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Breaking News; CNN Confirms science has discovered a way to stop Hurricane and set to start first test with Florida

The sky turned an eerie green as the winds began to howl, rattling windows and shaking palm trees. Hurricane Fury, the strongest storm in over a century, was bearing down on Florida. Roads were empty, stores boarded up, and families huddled in their homes, praying they had done enough to survive.

By midnight, the storm was in full rage. Waves taller than buildings crashed onto the shore, swallowing whole neighborhoods. The wind howled like a beast, tearing off roofs and sending debris flying through the streets. Power lines snapped, plunging the state into darkness, save for the terrifying flashes of lightning that illuminated the destruction.

In the small town of Port Braden, the water rose with deadly speed, creeping up porches, slipping through cracks under doors. The Collins family, trapped in their home, listened as their living room flooded. Their dog barked frantically while the children clutched each other, eyes wide with terror. The wind screamed louder, shaking the walls, and with a deafening roar, the roof was ripped away.

By dawn, Hurricane Fury had moved inland, leaving behind a shattered coastline. The Collins’ house was gone, swept away in the surge. Streets were rivers, homes reduced to piles of wood and concrete. But as the sun rose, survivors began to emerge—shocked, but alive. The storm had taken much, but Florida would rebuild. It always did.

And in the quiet aftermath, the state mourned what was lost, but with the resilience that hurricanes always seemed to demand, the people braced themselves to start over once more.

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