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The Drop

By J. L. Ender

I’d given up screaming. I was terrified and sick, but what was the point? No one could save me now. The descent seemed endless, like I was doomed to fall for eternity. The throb of my heartbeat in my ears had faded, and my nausea was subsiding, as though even my body had resigned itself.

Cities passed in a blur as I fell. Villages, taverns, and cheerily lit inns, all of them built around the Drop, a borehole dug through the Earth.

As mankind had descended toward the hollow Core of our world, we’d built our civilization along the way. I’d heard stories of vast digging machines rusting away miles under the Earth’s crust.

The further I fell, the more advanced and shinier the buildings set into the walls of the Drop became. Stone castles with black arch openings gave way to white stucco and windows that shed buttery illumination through diamond-shaped panes.

A train slid its way up the side of the bore hole, rattling my eardrums. I caught a brief glimpse of a freckled little girl holding a teddy bear. She tugged on her father’s sleeve, but by the time he turned around, I was long gone.

Stucco turned to garishly decorated wood, with houses and businesses painted in bright greens, blues, yellows, and reds. The brief pop of color transformed into stainless steel buildings that gleamed with hard, artificial light.

Seconds into this new phase of architecture, I nearly smacked into the side of a long, blue autobus ferrying passengers from one side of the Drop to the other.

The driver pulled off his cap and poked his head out. “Hey kid! Grab onta somethin’!”

“Help!” I gasped, doubting he’d even hear me.

“Sorry!” he called. “These old buses don’t go up and down!”

The brief exchange made me aware of a startling possibility. A conversation— however brief— whilst hurtling toward one’s doom is usually impossible.

Am I slowing down? When the idea occurred to me, I didn’t dare believe it. But minutes later, there was no denying it. I was decelerating. Perhaps my bones wouldn’t be smashed into gravy!

Not so endless after all. A massive, fan-like apparatus splayed beneath me, the contraption creating a pocket of warm, somewhat musty air to break my fall. Around me, dull silver buildings pocked with large, iridescent bubbles of glass protruded from the walls. In one bubble, a boxy robot clattered along a sterile white hallway.

The fan, which lay enclosed in a cage of fine silver mesh, gave ever so slightly as I landed butt-first onto it. I stared upward, breathing hard, heart still hammering in my chest. The sky hung miles above me, a tiny pinpoint of blue. Firm black rock hemmed in the fan, which narrowed the borehole to half the width it had been above.

I stood, wobbling, and nearly lost my footing. My windburned, tender face ached. Already the eternal descent had faded from my memory like a bad dream, too terrible to dwell on. Though I knew that whatever form my waking thoughts took, my sleep would be haunted by that fall for the rest of my life.

The center of the Earth—for where else could it be?—was muggy, the air thick with that stale odor common to basements and deep cellars cobwebbed by spiderlings.

“Fell over the guardrail, did we?” The voice made me jump, the mesh rippling as I took a startled step back.

A man in a bright blue cap watched me from a colorful control console near the far edge of the great fan. The blades had slowed to a stop, revealing complex gears and pulleys, through which I glimpsed a tiny circle of blue just like the one above me.

“I thought I was going to fall forever,” I panted. The possibility raised goosebumps on my arms. The sky was above me and at my feet.

“You think we wouldn’t have some kind of safety measures down here?” The man shook his head and grinned sardonically. “We’d have a whole pile of you dumb kids by now!”

“Why didn’t— how did we not know—”

“We can’t advertise this! Everybody would use it, and it’s not perfect. You get hit by a hovercrane or autobus on your way down, and this little air pocket isn’t good for much, is it?”

It made sense, though I could have done with the safety net being a little higher up. I decided to let it go, relieved I hadn’t splattered myself against the Earth’s Core.

My shabby clothes and tanned skinned must’ve projected the image of a hick Surface boy to the pale engineer in his fine blue coat. I felt in my pockets. Their emptiness wouldn’t help my case. If I pulled out my wallet, I was certain a fly would buzz out.

Wait… I patted my back pocket. Nope. My wallet was gone. Lovely.

“Don’t reckon you’d spare pocket change for a train ride?”

“Eh, I suppose.” He tossed me a silver dollar. “Oh, and kid?”

“Yes?” I fingered the coin. It bore an unfamiliar face. Core currency.

The man kicked the mesh. The metal grating swayed sickeningly beneath my feet. “Do us all a favor and keep this place to yourself, okay?”

“Sure,” I replied. “On one condition.”

“Oh?”

I pointed to my feet, at the second borehole leading to the far side of the world.

“I want to go that way.”


Can you guess which song from the 1980's inspired this story? Share in the comments!

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

J.L. Ender‘s first published novel, Portal World, is available now. He has also released several short stories, including The Rocket Game and The Meek Shall Inherit. His new superhero series, Steel Fox Investigations, will begin January 2020. Ender has worked as a dishwasher, a beef jerky labeler, a warehouse worker, a shelf stocker, a greeter, a traveling technician, a laser engraver, a package handler, a copywriter, a graphic designer, a librarian, an editor, a dispatcher, and a phone operator. He lives in Ohio with his dog Bear.


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15 comments - Join the conversation

Leave a Reply to Cassandra Hamm Cancel reply

 

  • Fun story! I’d like to know how you can “fall up” the other way. Looking forward on hearing about that.

    • I think our hero is hoping to take a train! Unlike the first Drop though, this second borehole is mostly undeveloped, so he’s going to be a little disappointed. He’ll still get his wish, it’ll just be a rougher ride than a train back home would have been.

  • Fascinating story! I have read about the physics of falling through the Earth – very quick at first, decelerating toward the center, then speeding up again until you near the rim and start falling the other way again, endlessly back and forth. But I liked how you took it in a different direction, by having an artificially created air cushion!
    The underground cities were a nice bit of world-building. I found that part especially fascinating, since a very similar concept once showed up in a dream

    • Thanks! Interesting, I didn’t know that about the physics. The real life version sounds a bit unpleasant… guess it’s a good thing the narrator got lucky. I think my inspiration was a sort of inverted Tower of Babel, with mankind going down instead of up as civilization advances.

  • What a curious, adventurous kid! First he thinks he’s going to die. As soon as he finds out that’s not the case, he wants to go the other way! :) That last line gives the child-character an extra dimension, personality-wise. Priceless!

    • It’s funny sometimes how quickly we can adapt to a new situation. The second borehole is a secret from the Surface, so I think he realizes what a once in a lifetime opportunity he’s gotten. Thanks for reading!

    • You’re correct! If you’re a member of the Havok Horde, you’ll be automatically entered into a drawing for a $10 Amazon gift card at the end of the month.

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