Wednesday, April 29, 2026

Something in Between

The tunnel breathed.

That was the only way Mara could describe it now.

The walls no longer held still—they pulsed faintly, like something alive beneath the concrete, as if the structure itself were trying to decide what it was supposed to be. Light from her lantern bent strangely across the surface, revealing flickers of something beneath—lines, grids, fragments of code that surfaced and vanished like thoughts half-formed.

Beside her, the man kept pace.

He had told her his name was Ilan—though even he didn’t sound certain when he said it. Names felt unstable now, like everything else.

“You feel that?” he asked quietly.

Mara nodded.

The ground shifted again beneath their feet—not violently, but enough to unsettle balance. Dust fell from above in soft streams. Somewhere behind them, the tunnel they had just exited groaned and sealed itself with a low, grinding collapse.

No going back.

“Forward,” Mara said.

They stepped out of the tunnel mouth—

—and into a city that couldn’t decide what it was.


Los Angeles.

But not the same Los Angeles.

Not the ruins.

Not the living city.

Something in between.

Buildings flickered as they walked—glass towers appearing intact for a split second before collapsing into skeletal frames of rust and sand. Streets stretched out ahead of them, then warped, bending at impossible angles before snapping back into something almost normal.

A car sat parked at a curb.

Pristine.

Engine idling.

Then—

It decayed in an instant, paint peeling, windows cracking, frame collapsing inward as if decades passed in a breath.

Ilan stopped.

“…that’s not just damage,” he said. “That’s time breaking.”

Mara didn’t answer.

She was watching something else.

Farther down the street, figures moved.

People.

Or echoes of people.

They flickered in and out—walking, talking, frozen mid-motion, then dissolving entirely.

One of them turned its head sharply—

and looked directly at her.

Mara froze.

The figure blinked out of existence.

Gone.

Ilan exhaled slowly.

“They can see us now.”

“Not all of them,” Mara said. “Just the ones waking up.”

She started forward again.

The air hummed—faint, mechanical, layered beneath the distant wind that didn’t quite behave like wind anymore.

She could feel it now more clearly than ever.

The source.

Not a place exactly.

More like a pressure.

A gravity pulling at the edges of her perception.

Deeper.

Always deeper.

“We’re close,” she said.

“To what?” Ilan asked.

Mara hesitated.

“I don’t know,” she admitted. “But it’s where this all comes from.”


The city shifted again.

Harder this time.

The sky flickered—

blue—

then orange—

then something else entirely, a dark, empty expanse threaded with faint, endless lines.

Then it snapped back.

Ilan grabbed her arm to steady himself.

“What happens if it doesn’t come back?” he asked.

Mara looked up.

For a moment, she saw through it.

Not sky.

Not atmosphere.

But a surface.

A ceiling.

Something artificial trying to pretend it wasn’t.

“Then this version ends,” she said quietly.

“And something else replaces it.”

Ilan let go slowly.

“That’s not… better.”

“No,” Mara said. “It’s not.”


Ahead, the ground split.

A crack ran across the street, jagged and deep. Not a natural fissure—too clean in places, too precise. Light leaked from within it—not sunlight, not firelight.

Something colder.

More structured.

Mara stepped closer, kneeling at the edge.

Below, the earth wasn’t earth.

It was layered.

Concrete.

Then darkness.

Then—

movement.

Rows.

Endless rows.

The same thing she had glimpsed before.

Servers.

Machines.

Rendering.

Calculating.

Watching.

Ilan crouched beside her.

“…that’s real,” he said.

Mara nodded.

“For something, yes.”

She stood slowly.

“That’s where we’re going.”

Ilan stared at her.

“You’re serious.”

Mara turned, scanning the shifting city.

The buildings flickered again—one collapsing into a dune of sand, another restoring itself into a pristine structure for a heartbeat before breaking apart again.

Nothing here would hold.

Nothing here was stable.

But beneath it—

Something was.

“We won’t make it above ground,” she said. “Not like this. It’s too unstable.”

She pointed toward a partially collapsed structure across the street.

Its entrance yawned open, dark and jagged.

Another tunnel.

Or the beginning of one.

“That’ll take us down,” she said.

“Deeper than before.”

Ilan followed her gaze.

The building flickered—half ruin, half intact, caught between states.

“You think it leads to the source?”

Mara didn’t answer right away.

Instead, she stepped forward.

The ground beneath her feet shifted again—but she didn’t falter this time.

She had learned the rhythm of it.

Or at least how to move with it.

“It leads somewhere real,” she said finally.

“And right now, that’s enough.”


Behind them, the city twisted again.

Figures appeared and vanished.

Time folded in on itself.

Reality strained.

But ahead—

The darkness of the tunnel remained.

Stable.

Waiting.

Mara stepped inside.

Ilan followed.

And as they descended—

The light above them flickered once more.

Then dimmed.

As if the world itself were trying to decide whether to keep them… or let them go.

 

Tuesday, April 28, 2026

Slow Surrender

In the hush before morning,
a wind moves without intention.

Bamboo bends—
not to reveal,
not to conceal—
yet the forest opens.

A narrow space appears,
as if the earth has exhaled.

Beyond it,
mist drifts in slow surrender,
lifting its own veil
for no one.

The mountain stands,
unannounced,
unwitnessed,
complete.

No eye receives it,
no mind names it,
no story is made.

Still, the bamboo sways,
still, the mist parts,
still, the mountain rises.

Not waiting,
not offering—
simply thus.

A moment passes
that no one keeps.

And yet,
nothing is lost.

 

Monday, April 27, 2026

Not Seeking Meaning

A young monk climbs the mountain,
counting each step as progress.
The peak stands before him—
solid, unmoving, real.

Rivers run where they must,
stones remain where they fall.
The world is simple:
a mountain is a mountain,
water is water.

Years pass like drifting clouds.

He returns to the same path,
but now the ground feels uncertain.
The mountain dissolves in his thoughts—
no edge, no center, no name.

Water slips through his fingers,
never once held.
What he called “river”
is only movement,
what he called “mountain”
only a moment of form.

He laughs, then grows quiet.
Nothing can be grasped.
Nothing stands alone.

Time passes again—
though he no longer counts it.

One morning,
he climbs without climbing.
The mountain rises
as it always has.

It does not ask to be explained.

Water flows past his feet,
clear, cold, complete.
He drinks—
not seeking meaning.

The mountain is a mountain.
The water is water.

No longer burdened by knowing, 
no longer divided by doubt, 
he walks on—
and the world walks with him.

 

Sunday, April 26, 2026

Endless Going

A pilgrim sets out at first light,
no map, no name for the road.
Dust gathers on his feet
like quiet understanding.

The path bends through hills,
through villages that do not ask who he is.
He drinks from a stream,
and the stream keeps no record.

With each step,
the world opens—
not ahead,
but beneath him.

He meets an old tree,
twisted by wind,
still growing
without ever arriving.

At dusk, he wonders
where he is going.
The question falls away
like a leaf into water.

For when the journey becomes a destination,
the feet forget how to move.
The eyes no longer see the sky,
only the horizon they chase.

Better to walk
as the clouds drift—
never arriving,
never lost.

In the endless going,
there is breath,
there is life.

In the need to arrive,
the road ends—
and so does the traveler.

 

Saturday, April 25, 2026

Along the Edges

They did not chant.

They stood at the edge of the crowd, where the noise thinned just enough to hear their own breathing, ragged and uneven. The two men had learned long ago that survival did not belong to those who shouted the loudest, but to those who knew when to stay silent.

Elias kept his head down, his coat pulled tight despite the heat of nearby fires. Beside him, Marlow scanned the shifting mass with sharp, restless eyes, always calculating, always searching for an opening. The protests were dangerous—not because of what they claimed to stand for, but because they were unpredictable. A single spark could turn a chant into a stampede, a march into a riot.

“Food first,” Marlow muttered, his voice nearly swallowed by the roar.

Elias nodded. Words were a luxury now.

They moved along the fractured sidewalk, stepping over broken glass and discarded signs, slipping past clusters of people too consumed by their anger to notice anything else. A man shouted into the void about justice. Another wept openly, clutching a sign he couldn’t seem to read anymore. No one paid attention to the two men drifting like ghosts along the edges.

They found what they were looking for in the ruins of a corner store, its windows long since shattered, its shelves stripped bare—except for what others had overlooked. Marlow crouched, digging through debris with practiced hands, uncovering a dented can and something wrapped in faded plastic. Elias kept watch, his eyes flicking toward the street where the noise ebbed and surged like a living thing.

“Got something,” Marlow said quietly.

It wasn’t much. It never was. But it was enough to keep them moving one more day.

A sudden surge in the crowd sent a ripple through the street. The chants grew louder, angrier, and then came the sound—glass shattering, a scream cut short, the unmistakable shift from protest to chaos. Elias grabbed Marlow’s arm.

“Time to go.”

They didn’t run. Running drew attention. Instead, they melted into the narrow alleyways, weaving through the veins of the broken city where the noise became distant and distorted. Here, the walls were tagged with layers of forgotten messages, each one overwritten by the next, a history of outrage buried beneath itself.

They reached a place they had come to know—a half-collapsed building that offered just enough shelter to rest without being seen. Inside, the air was still, heavy with dust and memory.

Marlow sat first, exhaling slowly, staring at the small portion of food in his hands. “You ever wonder,” he said after a long silence, “if they even know why they’re out there?”

Elias leaned against the wall, closing his eyes for a moment. The distant roar of the crowd filtered in, constant, unending.

“No,” he said finally. “And I don’t think it matters anymore.”

Marlow let out a dry laugh, though there was no humor in it.

Outside, the city continued to tear itself apart, one protest at a time. Inside, the two men ate in silence, clinging to what little remained—not of the world, but of themselves.

 

Friday, April 24, 2026

Patience and Compassion

At dawn, a young monk
sweeps fallen petals from the stone path.
Each stroke of the broom
leaves less on the ground—
and less in his mind.

He pauses,
watching mist lift from the valley.
Nothing hurries the sun,
yet morning arrives.

A bird calls.
Another answers.
Neither argues the sound.

He remembers:

To take only the step before him—
this is simplicity.
The path does not ask for more.

To wait as mountains wait—
through storm, through silence—
this is patience.
Even the river does not resist the bend.

To hold his own restless heart
as gently as a fallen leaf—
this is compassion.
No wind is turned away.

The broom rests.
The petals remain.
The world, unfinished, is complete.

He bows
not to perfection,
but to what is—
and in that quiet bow,
nothing is missing.

 Content now,
he sits and contemplates...

Thursday, April 23, 2026

Never Missing

A woman sits
by the window,
tea warming her hands
without promise.

Mountains rest
in the distance—
unchanged
by all that has passed
before her noticing.

Steam rises,
then disappears—
a life
complete in its leaving.

She once believed
there was somewhere to arrive—
a place
where everything
would finally settle.

But the tea was warm
then too.
The sky just as wide.

Days slipped through her fingers
like water—
not lost,
only never held.

A bird crosses
the space between peaks—
no thought
of where it will be next.

She drinks.

Nothing resolves.
Nothing needs to.

The mountains remain distant,
yet fully present.

And somewhere
in the quiet
between breath and sip—

she notices
this moment
has never been missing.