Presently, if you wish to visit the subterranean ruins of
the very first Deep Earth Settlement, you need only purchase an advance ticket
and travel to the tourist center located twenty kilometers west of Branson,
Missouri. There you will register, join a group of ten to fifteen fellow
visitors, and be assigned a professional tour guide who will lead you on your
exploration through the entertaining, informative, and fully climate-controlled
Deep Earth Settlement museum.
Shortly after reemergence, Deep Earth, Inc. (including all
fifteen of its North American Settlements) was purchased by the XinHai
Corporation and, for decades, remained closed to the public. However, when the settlement
property in Missouri was reclaimed by the local government in June of 2119, our
leaders quickly began refurbishing it with hopes of one day reopening and
welcoming a new generation of Deep Earth inhabitants. Though this dream is
still in process, the museum offers visitors a trustworthy look at the first
Deep Earth Settlement’s past, as well as a glimpse into the future of fun,
affordable, and safe subsurface living.
Upon entering the museum, your first stop will be
registration. Here you will experience an authentic recreation of the registration
process undergone by Deep Earth’s first settlers. Though history tells us that
the original settlers were held to very high standards of health, hygiene, and
intelligence, there are no such standards for visitors to the museum. All are
welcome!
After registration, all visitors are guided to Truth Hall,
where an accurate account of the circumstances necessitating the first Deep
Earth Settlement is presented through a series of engaging and interactive
exhibits, including Weather Wasteland, Money Market, and a visitor
favorite, The War Room. Each exhibit
offers a hands-on learning experience. An average visitor might find himself
watching historically-standardized hurricane footage, bartering for commodities
in a market game, or sitting behind an incredibly life-like nuclear launch
control panel.
Truth Hall was designed to educate the present generation on
the myriad factors that sent our ancestors below ground into subsurface
communities like the Deep Earth Settlement in Missouri. Over the years,
misinformation has corrupted society’s understanding of the past. But in Truth
Hall, history comes undeniably alive. Visitors leave with a new sense of the
tragedies and triumphs experienced by Deep Earth’s forefathers. The goal of the Deep
Earth Settlement Museum’s staff is that every visitor will
leave the tour with their questions answered and a new appreciation for the human
determination and ingenuity required to settle Deep Earth and allow for the continuation
of our great nation.
Upon leaving Truth Hall, visitors will be guided to the Deep
Earth Construction exhibit, where they will become acquainted with multiple
aspects of the design and construction of the Deep Earth Settlement. Years
before the first inhabitants arrived at Deep Earth, an army of engineers and
laborers worked tirelessly to create what would later be called an “underground
city”. Many of these laborers lost their lives during the construction phase of
Deep Earth, and the Deep Earth Construction exhibit is dedicated to their
memory and continued legacy.
Next on the tour is an exhibit titled The Gathering, a
remembrance of the families and individuals who stepped forward to participate
in the “great experiment” that was the Deep Earth Settlement program. Culled
from the highest achievers in a variety of fields, the Deep Earth settlers were
scientists, teachers, doctors, engineers, athletes, executives, and high
ranking military leaders. With willing hearts, they descended into Deep Earth,
hoping to preserve the greatness of our culture and society. They left behind family
and friends on the surface, but never doubted their own purpose in sustaining
humanity in the face of enormous challenges. The Gathering exhibit was established to honor these heroes, and to
help future generations recognize that survival was the least of their vast achievements.
The Transition Room encourages visitors to imagine the
difficulties settlers endured once they arrived at Deep Earth. Life below the
surface was much different than life above, and there were many hurdles to
overcome. Visitors are invited to watch a short film in which actors recreate
poignant scenes from this transitional phase at the Deep Earth Settlement.
Artificial light acclamation, dietary supplementation, and Economic Equality Enforcement
policies (EEE), were necessary and positive adjustments experienced by the
first settlers. These adjustments are entertainingly highlighted in the
Transition Room.
For visitors wanting a real taste of the past, the Deep Earth Settlement Museum offers a
sampling of dietary supplements and drinks similar to those consumed by the
Deep Earth settlers. Samples are available for purchase at the Deep Earth
Eatery located in the Transition Room.
After partaking in a “Settler Snack”, visitors make their
way through an exhibit hall titled Life
in Deep Earth. This portion of the museum tour is the most interactive,
with several hands-on learning activities offered. Two favorites are the Temple
of Light, where visitors are encouraged to spend a moment of quiet reflection,
and Private Pleasures, an exhibit open to all visitors ages eighteen and older.
If a visitor is curious about the Tyndale Terrorist Attack
(sometimes mistakenly referred to as the Tyndale Failed Revolution in illegal publications), pamphlets
are available upon exiting the Life in
Deep Earth exhibit hall.
The last two major exhibits guests will visit are the
Reemergence Room and the Future Room. The Reemergence Room offers the most reliable
and up-to-date information regarding humanity’s return to surface living. This
exhibit is consistently being updated to reflect the most accurate findings and
opinions of modern historians regarding the events leading to the Deep Earth Settlement’s
success.
Finally, the Future Room presents guests with an opportunity
to peek into the visionary minds of our contemporary leaders. Though subsurface
living is no longer a necessity, there are still big things in store for Deep
Earth. In the Future Room, visitors will learn how technologies first developed
for use in the Deep Earth Settlement have benefitted humanity post-reemergence,
and how new technological breakthroughs may impact life on earth in the decades
to come.
* * * * *
If you would like to learn more about Eternal Flames, read the original Wikipedia article HERE.
epic first sentence. i was hooked from the beginning. i like you trying new storytelling methods/narrative points of view, etc. the future thing here is good too.
ReplyDeletei would have liked it more cynically optimistic if that makes any sense. obviously something horrible happened and i guess that's why you wrote that tyndale thing, but i just needed more of the horrors clothed in saccharine language. maybe that's just me.
Yeah, tonally this could use a lot of work - I think I was figuring that out as I went, and wasn't quite sure what perspective I was telling the story from. I considered telling it first person from the perspective of a child visiting the museum, but didn't get far with that. I also thought of formatting this like a brochure for the museum, but got too lazy to mess with it. I'm hopping to finish the rest of the top 50 by the end of November, but we'll see.
Delete