December 2005
The Silent Towns
by Ray Bradbury
There was a little white silent town on the edge of the dead Martian
sea. The town was empty. No one moved in it. Lonely lights burned in the
stores all day. The shop doors were wide, as if people had run off without
using their keys. Magazines brought from Earth on the silver rocket a
month before, fluttered untouched, burning brown, on wire racks fronting
the silent drugstores.
The town was dead. Its beds were empty and cold. The only sound was the
power hum of electric lines and dynamos, still alive, all by themselves.
Water ran in forgotten bathtubs, poured out into living rooms, onto porches,
and down through little garden plots to feed neglected flowers. In the
dark theatres, gum under the many seats began to harden with tooth impressions
still in it.
Across town was a rocket port. You could still smell the hard, scorched
smell where the last rocket blasted off when it went back to Earth. If
you dropped a dime in the telescope and pointed it at Earth, perhaps you
could see the big war happening there. Perhaps you could see New York
explode. Maybe London could be seen, covered with a new kind of fog. Perhaps
then it might be understood why this small Martian town is abandoned.
How quick was the evacuation? Walk in any store, bang the NO SALE key.
Cash drawers jump out, all bright and jingly with coins. That war on Earth
must be very bad...
Along the empty avenues of this town now, whistling softly, kicking a
tin can ahead of him in deepest concentration, came a tall, thin man.
His eyes glowed with a dark, quiet look of loneliness. He moved his bony
hands in his pockets, which were tinkling with new dimes. Occasionally
he tossed a dime to the ground. He laughed temperately doing this, and
walked on, sprinkling bright dimes everywhere.
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