The sky turned dark Saturday afternoon, but it was not a sign of the world's impending doom - just a passing rain.
Welcome to the No-pacalypse - a disappointing finish to what doomsday believer Robert Fitzpatrick thought would be the End of Days.
"I don't understand why nothing has happened," a deflated Fitzpatrick said in Times Square a few minutes after 6 p.m. "I did what I had to do. I did what the Bible said."
The retired MTA worker from Staten Island bought $140,000 worth of advertising, proclaiming that the end was near. He and followers of California televangelist Harold Camping thought a global earthquake would strike the East Coast just before 6 p.m.
It didn't, but Fitzpatrick spent the day as if it was his last.
"This is it, May 21, the day of Rapture" he told the Daily News first thing in the morning.
For breakfast, he had coffee, toast and Ezekiel 4:9 brand Golden Flax cereal.
"The spiritual significance of these grains, I am not sure," said Fitzgerald.
He felt no need to do the dishes, but did take a moment to feed peanuts to two squirrels that hang out at his back door.
"Only people can be saved - there will be no animals in heaven," he said. "I sure hope I am one of those that God will be picking."
Asked how he would feel if the world didn't end at 6 p.m., a confident Fitzgerald said: "I wouldn't consider it because there's so much biblical evidence."
"It's locked in," he said. "Buildings will be collapsing; the graves of the unsaved dead will be ripped open. The dead will be all around."
Fitzgerald spent several hours at home responding to emails and making calls. Then it was time for his final lunch of chicken tenders and spinach served with lemon and a bit of bread and butter.
"I expect this to be my last meal," he said.
Next, Fitzpatrick drove to the nursing home that cares for his 94-year-old mother, who suffers from dementia. As parting gifts he brought grapes, a granola bar, juice, chocolates and a bottle of water.
"I read a passage - Luke 23," he said of his 30-minute visit. "It's an example of a thief on the cross and Jesus saving people up to the last minute."
Fitzpatrick planned to do the same. He kissed his mother goodbye and jumped on the 4:30 p.m. ferry to Manhattan, where he planned to warn people of the Rapture until the bitter end.
Few were surprised when the end didn't come.
"The Bible says no one knows the day or time of Christ's return," said Brian James, 24, a born-again Christian missionary with a group called Prayer Changes Things.
"A real religion should try to help people, not scare them," added Michael Rodriguez, 24, a student from the Bronx.
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