posted on Aug, 31 2024 @ 05:10 PM
They called to us, we would not listen.
They beckoned to us, we would not listen.
They warned us, we would not listen.
Did Their voices not thunder across the sky?
We should have trembled, we would not listen.
We should have taken heed, we would not listen.
We could have avoided what is now unavoidable.
We still do not listen.
-Lamentations of Hindsight
THE NOISE
Ann and Conner were on the roof of their shared apartment building gazing at stars when the noise started. It was a small five story complex and they
really weren't supposed to be on the roof, but Conner's dad was the building's Superintendent. On Friday nights, he went to a local bar and gave
Conner the keys, leaving him in charge.
Conner met Ann nine years ago, when her family moved into the building. They lived on the same floor, they were the same age, and neither had
siblings; so, they became fast friends. Conner had lived in the apartments all of his life. He gleefully showed his new friend, Ann, all the secrets
of the building, and the best hiding places.
Last year, when Conner turned seventeen, his dad began trusting him with more responsibility in the running of the apartments. His dad also began to
pay him for the time he worked. Not much, but it gave him a little money to spend. One of the first things Conner bought was a telescope. So, while
his dad had a few drinks with friends on this Friday night, Ann joined him on the roof for stargazing. It was one more secret place to share with his
best friend.
Ann's parents liked and trusted Conner, and knew where she was. Her mom often teased her that one day the two of them would be married. Ann always
protested, but she knew her mom was right. It wasn't something she could explain, she just knew. They were best friends from the moment they met,
and now she viewed their meeting as a touch of destiny. God's hand, as her grandmother used to say.
The sky was mostly clear that night, with a few clouds. Conner had finished setting up his telescope, and was pointing out the constellation
Sagittarius, when the noise began.
"What is that?" Ann said, crooking her head slightly as she listened to the noise. The sound filled the sky.
"It's loud!" Conner said, pulling out his phone to record it. "It almost sounds like a machine!"
"Or a giant orchestra warming up!" Ann injected.
The sound had begun softly, at first, gradually growing in strength. It seemed to come from the sky. The noise was unidentifiable to the pair. It
reached a peak volume, held it for a few seconds, then faded, just as it had grown. The two teens sat for a moment in stunned silence.
"That was weird." Conner observed. He was a bit freaked out. He had seen videos on the internet of this sort of thing, but he never imagined he
would actually witness it. "It's starting again!"
Just as before, the noise grew in intensity, held, and then faded.
"What is it? Some kind of metal scraping?.. a monster?.. a giant machine?.. some sort of horn?" Ann couldn't actually describe what the sound
was, but it was familiar. It was as if something from her imagination had been brought to life. It wasn't frightening, but it was ominous. It was
a big noise. Ann could only imagine how big the thing was that made it.
"I don't know what it is." Conner responded, "Are you scared?"
"Not really. Just kinda weirded out." Ann said, as the sound started again. "How long will this last?"
"The videos I've seen only last a few minutes, but I don't know if they stopped filming or the sound stopped happening!" Shouting over the noise,
Conner was imagining a million views on TikTok. He turned around slowly, holding his phone out to show there was nothing around that could be making
the noise.
Conner added, "What is that! It's really freaking me out!" for dramatic effect, and hoped the sound was recording clearly on his phone. Ann
frowned at him.
"So what do they say these sounds are?" She spoke quickly, in case it started again.
"No one knows. Some say it's just a factory machine, a train, or a boat horn. Some think it's shifting plates in the Earth, or even the final
trumpets from the bible. It's anyone's guess. I really have no idea.. and it IS freaking me out a little!" Conner finished just in time to avoid
shouting as the sound reached it's crescendo.
They were silent and listened as the noise faded and started up again. Conner held his phone up with outstretched arm, as if that would bring the
sound in clearer. Normally, Ann would have commented on the absurdity of it, but she never noticed. She stared at the sky, and hoped to see some
clue as to what was making the noise. She counted in her head the time it took for the noise to rise, and hold, and fade.
As it faded away, Ann spoke, "Seven."
"What?" Conner asked as he pointed his phone towards her.
"It takes seven seconds to rise, it holds for seven seconds, then fades in seven seconds."
"No way!" Conner again looked into his camera. "That's weird."
"Yeah." Ann agreed. "I bet it's silent for seven seconds too. So, that must mean it's not natural, right? It's not some giant monster coming
to eat us?"
"Look out! It's Godzilla!" Conner held the phone high as the sound rose in it's rhythmic crescendo.
"It sounds like it's coming from the sky, and we're not near the ocean or a lake, so I think we can rule out a boat horn! " Ann shouted over the
noise. Something seemed wrong to her. "If it was a machine, wouldn't it be coming from a specific direction!?"
Conner shrugged.
"It's like my mind can't quite grasp what I'm hearing." Ann declared in the momentary silence.
"It does sound like it's coming from above us." He spun around again as he spoke, "It could just be SO LOUD that we are, sort of.. buried in the
sound. So that it seems like it's coming from above."
The noise began it's quiet start.
"Or it's aliens." Conner turned his phone to his face and made his most serious mad-scientist face. This could go on for hours. I hope I have
enough battery.
"How come you're not filming, Ann?" He nearly had to shout to be heard, but Ann looked as if she didn't hear him. "Ann!?" As Conner shouted
her name, he noticed that she was crying. He couldn't imagine why she was crying, but he decided to give her a moment and ask about it when the
sound faded.
He held his phone high, pointed at the clouds. As it died out, the noise seemed to linger a bit longer before fading away. Conner figured that was
just his imagination.
Continued