
The Surge
Purge
Paul Block(Author)
Independently Published
Published on 11. May 2026
Book
Paperback/Softback
132 pages
979-8-1965-0445-7 (ISBN)
Description
The air, once thick with the drone of lawnmowers and the distant wail of sirens, had fallen into a profound, suffocating silence. Mike stood on his cracked driveway, the hose he'd been wrestling moments ago now a forgotten, limp serpent at his feet. The crimson stain in the sky, no longer a mere visual anomaly but a tangible wound that seemed to pulse with an unseen, nauseating rhythm, cast an unearthly, bruised hue over everything. His meticulously manicured lawn, the one he'd spent his Saturday mornings tending to with a quiet pride, now shimmered with an iridescence that felt alien, like the scales of some colossal, slumbering beast.
He took a tentative step forward, the familiar crunch of gravel under his worn sneakers sounding impossibly loud. The house, his house, seemed to shrink, its cheerful yellow paint dulled and warped by the pervasive, otherworldly light. He could see through the living room window, a ghostly tableau of his former life: the half-finished crossword puzzle on the coffee table, the remote control perched precariously on the armrest of his recliner, a half-eaten bowl of popcorn, still impossibly fresh, as if time itself had snagged on a snagged on an invisible thread.
A tremor, not of the earth but of reality itself, ran through him. He squeezed his eyes shut, trying to shake off the dizziness, the sickening sensation of being untethered. When he opened them, the world hadn't righted itself. Instead, the edge of his neighbor's prize-winning rose bush seemed to blur, its vibrant red petals momentarily swirling into a viscous, oily sheen before snapping back into focus, leaving behind a faint, metallic scent that stung his nostrils.
Mike's breath hitched. This wasn't just a storm. This wasn't a meteor strike. This was... something else. The silence was the most terrifying aspect. No birdsong, no distant traffic, not even the hum of the electrical grid, which he'd never realized was so constant until its absence was so starkly apparent. It was the silence of a world holding its breath, a void where sound used to be.
He turned his gaze back to the sky. The crimson tear was larger now, or at least it seemed so. Tendrils of impossible colors, hues that had no names, bled from its edges, tendrils that weren't quite light, not quite shadow. They twisted and writhed, like celestial serpents devouring the very fabric of the blue. He could almost feel them, a low-frequency thrumming against his teeth, a psychic vibration that burrowed into his skull.
His instinct, honed by years of routine and predictable consequences, screamed at him to retreat, to barricade himself inside, to pretend this was a bad dream. But something else, something deeper and more primal, held him rooted. It was the need to understand. The need to catalog. To make sense of the senseless.
He took a tentative step forward, the familiar crunch of gravel under his worn sneakers sounding impossibly loud. The house, his house, seemed to shrink, its cheerful yellow paint dulled and warped by the pervasive, otherworldly light. He could see through the living room window, a ghostly tableau of his former life: the half-finished crossword puzzle on the coffee table, the remote control perched precariously on the armrest of his recliner, a half-eaten bowl of popcorn, still impossibly fresh, as if time itself had snagged on a snagged on an invisible thread.
A tremor, not of the earth but of reality itself, ran through him. He squeezed his eyes shut, trying to shake off the dizziness, the sickening sensation of being untethered. When he opened them, the world hadn't righted itself. Instead, the edge of his neighbor's prize-winning rose bush seemed to blur, its vibrant red petals momentarily swirling into a viscous, oily sheen before snapping back into focus, leaving behind a faint, metallic scent that stung his nostrils.
Mike's breath hitched. This wasn't just a storm. This wasn't a meteor strike. This was... something else. The silence was the most terrifying aspect. No birdsong, no distant traffic, not even the hum of the electrical grid, which he'd never realized was so constant until its absence was so starkly apparent. It was the silence of a world holding its breath, a void where sound used to be.
He turned his gaze back to the sky. The crimson tear was larger now, or at least it seemed so. Tendrils of impossible colors, hues that had no names, bled from its edges, tendrils that weren't quite light, not quite shadow. They twisted and writhed, like celestial serpents devouring the very fabric of the blue. He could almost feel them, a low-frequency thrumming against his teeth, a psychic vibration that burrowed into his skull.
His instinct, honed by years of routine and predictable consequences, screamed at him to retreat, to barricade himself inside, to pretend this was a bad dream. But something else, something deeper and more primal, held him rooted. It was the need to understand. The need to catalog. To make sense of the senseless.
More details
Language
English
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 152 mm
Thickness: 7 mm
Weight
188 gr
ISBN-13
979-8-1965-0445-7 (9798196504457)
Schweitzer Classification