Saturday, December 13, 2025

Reclaiming the World

Deep underground, in the chamber carved from ancient concrete and reinforced with scavenged steel, the empty room held its breath.

A single lantern flickered on the central table, its wavering light casting long, nervous shadows that stretched across the rough walls. Four candles, burned low and warped by heat, formed a small circle around a hand-drawn map—its edges curled, its surface stained by soot, sweat, and the trembling fingerprints of those who dared to dream of rebuilding.

The map was a patchwork of the world above: crumbling roads, poisoned rivers, collapsed districts, and the ruins of Los Angeles marked in jagged charcoal. Someone had added small symbols—triangles for safe tunnels, circles for supply caches, X’s where others had been lost. It was a record of danger and hope, equally fragile.

The air trembled faintly. Distant booms drifted through the bedrock like the heartbeat of a dying colossus. The storms above were tearing across the wasteland again—howling winds filled with sand, ash, and the remnants of a city that once glittered with lights and ambition. Now the storms carried only ruin.

The survivors who used this room—the ones who whispered strategy, argued over risks, and dared to believe freedom wasn’t extinct—they were out there somewhere, navigating tunnels and scouting for allies. Each absence stretched longer than the last.

Dust fell from the ceiling with every distant rumble. The lantern flame fluttered violently, as though sensing the tension that clung to the cavern.

Footsteps would return here soon. They had to.

This small room was their command center, their sanctuary, the birthplace of rebellion in a world that had forgotten what resistance looked like. Every scratch on the table, every wax drip on the stone, every penciled line on the map was a testament to the living—however few they were—refusing to give in.

And so the room waited, holding its silence, holding its breath, waiting for the moment those weary, determined hands would reach for the lantern again and plan the next step toward reclaiming the dead world above.

 

Friday, December 12, 2025

Shifting Mosaic

The rain thickened as dusk deepened, turning the city into a shifting mosaic of reflections—wet asphalt glimmering like a dark mirror, puddles trembling with each passing car. Edna’s gaze locked onto the red taillights sliding by below her window, each pair smearing into long streaks across the glass. They pulsed softly, like distant heartbeats.

The glow tugged at something deep inside her.

Red.
The color of brake lights.
The color of her mother's scarf whipping in the wind as they drove with the windows down.
The color of the suitcase her father packed for weekend trips.

But none of the images aligned neatly. They leaned into one another, merging into a hazy patchwork that made no sense and yet felt familiar. One moment she was a little girl with hair in ribbons, pressed against the backseat window, watching cornfields blur by. The next she was a teenager, tapping her foot impatiently as her parents argued softly in the front seat about which turn to take.

Then they were all there at once—a braided loop of time she couldn’t straighten.

She blinked, trying to bring clarity to the haze, but everything slipped like water through her fingers.

A pair of taillights glowed redder than the rest, cutting through the mist. For a second, she felt the jolt of the car hitting a pothole, her father’s voice apologizing over his shoulder, her mother laughing, her younger self clutching a stuffed rabbit. She felt the warmth of the car heater on her shins. She heard the faint hum of her parents’ favorite radio station.

Then—gone.

The memory dissolved into static.

The real world settled back around her with its soft hums and distant footsteps. She didn’t move. Her face remained blank, but inside, a soft ache rippled through her, gentle but persistent.

Another set of taillights drifted past—slow, steady, blooming red against the slick pavement. Edna followed them with her eyes, but not with her mind. Her thoughts floated somewhere unreachable, like balloons caught in branches high above her.

She couldn’t piece together the moments. Couldn’t decide whether she’d been eight, sixteen, or somewhere in between. The years folded over each other until nothing had edges anymore.

She exhaled, a small, weary breath.

Outside, the cars kept passing.
Inside, the memories kept blurring.

And Edna sat there, dazed but calm, her mind drifting in the soft glow of red lights and rain, lost somewhere between then and now, between who she had been and who she was fading into.

 

Thursday, December 11, 2025

Reclamation

After the fall, Los Angeles did not simply die—it dissolved, unraveling into a wasteland where nature and toxins fought for dominance.

The city lay in fragments, sinking into its own ashes.
Concrete buckled.
Steel curled like scorched paper.
Neighborhoods once pulsing with life were now skeletal outlines buried beneath dunes of gray dust that drifted like snow through the empty streets.

Nature Returned, but Twisted

Vegetation pushed through the ruins, but it wasn’t the hopeful green of renewal.
It was feral.
Overgrown.
Poisoned by centuries of chemical runoff and nuclear residue.

Vines the color of bruises crawled up the sides of crumbling towers, their tendrils weaving through shattered windows like fingers searching for purchase. Trees erupted through cracked sidewalks, their bark warped and split, leaves slick with oily sheens that shimmered under the dim, storm-blurred sun.

This was not rebirth—it was reclamation by something wild, desperate, and half-mad.

The Storms Never Stopped

Above it all, the sky churned with perpetual violence.
The storms rolled in daily, black and churning, carrying with them winds sharp enough to strip the paint from rusted vehicles and sandblast exposed bone.
Lightning forked across the horizon in toxic greens and sulfur yellow, illuminating the ruins like an autopsy flash.

Rain fell in acidic sheets, carving channels into the dust hills, turning whole blocks into rivers of muddy poison. Thunder shook the earth, echoing through collapsed subway tunnels where survivors hid.

Survivors Became Phantoms

They no longer walked the streets openly.
They slithered through shadows, crawled through drainpipes, traveled beneath debris where the storms could not reach them.
Their shelters—dugout warrens stitched together with scavenged metal—were hidden behind rockfalls or beneath piles of toppled freeway slabs.

Every movement was measured. Every breath cautious.
The storms hunted them as ruthlessly as the old forces once had.

Those who lived learned to read the weather like scripture:
the shift of the wind,
the taste of the air,
the way dust rose in spirals before a downpour.

Silence was their ally, secrecy their shield.

They whispered to one another in low voices, recalling what the city had once been—not to mourn it, but to remember why they must endure. Because survival was no longer just about living day to day. It was about outlasting the corruption that had brought the world to its knees.

Hidden in their burrows, listening to the storms tear apart what little remained above, they clung to a single truth:

The world had fallen, but they had not.

 

Wednesday, December 10, 2025

The Final Stage

Before the final collapse, before the cities burned and the sky turned the color of old wounds, the forces that hunted survivors had moved like shadows—silent, organized, and merciless. They had not appeared overnight. They had been built brick by brick, law by law, justification by justification, until the machinery of suppression was so vast and entrenched that no one could pinpoint when freedom had actually died.

They were not soldiers—not in the old sense. They were an amalgamation of outsourced power:
corporate enforcers, private mercenary outfits, cartel-funded militias, and state-controlled security drones. Each faction served the same unspoken master—control at any cost.

Before the Collapse, the Hunt Was Systematic

The Drones Came First

Silent tri-rotor units drifted through the streets like metallic vultures, their sensors tuned to detect gatherings of more than three people. They scanned faces, logged heat signatures, listened for forbidden words. A single anomaly triggered a cascade of escalation.
First a warning blared from the drone’s speaker.
Then a flash of light.
Then someone vanished, carried away in a stun-web, the drone lifting them like prey.

People learned not to look up. Not to speak loudly. Not to hope.

Then Came the Black Vans

No markings, no plates.
They prowled the neighborhoods at night, taking those who asked too many questions, those who refused to comply, those who still believed in the naïve notion of rights.

Residents heard the same sequence in their nightmares:
Tires on wet asphalt.
Doors sliding open.
Boots hitting concrete.
A muffled cry.
Then silence.

The vans drove off into the darkness, leaving behind homes full of trembling families who pretended not to have seen a thing.

Cartel Militias Filled the Void

When the government traded its integrity for alliances with drug syndicates, the militias became enforcers.
Heavily armed.
Unrestrained.
Deadly.

Entire blocks were sealed off as “stability zones,” where residents were forced to submit to inspections, interrogations, loyalty tests. Those who refused were marked—sprayed with invisible ink read only by drone scanners. Once marked, escape was impossible. Every corner, every checkpoint became a trap.

Propaganda Finished What Force Alone Couldn’t

Legacy media—the same institutions that once claimed to guard the truth—became the mouthpieces of the regime.
Every broadcast insisted that dissenters were:

  • extremists

  • threats to national safety

  • enemies of democracy

Neighbors turned on neighbors. Families reported their own.
Fear did the hunting even when the hunters slept.

The Final Stage: Purges Before the Fall

As the nation finally buckled, the forces escalated.
Curfews tightened.
Entire districts vanished behind barricades.
Search teams swept through burned-out suburbs with heat sensors and sonic disrupters, flushing out the last pockets of resistance like animals.

Anyone who survived had done so through sheer luck—or because they had already descended into the underground network forming beneath collapsing cities: the seed of a future resistance.

And Even Now, Long After the Collapse

Those forces, or twisted remnants of them, still roam the wasteland.
Some as broken machines, following protocols no human remembers.
Some as rogue militias, surviving off the bones of the fallen world.
And some—still organized—because the hunger to silence hope never truly died.

 

Tuesday, December 9, 2025

The Gentle Drift

In the stillness of night
an ancient tree drifts on calm water,
its roots loose from earth,
its branches brushing the stars.

Candles float beside it,
each flame a tiny heartbeat
in the vast, dark hush.

Their light dances on the surface—
wavering gold,
soft ripples folding into themselves,
reflections merging
with shadow and moon.

The tree glides without intent,
carried only by the quiet.
No beginning,
no destination—
just the gentle drift
of being.

Here,
between flame and reflection,
between water and sky,
all things pause
and become simple again—
a single moment,
unbroken.

 

Monday, December 8, 2025

Moving In

The troops moved like a slow, mechanical tide—methodical, relentless, sweeping through the ruins with the certainty of men who believed they owned the ground they walked on. Their visor lights glowed red through the ash-filled air, giving them the look of predators whose eyes had adapted perfectly to darkness.

But they weren’t alone in the ruins.

High above them—perched at the broken edge of a collapsed freeway ramp—Maren watched.

She had extinguished her lantern.
Her breath was slow, controlled.
Only the faintest outline of her silhouette broke against the storm-lit sky.

Below, the squad advanced in perfect formation, unaware they were being observed.

From her vantage point, she could see everything:

The scanning beams sweeping back and forth like hungry tongues.
The drone searchlights stabbing through cracks in buildings.
The subtle tension in the air—the kind soldiers carried when they sensed they were close to something important, something dangerous.

But it was what she felt that chilled her.

Silen was near.

She didn’t know how she knew—whether it was instinct, memory, or something deeper threading through whatever strange dreamlike shifts reality had recently taken—but she could sense him like a dim pulse beneath her feet.

The troops were closing in on him… and on her.

A gust of wind tore down the freeway, scattering ash and tattered paper from a fallen billboard. A piece fluttered by her boot—an old government poster from the early days of the collapse:

“STAY SAFE. OBEY DIRECTIVES. PROTECT THE COLLECTIVE.”

The smiling faces on it were faded, sun-bleached into cruel mockery.

Maren’s fist tightened.

Below, the squad halted.

One soldier raised a hand.
He had seen something.

Maren froze.

Through a jagged break in the rubble, she saw what had caught his attention: a footprint, half-smudged but unmistakably fresh. It led downward—toward a gap between two collapsed buildings that formed a narrow stone chute.

Toward Silen.

The officer knelt beside it, touching the edge with two fingers.

“She’s close,” he said. “And he’s not far ahead.”

Maren’s heart hammered once—hard.

They knew.

The squad fanned out, rifles raised, each man scanning angles and shadows. The officer pointed toward the chute.

“Two teams. One follows the tracks. One circles to cut them off.”

Maren’s decision had to be immediate.

She crouched lower behind the cracked concrete barrier and watched as the soldiers began their descent. The formation split, half slipping into the ravine-like chute, the others moving along an upper ridge.

She knew that path.
It led directly into one of the underpasses—one of the corridors Silen used.

If they found him first—

Lightning split the sky, briefly illuminating the city in a blinding white flash.

The troops became silhouettes.

For an instant, Maren saw her reflection in their visors from afar—small, hidden, but vulnerable.

She whispered into the storm:

“Silen… you have to move.”

And then she slipped backward into the shadows of the freeway skeleton, preparing to descend, to try and reach him before the troops did—but knowing she was impossibly outnumbered, outgunned, and watched by eyes trained to see everything.

Behind her, the storm throbbed with electricity.
Ahead, the soldiers moved like wolves.

And from deep below the ruins…
Silen felt a sudden jolt of awareness—like a memory breaking through, like someone calling his name through water.

They were converging.

All of them.

The hunter, the hunted, and the one who refused to let the story end here.

 

Sunday, December 7, 2025

Forgotten Voyage

Along the quiet inlet
an old tall ship drifts forward,
its sails unfurling
like slow, deliberate breaths.

No voices rise from the deck,
no footsteps echo on the boards—
only the soft creak of wood
remembering journeys long past.

Mountains guard the horizon,
their shadows resting on the water.
Pines lean close,
whispering nothing to the passing wind.

Clouds drift in unhurried layers,
mirroring the ship’s steady grace,
each one a silent companion
on this forgotten voyage.

Alone, the vessel glides—
yet not alone.
Sea, sky, earth, and canvas
move as a single mind,
a moment of stillness
carried quietly across the tide.