet and nervous wait to finally face
the Daleks. All of them defending the barricade, across Alleyn Vale’s main
street, had been tense and agitated. People were walking back and forth; others
were incessantly talking nonsense, while others repeatedly rushed off to
urinate. He had gripped his gun tightly, aiming down the street, his body
as tight as a piano wire, unmoving, behind the barricade.
When the Daleks finally swept into Alleyn Vale it was fast and unstoppable.
With a rush of noise and movement one of the Daleks’ saucer ships landed at
the head of the road. Everyone on the barricade had ducked for cover, as
the rush of air pushed over the top of the barricade, the Daleks must have
swept out of their ship then. When he pulled himself back up the barricade,
only a few moments later, Joshua saw an army of Daleks bearing down upon them.
Suddenly the air around him was crackling with energy as the Daleks fired
upon them, in a solid rain of energy bolts down upon the barricade.
In only a few moments both people, on either side of him, people he had
only known for a matter of hours, were dead.
Then the whole barricade exploded.
One moment he was desperately firing at those Daleks; the next moment he
was bodily thrown into the air by a deafening explosion, his body hit by pieces
of metal and wood; then he was unconscious, a dark nothingness swallowing
him up.
When he awoke, his body pressed down by a weight of what must have been
left of the barricade, he seemed to be aching all over, a head throbbing,
but no great pain anywhere else. Slowly and carefully, so as not to make
any noise, he pulled himself through the rubble, dragging his body over dirt
and wreckage. As his head cleared the wood and metal, he saw that it was dusk.
The town was strangely quiet.
Once he was finally clear of the wreckage he was able to survey the destruction
all around him. Buildings were burning, or had collapsed in upon themselves.
The barricade had been completely destroyed, blown apart and then the remaining
wreckage just swept aside. Everywhere he looked were bodies, those who had
been defending the barricade with him, broken and discarded bodies. Some were
burnt, some were crushed, some were broken, but all were simply lying there
discarded. Quickly he stopped looking at them; he didn’t want to see anyone
he really knew.
The town was eerily quiet; the only sounds that of the crackle and snapping
from the burning buildings. Still being disorientated from being knocked unconscious
it took him a long moment to realise that the town was so quiet because the
Daleks had already left. They had swept through the town, destroying and
killing all before them and then just swept out of the town. They were gone
now, leaving only destruction behind.
For several hours he wandered through the ruins of Alleyn Vale looking for
survivors. At first he had combed through the wreckage of the barricade but
all he found were dead and broken bodies, no one living. When he moved on
to searching the ruins of the town he was far less careful. He simply wandered
the few streets, again and again, looking around himself for signs of survivors.
He’d tried looking inside two buildings, but the fire he found inside the
second building had pushed him back so after that he simply wandered through
the streets.
Undercover of darkness he left Alleyn Vale, when his fatigue grew greater
than his desire to find any survivors. He only managed to walk a few kilometres
out of Alleyn Vale until fatigue sapped all of his energy. He spent the night
sleeping at the back of a small barn, housing two harvesting droids, he had
stumbled across.
The next day, shortly after dawn, he left the small barn and carried on
walking home.
There were no signs of any Daleks, as he trudged through the countryside,
but there were many over signs that the Daleks had been there already. He
passed burnt or smouldering buildings, droids that had been melted and set
into bizarre shaped, the remains of hurriedly built barricades and defences
burnt and blown apart; and with them were so often dead and broken bodies.
He saw no Daleks on his long walk; neither did he see any living humans.
He had lost the contents of his stomach, vomiting green and acid bile, into
a narrow drainage ditch. Moments before, lying abandoned at the side of the
road, he found the burnt and broken body of someone he knew from school. Alistair
Moore was his name, they were not friends, but he remembered him all the
same.
He reached his parents’ farm, shortly before midday, after cutting across
country. Though tired and hungry he had still stopped on that ridge, overlooking
the farm, and waited while he watched the farm.
When he left the farm, over a day ago, to defend Alleyn Vale, it had been
after a very violent argument with his mother. She demanded that he stay at
the farm, with her and his father, and wait for the Military to defeat the
Daleks. His reply was to scream back that she was a coward and that it was
everyone’s duty to fight the Daleks. He had stormed out of the building with
two of his father’s guns – one of which he’d lost when the barricade was
destroyed. Now, he felt reluctant to return to the farm. When she would hear
of the destruction of Alleyn Vale she would only crow that he should have
stayed at the farm, in the first place.
He had been waiting there a handful of minutes when he saw movement from
the farm. He saw the building’s front door slowly swing open and three of
his mother’s dogs rushed out into the yard, in front of the house. A long
moment later they were followed by his mother, her hands dug deep into her
trouser pockets – she was still wearing the same clothes she had worn the
day before.
She stood on the building’s freshold, simply staring down the farm’s driveway,
as the dogs ran around her legs.
Then, with a sudden spurt of movement, she seemed to cry out, then turned
around and ran back into the building, tightly closing the door behind her.
She left behind one of the dogs running around the yard in a very agitated
state.
He glanced down the farm’s driveway; in the direction his mother had been
staring – carefully keeping himself hidden behind the foliage. To his horror
he easily saw what his mother had seen. A small column of Daleks was heading
up the driveway. At the head of the column was a type of Dalek he’d never
seen before. The bottom half of it was the same as the other Daleks but the
top half of it was vastly different. The top half was just one, large weapon;
a large and dirty gun turret, with a squat gun barrel pointing out of it.
It sent a chill through him. It was the most chilling horror out of all the
horrors he had seen in the previous days.
He heard the Daleks barking orders at the farm building. He couldn’t discern
what they were saying, but he heard the harsh noise of their electronic voices.
Then, causing him to blink in a reflex action, the weapon Dalek opened fire
on his home with a blinding flash of energy. As his eyelids opened he saw
the destruction unleashed upon his home. The front of the building was destroyed,
a burning mass replacing the neat structure it had been. Then the weapon Dalek
fired another blinding flash of energy at the remainder of the building.
As he opened his eyes again, moments later, he saw that the weapon Dalek
had blasted right through the building, destruction smashing most of his home
into mere wreckage in only a few seconds. All that was left now of his large
home was one wall on the east side and on the west side the recent extension
that housed his mother’s new kitchen. A path of destruction had been cut
right through the building, north to south, levelling the housing from front
to back.
As the Daleks retreated back up the driveway a fireball exploded in the
heart of what was left of his home, rapidly setting light to the remaining
wreckage. The Daleks paid no heed and simply glided away.
He sat there, on that ridge, for long uncounted hours until fire in the
wreckage died. At no point did he see any movement from the wreckage. He
did not see his mother pushing his father out of the wreckage nor his mother
alone climbing out of the wreckage, no one left the wreckage. No one was
left alive.
He sat there, misery and horror paralysing his every muscle, a burning cramp
in all his made him start to stand up. Instead, he fell over sideways on the
ground, letting go of his gun. Lying there, on the dry ground, he started
to weep with grief and frustration…
Story © 2005 Drew Payne.
Layout © 2005 Visagraph Films International.
Thanks to Andrew Panero for the editing on the story.