Jonathan Ford, once a respected journalist for the Charmouth Gazette, was desperate to reignite his fading career after being laid off. Months of rejection had left him restless and searching for a story that could put his name back on the map.
Determined to find something big, he turned his focus to the natural world, hoping to capture rare footage of powerful storms. He had just purchased a state-of-the-art drone — his last investment in his dream of getting back into journalism.
The day the drone arrived, Jonathan set out along the rugged coastline near Charmouth. As storm clouds gathered, he launched it into the air, eager to capture dramatic footage that could finally earn him a headline again.
At first, everything went as planned. The drone recorded flashes of lightning, crashing waves, and the dark beauty of the approaching storm. But then, as it swept inland, the camera caught something strange buried deep in the underbrush.
Jonathan leaned closer to his monitor, his pulse quickening. It wasn’t debris or an animal — it was metallic, half-covered, and shaped like something man-made. A chill ran through him as the image became clearer.
He tried to dismiss it as scrap metal or machinery, but something about its markings looked wrong — deliberate, almost concealed. His instincts as a reporter kicked in. Whatever it was, it didn’t belong there.
Without hesitation, he called 911, describing what he’d seen and sending the coordinates. The dispatcher promised to alert local authorities immediately. Jonathan’s hands shook as he replayed the footage again and again.
That night, sleep wouldn’t come. The glowing image from the drone haunted him — a silent warning of something buried, something dangerous, waiting to be uncovered. His next story, he realized, might change everything.