The sky above Los Angeles was a smoky canvas, streaked with the reds and oranges of a dying sun, as if the heavens themselves mourned the city’s demise. Once a sprawling metropolis, its skyline now lay in jagged ruins, skeletal remains of what was once the crown jewel of the West. Skyscrapers stood like blackened teeth, their glass windows shattered, their metal frames twisted and charred. The streets were silent save for the occasional rustle of wind carrying ash and memories of a city that once pulsed with life.
In the shadow of this graveyard, a lone man sat beside a small campfire, its flames licking at the cool evening air. His tent, a patchwork of salvaged tarps and canvas, leaned against the shell of a burned-out car. His world was small now, contained within the flickering glow of his fire.
He ran a hand through his matted hair, his fingers brushing against the grit and soot that seemed to cling to everything. His clothes were threadbare, the fabric worn thin from months of wear and exposure. A pot balanced precariously over the fire, steam curling upward with the aroma of scavenged roots and the last of a small rabbit he had trapped that morning.
The man’s eyes wandered to the horizon, where the distant outline of the Hollywood sign was barely discernible, its letters scorched and broken. It was a cruel joke now, a relic of a dream that had long since turned to dust. He remembered the city as it had been—its ceaseless energy, the hum of traffic, the lights that never dimmed. He remembered the people too: their laughter, their ambition, their naivety.
But those people were gone. They had fled when the fires came, when the riots tore through the streets, when the government declared the city lost. And though they carried pieces of Los Angeles in their hearts and minds, the city itself was a tomb.
He poked at the fire with a stick, sending a shower of embers into the darkening sky. Rebuilding? The thought crossed his mind, but he dismissed it as quickly as it came. Rebuilding wasn’t on the horizon. Not in his lifetime, maybe not ever. Los Angeles had been consumed by its own excess, its own arrogance, leaving behind a cautionary tale written in smoke and ruin.
What then, he wondered, was the future? Survival, perhaps. Something simpler. He had learned to live off the land, to hunt, to make do with what the earth provided. In the stillness of the night, he felt something primal stir within him—a connection to the world as it once was, before cities and machines and endless noise.
The fire crackled, its warmth a small comfort against the encroaching chill. Tomorrow, he would search for more food, check the traps, maybe salvage supplies from the ruins. Tomorrow, the world would still be ash and silence. But tonight, beneath the vast expanse of stars that now seemed brighter without the city’s lights to compete with, he allowed himself a moment to simply be. To exist.
And as he stared into the flames, the ruins of Los Angeles around him, he wondered if maybe this was how it was always meant to be—a world stripped bare, waiting for the earth to reclaim what humanity had lost.