Sci-fi story I read decades ago: young tenants in an apartment which turns out to be a trap












5















This story featured a young couple who were looking for an apartment. They didn’t have a lot of money to spend and were very excited to find the perfect place, all the amenities, unbelievably low rent, well located, everything. The other renters were also young, and everyone was thrilled to have found such an unbelievable deal.
One day when everyone was at home the apartment closed up, everyone was trapped, and the entire building lifted off into space. It was a trap, designed to capture humans. I think the couple escapes in the nick of time.










share|improve this question









New contributor




Beata Booth is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.

























    5















    This story featured a young couple who were looking for an apartment. They didn’t have a lot of money to spend and were very excited to find the perfect place, all the amenities, unbelievably low rent, well located, everything. The other renters were also young, and everyone was thrilled to have found such an unbelievable deal.
    One day when everyone was at home the apartment closed up, everyone was trapped, and the entire building lifted off into space. It was a trap, designed to capture humans. I think the couple escapes in the nick of time.










    share|improve this question









    New contributor




    Beata Booth is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.























      5












      5








      5


      1






      This story featured a young couple who were looking for an apartment. They didn’t have a lot of money to spend and were very excited to find the perfect place, all the amenities, unbelievably low rent, well located, everything. The other renters were also young, and everyone was thrilled to have found such an unbelievable deal.
      One day when everyone was at home the apartment closed up, everyone was trapped, and the entire building lifted off into space. It was a trap, designed to capture humans. I think the couple escapes in the nick of time.










      share|improve this question









      New contributor




      Beata Booth is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.












      This story featured a young couple who were looking for an apartment. They didn’t have a lot of money to spend and were very excited to find the perfect place, all the amenities, unbelievably low rent, well located, everything. The other renters were also young, and everyone was thrilled to have found such an unbelievable deal.
      One day when everyone was at home the apartment closed up, everyone was trapped, and the entire building lifted off into space. It was a trap, designed to capture humans. I think the couple escapes in the nick of time.







      story-identification short-stories






      share|improve this question









      New contributor




      Beata Booth is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.











      share|improve this question









      New contributor




      Beata Booth is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.









      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited 1 hour ago









      Rand al'Thor

      96.6k41461645




      96.6k41461645






      New contributor




      Beata Booth is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.









      asked 1 hour ago









      Beata BoothBeata Booth

      261




      261




      New contributor




      Beata Booth is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.





      New contributor





      Beata Booth is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.






      Beata Booth is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.






















          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          4














          "Shipshape Home", a short story by Richard Matheson, also the answer to this old question and this one; first published in Galaxy Science Fiction, July 1952, available at the Internet Archive.



          This story featured a young couple who were looking for an apartment. They didn’t have a lot of money to spend and were very excited to find the perfect place, all the amenities, unbelievably low rent, well located, everything.




          "No, it's fluky," Ruth analyzed as we sat having dinner that night.

          I grinned at Phil and he grinned back.

          "I think so, too," Marge agreed. "Whoever heard of charging only sixty-five a month for a five-room apartment, furnished? Stove, refrigerator, washer—it's fantastic!"

          "Girls," I said, "lets not quibble. Let's take advantage."

          "Oh!" Ruth tossed her pretty blonde head. "If a man said, 'Here's a million dollars for you, old man,' you'd probably take it."

          "I most definitely would take it," I admitted. "I would then run like hell."

          "You're naive," she said. "You think everybody is Santa Claus."

          "It is a little funny," Phil said, "think about it, Rick."

          I thought about it. A five-room apartment, brand-new, furnished in even better than good taste right down to a couple of sets of expensive dishes . . .

          I pursed my lips. A guy can get lost writing about the bars on Mars. Maybe it was true. I could see their point. Of course, I wouldn't show it, though. And spoil Ruth's and my little game of war? Never.

          "I think they charge too much," I said.

          "Oh, Lord!" Ruth was taking it straight, as she usually did. "Too much? Five rooms yet! Furniture, dishes, linens, a television set! What do you want, a swimming pool?"

          "A small one would be good enough."

          She looked at Marge and Phil. "Let us discuss this thing quietly. Let us pretend that the fourth voice we hear is nothing but the wind in the eaves."

          "I am the wind in the eaves," I said.

          "Listen," Ruth restated her forebodings, "what if this place were a fluke? I mean, what if they just want people here for a coverup? That would explain the rent. You remember the rush on this place when they started renting?"

          I remembered as well as Phil and Ruth and Marge. The only reason we'd got apartments was we all happened to be walking past the place when the janitor put out the renting sign. The four of us had gone right in. I remember our amazement, our delight, at the rental. Why, we'd been paying more than double for half the size and ratty furniture, besides.




          One day when everyone was at home the apartment closed up, everyone was trapped, and the entire building lifted off into space. It was a trap, designed to capture humans.




          I headed for the door and grabbed the knob.

          It didn't turn.

          A bout of panic drove through me. I grabbed at it and yanked hard. I thought for a second, fighting down fear, that it was locked on the inside. I checked.

          It was locked on the outside.

          Marge was ready to scream. You could sense it bubbling up in her.

          "It's true," Ruth said, horrified. "Oh, my God, it's true then!"

          I made a dash for the window.

          The place began to vibrate, as if we were about to get hit by an earthquake. Dishes started to rattle and fall off their shelves. We heard a chair crash onto its side in the kitchen.

          "What is it?" Marge cried.

          Phil grabbed for her as she began to whimper. Ruth ran to me and we stood there, frozen, feeling the floor shake under our feet.

          "The engines!" Ruth suddenly screamed. "They're going now!"

          "They have to warm up!" was my wild guess. "We can still get out!"

          I let go of Ruth and grabbed a chair. For some reason I felt that the windows would be automatically locked, too.

          I hurled the chair through the glass. The vibrations were getting worse.

          "Quick!" I shouted over the noise. "Out on the fire escape! Maybe we can make it!"




          I think the couple escapes in the nick of time.



          Spoiler:




          And then the sky, which was growing light, grew dark. My head snapped around. Women were screaming their lungs out in terror. I looked in all directions.

          Solid walls were blotting out the sky.

          "We can't get out," she said. It's the whole block."

          And then the rockets started.







          share|improve this answer


























          • Beata, if this is the correct answer, you can accept it by clicking the checkmark on the left. Please do; it will show everyone the mystery was solved and reward both you and user14111 with some reputation :)

            – Jenayah
            35 mins ago






          • 2





            Many congratulations on an incredible 100,000 reputation! I'm happy to be the one giving you the last upvote to get you there :-) Enjoy the inevitable Stack Exchange swag pack!

            – Rand al'Thor
            18 mins ago











          Your Answer








          StackExchange.ready(function() {
          var channelOptions = {
          tags: "".split(" "),
          id: "186"
          };
          initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

          StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function() {
          // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
          if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled) {
          StackExchange.using("snippets", function() {
          createEditor();
          });
          }
          else {
          createEditor();
          }
          });

          function createEditor() {
          StackExchange.prepareEditor({
          heartbeatType: 'answer',
          autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
          convertImagesToLinks: false,
          noModals: true,
          showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
          reputationToPostImages: null,
          bindNavPrevention: true,
          postfix: "",
          imageUploader: {
          brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
          contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
          allowUrls: true
          },
          noCode: true, onDemand: true,
          discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
          ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
          });


          }
          });






          Beata Booth is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.










          draft saved

          draft discarded


















          StackExchange.ready(
          function () {
          StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fscifi.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f203976%2fsci-fi-story-i-read-decades-ago-young-tenants-in-an-apartment-which-turns-out-t%23new-answer', 'question_page');
          }
          );

          Post as a guest















          Required, but never shown

























          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes








          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          4














          "Shipshape Home", a short story by Richard Matheson, also the answer to this old question and this one; first published in Galaxy Science Fiction, July 1952, available at the Internet Archive.



          This story featured a young couple who were looking for an apartment. They didn’t have a lot of money to spend and were very excited to find the perfect place, all the amenities, unbelievably low rent, well located, everything.




          "No, it's fluky," Ruth analyzed as we sat having dinner that night.

          I grinned at Phil and he grinned back.

          "I think so, too," Marge agreed. "Whoever heard of charging only sixty-five a month for a five-room apartment, furnished? Stove, refrigerator, washer—it's fantastic!"

          "Girls," I said, "lets not quibble. Let's take advantage."

          "Oh!" Ruth tossed her pretty blonde head. "If a man said, 'Here's a million dollars for you, old man,' you'd probably take it."

          "I most definitely would take it," I admitted. "I would then run like hell."

          "You're naive," she said. "You think everybody is Santa Claus."

          "It is a little funny," Phil said, "think about it, Rick."

          I thought about it. A five-room apartment, brand-new, furnished in even better than good taste right down to a couple of sets of expensive dishes . . .

          I pursed my lips. A guy can get lost writing about the bars on Mars. Maybe it was true. I could see their point. Of course, I wouldn't show it, though. And spoil Ruth's and my little game of war? Never.

          "I think they charge too much," I said.

          "Oh, Lord!" Ruth was taking it straight, as she usually did. "Too much? Five rooms yet! Furniture, dishes, linens, a television set! What do you want, a swimming pool?"

          "A small one would be good enough."

          She looked at Marge and Phil. "Let us discuss this thing quietly. Let us pretend that the fourth voice we hear is nothing but the wind in the eaves."

          "I am the wind in the eaves," I said.

          "Listen," Ruth restated her forebodings, "what if this place were a fluke? I mean, what if they just want people here for a coverup? That would explain the rent. You remember the rush on this place when they started renting?"

          I remembered as well as Phil and Ruth and Marge. The only reason we'd got apartments was we all happened to be walking past the place when the janitor put out the renting sign. The four of us had gone right in. I remember our amazement, our delight, at the rental. Why, we'd been paying more than double for half the size and ratty furniture, besides.




          One day when everyone was at home the apartment closed up, everyone was trapped, and the entire building lifted off into space. It was a trap, designed to capture humans.




          I headed for the door and grabbed the knob.

          It didn't turn.

          A bout of panic drove through me. I grabbed at it and yanked hard. I thought for a second, fighting down fear, that it was locked on the inside. I checked.

          It was locked on the outside.

          Marge was ready to scream. You could sense it bubbling up in her.

          "It's true," Ruth said, horrified. "Oh, my God, it's true then!"

          I made a dash for the window.

          The place began to vibrate, as if we were about to get hit by an earthquake. Dishes started to rattle and fall off their shelves. We heard a chair crash onto its side in the kitchen.

          "What is it?" Marge cried.

          Phil grabbed for her as she began to whimper. Ruth ran to me and we stood there, frozen, feeling the floor shake under our feet.

          "The engines!" Ruth suddenly screamed. "They're going now!"

          "They have to warm up!" was my wild guess. "We can still get out!"

          I let go of Ruth and grabbed a chair. For some reason I felt that the windows would be automatically locked, too.

          I hurled the chair through the glass. The vibrations were getting worse.

          "Quick!" I shouted over the noise. "Out on the fire escape! Maybe we can make it!"




          I think the couple escapes in the nick of time.



          Spoiler:




          And then the sky, which was growing light, grew dark. My head snapped around. Women were screaming their lungs out in terror. I looked in all directions.

          Solid walls were blotting out the sky.

          "We can't get out," she said. It's the whole block."

          And then the rockets started.







          share|improve this answer


























          • Beata, if this is the correct answer, you can accept it by clicking the checkmark on the left. Please do; it will show everyone the mystery was solved and reward both you and user14111 with some reputation :)

            – Jenayah
            35 mins ago






          • 2





            Many congratulations on an incredible 100,000 reputation! I'm happy to be the one giving you the last upvote to get you there :-) Enjoy the inevitable Stack Exchange swag pack!

            – Rand al'Thor
            18 mins ago
















          4














          "Shipshape Home", a short story by Richard Matheson, also the answer to this old question and this one; first published in Galaxy Science Fiction, July 1952, available at the Internet Archive.



          This story featured a young couple who were looking for an apartment. They didn’t have a lot of money to spend and were very excited to find the perfect place, all the amenities, unbelievably low rent, well located, everything.




          "No, it's fluky," Ruth analyzed as we sat having dinner that night.

          I grinned at Phil and he grinned back.

          "I think so, too," Marge agreed. "Whoever heard of charging only sixty-five a month for a five-room apartment, furnished? Stove, refrigerator, washer—it's fantastic!"

          "Girls," I said, "lets not quibble. Let's take advantage."

          "Oh!" Ruth tossed her pretty blonde head. "If a man said, 'Here's a million dollars for you, old man,' you'd probably take it."

          "I most definitely would take it," I admitted. "I would then run like hell."

          "You're naive," she said. "You think everybody is Santa Claus."

          "It is a little funny," Phil said, "think about it, Rick."

          I thought about it. A five-room apartment, brand-new, furnished in even better than good taste right down to a couple of sets of expensive dishes . . .

          I pursed my lips. A guy can get lost writing about the bars on Mars. Maybe it was true. I could see their point. Of course, I wouldn't show it, though. And spoil Ruth's and my little game of war? Never.

          "I think they charge too much," I said.

          "Oh, Lord!" Ruth was taking it straight, as she usually did. "Too much? Five rooms yet! Furniture, dishes, linens, a television set! What do you want, a swimming pool?"

          "A small one would be good enough."

          She looked at Marge and Phil. "Let us discuss this thing quietly. Let us pretend that the fourth voice we hear is nothing but the wind in the eaves."

          "I am the wind in the eaves," I said.

          "Listen," Ruth restated her forebodings, "what if this place were a fluke? I mean, what if they just want people here for a coverup? That would explain the rent. You remember the rush on this place when they started renting?"

          I remembered as well as Phil and Ruth and Marge. The only reason we'd got apartments was we all happened to be walking past the place when the janitor put out the renting sign. The four of us had gone right in. I remember our amazement, our delight, at the rental. Why, we'd been paying more than double for half the size and ratty furniture, besides.




          One day when everyone was at home the apartment closed up, everyone was trapped, and the entire building lifted off into space. It was a trap, designed to capture humans.




          I headed for the door and grabbed the knob.

          It didn't turn.

          A bout of panic drove through me. I grabbed at it and yanked hard. I thought for a second, fighting down fear, that it was locked on the inside. I checked.

          It was locked on the outside.

          Marge was ready to scream. You could sense it bubbling up in her.

          "It's true," Ruth said, horrified. "Oh, my God, it's true then!"

          I made a dash for the window.

          The place began to vibrate, as if we were about to get hit by an earthquake. Dishes started to rattle and fall off their shelves. We heard a chair crash onto its side in the kitchen.

          "What is it?" Marge cried.

          Phil grabbed for her as she began to whimper. Ruth ran to me and we stood there, frozen, feeling the floor shake under our feet.

          "The engines!" Ruth suddenly screamed. "They're going now!"

          "They have to warm up!" was my wild guess. "We can still get out!"

          I let go of Ruth and grabbed a chair. For some reason I felt that the windows would be automatically locked, too.

          I hurled the chair through the glass. The vibrations were getting worse.

          "Quick!" I shouted over the noise. "Out on the fire escape! Maybe we can make it!"




          I think the couple escapes in the nick of time.



          Spoiler:




          And then the sky, which was growing light, grew dark. My head snapped around. Women were screaming their lungs out in terror. I looked in all directions.

          Solid walls were blotting out the sky.

          "We can't get out," she said. It's the whole block."

          And then the rockets started.







          share|improve this answer


























          • Beata, if this is the correct answer, you can accept it by clicking the checkmark on the left. Please do; it will show everyone the mystery was solved and reward both you and user14111 with some reputation :)

            – Jenayah
            35 mins ago






          • 2





            Many congratulations on an incredible 100,000 reputation! I'm happy to be the one giving you the last upvote to get you there :-) Enjoy the inevitable Stack Exchange swag pack!

            – Rand al'Thor
            18 mins ago














          4












          4








          4







          "Shipshape Home", a short story by Richard Matheson, also the answer to this old question and this one; first published in Galaxy Science Fiction, July 1952, available at the Internet Archive.



          This story featured a young couple who were looking for an apartment. They didn’t have a lot of money to spend and were very excited to find the perfect place, all the amenities, unbelievably low rent, well located, everything.




          "No, it's fluky," Ruth analyzed as we sat having dinner that night.

          I grinned at Phil and he grinned back.

          "I think so, too," Marge agreed. "Whoever heard of charging only sixty-five a month for a five-room apartment, furnished? Stove, refrigerator, washer—it's fantastic!"

          "Girls," I said, "lets not quibble. Let's take advantage."

          "Oh!" Ruth tossed her pretty blonde head. "If a man said, 'Here's a million dollars for you, old man,' you'd probably take it."

          "I most definitely would take it," I admitted. "I would then run like hell."

          "You're naive," she said. "You think everybody is Santa Claus."

          "It is a little funny," Phil said, "think about it, Rick."

          I thought about it. A five-room apartment, brand-new, furnished in even better than good taste right down to a couple of sets of expensive dishes . . .

          I pursed my lips. A guy can get lost writing about the bars on Mars. Maybe it was true. I could see their point. Of course, I wouldn't show it, though. And spoil Ruth's and my little game of war? Never.

          "I think they charge too much," I said.

          "Oh, Lord!" Ruth was taking it straight, as she usually did. "Too much? Five rooms yet! Furniture, dishes, linens, a television set! What do you want, a swimming pool?"

          "A small one would be good enough."

          She looked at Marge and Phil. "Let us discuss this thing quietly. Let us pretend that the fourth voice we hear is nothing but the wind in the eaves."

          "I am the wind in the eaves," I said.

          "Listen," Ruth restated her forebodings, "what if this place were a fluke? I mean, what if they just want people here for a coverup? That would explain the rent. You remember the rush on this place when they started renting?"

          I remembered as well as Phil and Ruth and Marge. The only reason we'd got apartments was we all happened to be walking past the place when the janitor put out the renting sign. The four of us had gone right in. I remember our amazement, our delight, at the rental. Why, we'd been paying more than double for half the size and ratty furniture, besides.




          One day when everyone was at home the apartment closed up, everyone was trapped, and the entire building lifted off into space. It was a trap, designed to capture humans.




          I headed for the door and grabbed the knob.

          It didn't turn.

          A bout of panic drove through me. I grabbed at it and yanked hard. I thought for a second, fighting down fear, that it was locked on the inside. I checked.

          It was locked on the outside.

          Marge was ready to scream. You could sense it bubbling up in her.

          "It's true," Ruth said, horrified. "Oh, my God, it's true then!"

          I made a dash for the window.

          The place began to vibrate, as if we were about to get hit by an earthquake. Dishes started to rattle and fall off their shelves. We heard a chair crash onto its side in the kitchen.

          "What is it?" Marge cried.

          Phil grabbed for her as she began to whimper. Ruth ran to me and we stood there, frozen, feeling the floor shake under our feet.

          "The engines!" Ruth suddenly screamed. "They're going now!"

          "They have to warm up!" was my wild guess. "We can still get out!"

          I let go of Ruth and grabbed a chair. For some reason I felt that the windows would be automatically locked, too.

          I hurled the chair through the glass. The vibrations were getting worse.

          "Quick!" I shouted over the noise. "Out on the fire escape! Maybe we can make it!"




          I think the couple escapes in the nick of time.



          Spoiler:




          And then the sky, which was growing light, grew dark. My head snapped around. Women were screaming their lungs out in terror. I looked in all directions.

          Solid walls were blotting out the sky.

          "We can't get out," she said. It's the whole block."

          And then the rockets started.







          share|improve this answer















          "Shipshape Home", a short story by Richard Matheson, also the answer to this old question and this one; first published in Galaxy Science Fiction, July 1952, available at the Internet Archive.



          This story featured a young couple who were looking for an apartment. They didn’t have a lot of money to spend and were very excited to find the perfect place, all the amenities, unbelievably low rent, well located, everything.




          "No, it's fluky," Ruth analyzed as we sat having dinner that night.

          I grinned at Phil and he grinned back.

          "I think so, too," Marge agreed. "Whoever heard of charging only sixty-five a month for a five-room apartment, furnished? Stove, refrigerator, washer—it's fantastic!"

          "Girls," I said, "lets not quibble. Let's take advantage."

          "Oh!" Ruth tossed her pretty blonde head. "If a man said, 'Here's a million dollars for you, old man,' you'd probably take it."

          "I most definitely would take it," I admitted. "I would then run like hell."

          "You're naive," she said. "You think everybody is Santa Claus."

          "It is a little funny," Phil said, "think about it, Rick."

          I thought about it. A five-room apartment, brand-new, furnished in even better than good taste right down to a couple of sets of expensive dishes . . .

          I pursed my lips. A guy can get lost writing about the bars on Mars. Maybe it was true. I could see their point. Of course, I wouldn't show it, though. And spoil Ruth's and my little game of war? Never.

          "I think they charge too much," I said.

          "Oh, Lord!" Ruth was taking it straight, as she usually did. "Too much? Five rooms yet! Furniture, dishes, linens, a television set! What do you want, a swimming pool?"

          "A small one would be good enough."

          She looked at Marge and Phil. "Let us discuss this thing quietly. Let us pretend that the fourth voice we hear is nothing but the wind in the eaves."

          "I am the wind in the eaves," I said.

          "Listen," Ruth restated her forebodings, "what if this place were a fluke? I mean, what if they just want people here for a coverup? That would explain the rent. You remember the rush on this place when they started renting?"

          I remembered as well as Phil and Ruth and Marge. The only reason we'd got apartments was we all happened to be walking past the place when the janitor put out the renting sign. The four of us had gone right in. I remember our amazement, our delight, at the rental. Why, we'd been paying more than double for half the size and ratty furniture, besides.




          One day when everyone was at home the apartment closed up, everyone was trapped, and the entire building lifted off into space. It was a trap, designed to capture humans.




          I headed for the door and grabbed the knob.

          It didn't turn.

          A bout of panic drove through me. I grabbed at it and yanked hard. I thought for a second, fighting down fear, that it was locked on the inside. I checked.

          It was locked on the outside.

          Marge was ready to scream. You could sense it bubbling up in her.

          "It's true," Ruth said, horrified. "Oh, my God, it's true then!"

          I made a dash for the window.

          The place began to vibrate, as if we were about to get hit by an earthquake. Dishes started to rattle and fall off their shelves. We heard a chair crash onto its side in the kitchen.

          "What is it?" Marge cried.

          Phil grabbed for her as she began to whimper. Ruth ran to me and we stood there, frozen, feeling the floor shake under our feet.

          "The engines!" Ruth suddenly screamed. "They're going now!"

          "They have to warm up!" was my wild guess. "We can still get out!"

          I let go of Ruth and grabbed a chair. For some reason I felt that the windows would be automatically locked, too.

          I hurled the chair through the glass. The vibrations were getting worse.

          "Quick!" I shouted over the noise. "Out on the fire escape! Maybe we can make it!"




          I think the couple escapes in the nick of time.



          Spoiler:




          And then the sky, which was growing light, grew dark. My head snapped around. Women were screaming their lungs out in terror. I looked in all directions.

          Solid walls were blotting out the sky.

          "We can't get out," she said. It's the whole block."

          And then the rockets started.








          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited 32 mins ago

























          answered 40 mins ago









          user14111user14111

          100k6388499




          100k6388499













          • Beata, if this is the correct answer, you can accept it by clicking the checkmark on the left. Please do; it will show everyone the mystery was solved and reward both you and user14111 with some reputation :)

            – Jenayah
            35 mins ago






          • 2





            Many congratulations on an incredible 100,000 reputation! I'm happy to be the one giving you the last upvote to get you there :-) Enjoy the inevitable Stack Exchange swag pack!

            – Rand al'Thor
            18 mins ago



















          • Beata, if this is the correct answer, you can accept it by clicking the checkmark on the left. Please do; it will show everyone the mystery was solved and reward both you and user14111 with some reputation :)

            – Jenayah
            35 mins ago






          • 2





            Many congratulations on an incredible 100,000 reputation! I'm happy to be the one giving you the last upvote to get you there :-) Enjoy the inevitable Stack Exchange swag pack!

            – Rand al'Thor
            18 mins ago

















          Beata, if this is the correct answer, you can accept it by clicking the checkmark on the left. Please do; it will show everyone the mystery was solved and reward both you and user14111 with some reputation :)

          – Jenayah
          35 mins ago





          Beata, if this is the correct answer, you can accept it by clicking the checkmark on the left. Please do; it will show everyone the mystery was solved and reward both you and user14111 with some reputation :)

          – Jenayah
          35 mins ago




          2




          2





          Many congratulations on an incredible 100,000 reputation! I'm happy to be the one giving you the last upvote to get you there :-) Enjoy the inevitable Stack Exchange swag pack!

          – Rand al'Thor
          18 mins ago





          Many congratulations on an incredible 100,000 reputation! I'm happy to be the one giving you the last upvote to get you there :-) Enjoy the inevitable Stack Exchange swag pack!

          – Rand al'Thor
          18 mins ago










          Beata Booth is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.










          draft saved

          draft discarded


















          Beata Booth is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.













          Beata Booth is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.












          Beata Booth is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
















          Thanks for contributing an answer to Science Fiction & Fantasy Stack Exchange!


          • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

          But avoid



          • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

          • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.


          To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




          draft saved


          draft discarded














          StackExchange.ready(
          function () {
          StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fscifi.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f203976%2fsci-fi-story-i-read-decades-ago-young-tenants-in-an-apartment-which-turns-out-t%23new-answer', 'question_page');
          }
          );

          Post as a guest















          Required, but never shown





















































          Required, but never shown














          Required, but never shown












          Required, but never shown







          Required, but never shown

































          Required, but never shown














          Required, but never shown












          Required, but never shown







          Required, but never shown







          Popular posts from this blog

          Magento 2 controller redirect on button click in phtml file

          Polycentropodidae