For the first time, the world knows what an atomic bomb is.
In the same area, 350 girls from women's business schools are cleaning up an open space. They are all wearing blue student clothes. When the mushroom cloud rose in the air, the girls who turned to look at the flash curiously-about 3000 people-died at once. Songyuan Miyoko, 12 years old, never looked back. She instinctively covered her face and threw herself to the ground. When she regained consciousness, it seemed like a lifetime ago, and there was an unimaginable desolation around her. There are no people, no buildings, only endless rubble. She looked down and was startled. Her clothes have disappeared, leaving only a white cloth belt around her waist, and she is still smoking. She slapped with her right hand, only to find that her skin slipped down and hung unsteadily. Dr Shigeto Fumio, director of internal medicine at Hiroshima red cross hospital, is waiting for work at the tram stop. There was a long queue waiting for the bus. He was the last one. He leaned against the thick wall of Hiroshima Railway Station and looked down at the newspaper. Instantly, dozens of suns appeared in the sky at the same time. He looked up and saw a large group of girls preparing for school on the sidewalk in front of him turned white, almost transparent, and then disappeared. He fell to the ground and a big stone fell on him-the wall and slate behind saved his life. When he woke up, he found it was already dark, but it was already past 8 o'clock in the morning. When the dark clouds cleared, he found that everything was gone. He was the only survivor in the waiting crowd. A cavalry horse stood alone on the road. It turned purple, and the light radiation burned its whole skin. The horse hobbled with a private who was pierced in the back by a big nail on the beam. The horse froze in the memory of going down the mountain. For years, he dreamed of this helpless purple horse and followed it until it fell. Near the vanished Hiroshima Castle, another scene appeared. Four people covered in blood, whose hair and eyebrows were burnt, staggered in the fire and carried a huge portrait of the emperor through a charred body. The dying and insensitive underground refugees shouted like an electric shock: "The image of the emperor!" "People covered in blood struggle to stand up and bow to the portrait, and those who can't stand up pray with their hands folded. Half an hour later, the deadly black rain wet the newborn baby, and the baby hasn't cried since the explosion. But a miracle happened to this girl. From then on, she was named "Shinko" (meaning the flash of an atomic bomb). She gradually became very beautiful and healthy, and later became a tennis champion in Hiroshima and a world-famous figure. There is a certain connection between life and death, and human beings will live forever. After Hiroshima, Nagasaki was destroyed. After the war, the director of Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum and Professor Okada Takeshi concluded that at least 200,000 people died in the atomic bombing. The fire of the atomic bomb swallowed Nagasaki. According to the estimate of Nagasaki administrative officials, the death toll during the explosion and the following days was 74,800. Most survivors suffer from strange diseases: nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, fever, hair loss, and terrible bright spots appear on the victims-red, green with yellow, black and purple. Some people just burned their hands and feet, and then vomited blood and died. Terror hangs over all living people, and no one knows which day he will live. The Pushangchuan River was covered with corpses, and the river turned strangely yellow and red. The circular gas storage tank of the nearby gas company turned into a big fireball flying in the air. They roared into the air, fell to the ground, and then bounced into the air. A surviving painter witnessed such a terrible scene: a naked and black man, with no expression on his face, staring blankly ahead, carrying a child on his back, his intestines overflowing and dragging to the ground; Next to it, a cat whose hair has been burned into a knot is licking the intestines hanging from the horse's belly skinned by light radiation. The creaking sound is heartbreaking. A few days later, foreign rescue teams began to enter the ruins of death. The first thing to do is to deal with those bodies that decompose rapidly in the August sun. Rescuers began to collect grotesque bodies, gather them together and cremate them with unburned charred wood they picked up. The smoke is rolling and the burning smell is disgusting, but over time, some workers have become particularly fond of smelling this smell, reaching the point of addiction, which can actually stimulate their appetite. " However, no one in Hiroshima and Nagasaki doubts that the' black rain' has had a fatal impact on all living things, but people don't understand why the black spots left on their bodies after the rain can't be washed away, and no one can figure out how the water becomes like this: drinking it will kill people, and the dust falling on the road and people will also die. It was only with the passage of time that everyone gradually understood what had happened. Doctors gradually realized that most citizens in Hiroshima and Nagasaki died of nuclear radiation, but there was nothing they could do. After radiation, people kept vomiting, and all people's body temperatures were rising (reaching 39℃ ~ 40℃ the next day), and their heart beat was accelerated, reaching more than 150 times per minute, and their blood pressure gradually decreased, leading to asthma, and then bleeding-blood appeared on pale and swollen skin, then a large area festered, hair fell off, blood components changed dramatically, and then died one after another ...