By Matthew Spence
Jessica
Beckingham first heard about the flying plants from one of her neighbors. She'd
been tending her flower garden when she noticed that some of her plants were
missing. At first she thought an animal might have dug them up, or that they
might have even been stolen, but the holes where the roots had been were too
neatly scooped out for that. Then she heard about the flying plants on the
news, and told Jessica what had happened.
"I
don't know why mine left," she sobbed. "I took good care of
them."
Jessica
tried to be sympathetic. "Maybe it was just instinct, or something-they
just wanted to follow the others? The rest of your flowers are still there,
after all."
"Yes,
but why is it happening?" Jessica's neighbor suddenly sounded afraid.
"What if something else is next?"
Jessica
began to wonder about that too, as the news about the flying plants spread. But
as she had pointed out, it was only some plants, not entire groups, or
colonies, as they were called. Videos were shown of trees, flowers, bushes,
even weeds, pulling themselves up out of the ground as if by invisible hands
and floating up until they were caught by the jet stream or other air currents
and deposited hundreds, sometimes, thousands, of miles away, where they took
root again.
"It
seems to be a migration pattern," one of her other neighbors, a man named
Scott, said one afternoon. He was a biology teacher at the local high school,
and had been following the flying plants online. "They're staying in their
own hemispheres, however. And different plant species seem to be deliberately
avoiding each other. It's like they treat each other as invasive species
infringing on their territory."
"But
what does that mean?" Jessica asked. "Are they intelligent?"
"Plants
do communicate with each other in nature," Scott pointed out.
"And...yeah, that worried me. What if...what if they start to
organize-against us?"
Jessica
had wondered about that herself, and thought about it as she somewhat nervously
looked at the sky. There were a few flying plants up there now-trees, elm and
birch, probably from the nearby national forest area. She wondered where they
were going, if they were going to take root there permanently, or if they might
leave and go somewhere else. And what would they do then?
Jessica
hoped she wouldn't have to find out, as the herbs on her kitchen windowsill
began to stir restlessly.
About the author:
Matthew Spence was
born in leveland, Ohio. His work has most recently appeared in Tall Tale TV.
More details of the author can be found here:
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