Space and Time


In a world covered in the rich plant life of planet Earth and the absence of space or time, nature has evolved to maintain its existence on what is considered Earth today. Fast forward millions of years when mankind has all but destroyed itself and the planet has been overcome with new life in the form of Mother Nature itself and vegetation is abundant. After the human race discovered a way to eradicate the concept of space and time, ultimately leading to their demise, nature took a different course. Certain species of plants are capable of furling and unfurling when the sun touches them in the early hours of morning. When the humans learned the capability of destroying space and time, the day stood still for thousands of years. These species of plant had the opportunity to absorb the amount of nutrients from the sun that they had never had before and as a result they tripled in size and began to spread, covering roads, roping through cities and blanketing bodies of water. The vegetation spread to the parts of the planet that were in the dark and could not absorb nutrients for itself; giving its’ own supply to other plants in order for them to grow strong and cover more ground. Space and time, thought to have been completely eradicated, began to slowly return and the never-ending day began to turn into night, causing the overgrowth to slow substantially. It would later be discovered that not all humans had perished after the space-time continuum lapsed, but found refuge on the dark side of the planet during the never-ending day. Once the plants began to reach into their territory, they took their knowledge of the plants that began to grow and used them to their own advantage. What they will do with them and how they will begin to rebuild their world, truly depends on how deeply the generations before them damaged space and time.

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