Chapter 2 -- Flash in the sky
Cody finishes his morning routine with a cup of hot coffee and turns on the TV for the morning news. He just catches the end of today's lead story.
"... from scientists at the Meyer-Womble Observatory that they have spotted a herefor undetected truck-sized comet in the sky above the state of Colorado. The celestial object has been named the Summers-Thrace comet, after the two astrologists that first discovered it. It is estimated that the comet will enter our atmosphere at around 9 o'clock this morning, somewhere above the Rocky Mountains. We have been told that an actual impact with the earth's surface is unlikely due to Summers-Thrace's size. It will most likely burn up in it's descent. A sonic boom might be heard, followed by a bright flash.
An explanation is yet to be given as to why this comet has remained undetected for so long. We will keep you updated as we receive further information from the Meyer-Womble Observatory.
In other news today..."
Cody turns off the TV, puts on his coat and heads out. Riding his bike on W Elisabeth St to his job at Colorado State University, Cody was going on automatic pilot, not really paying anyone or anything any special attention.
He's suddenly pulled out of his day dream by the fact that the pedestrians he's passing stop what they are doing and are looking up at the clear fall sky. He stops riding his bike and moves onto the side walk to get a look at what's got everybody so interested. He too looks up and, sure enough, there's the fireball in the sky that the news spoke about this morning. But instead of burning up, the fireball only seems to get bigger as time goes by.
Suddenly it becomes clear that the comet hasn't burned up as predicted, but has instead broken through the top layers of the earth's atmosphere and is barreling down at a break neck speed. Cody's eyes follow it down, heading west beyond the Horsetooth Reservoir and into the Arapaho & Roosevelt National Forest. Gasps are heard all around him as a bright flash lightens up the morning air.
The morning air takes on a pronounced shimmering look. Like it's filled with an uncountable number of tiny mirrors, reflecting the sunlight every which way. A few moments later, Cody and everyone around him is hit with a strong, warm wind that has a slightly sweet and burnt smell to it. Some people around him start coughing while others, like Cody, seem to have no reaction at all. Except for a faint smoke plume in the distance, the horizon shows no further signs of the impact. So Cody gets back on his bike and continues riding to work.
The following days go by like any other, without much news updates on the asteroid impact. The fires in the National Forest following the Summers-Thrace's impact were quickly subdued by the local fire department.
An explanation has yet to be presented for why such a relatively small asteroid didn't burn up when entering the atmosphere. No trace of the asteroid was found at the crash site, but the air around the area kept an intense, shimmering quality about it for days.
By the end of the week however, there's a growing sense of alarm in Fort Collins as local news stations are reporting on small riots around what looks like to be quarantined neigbourhoods. Cody had spent his evenings after work gaming online so he hadn't followed any of the news stories. He had picked up little bits here and there from friends but hadn't really payed it much attention. The things they were saying were crazy.
He had seen a part of a story about how the firemen who were at the asteroid impact all needed to be hospitalized with what seemed like extreme symptoms of rabies. On Thursday, one of his online gaming friends had sent him a short video of a group of people running after a woman the past night. True, the chasers were a strange group, especially the way the moved. A better word would've been jerked. But the video was dark and the party ran behind a corner after only a few seconds. He didn't reallly know what to think of everything going on but had decided that on Friday he'd ask his boss for a few days off next week so he could go to his parent's cabin at Grand Lake. He didn't feel like staying in the city so Friday after work, he would go home, get his car from storage and head out.