Tuesday, March 31, 2026

In the Aftermath

The flickering stopped.

Not all at once—but enough.

Enough for the world to choose a form again.


The ash-choked sky steadied into a deep, bruised orange.

The shifting ground beneath Aurelian’s feet hardened into cracked asphalt and fractured concrete. The distant figure dissolved like smoke, leaving only empty streets and skeletal buildings stretching toward the horizon.

The spinning in his mind slowed.

Not gone.

But… contained.

Like a storm pushed just beyond the edges of thought.

Aurelian stood still, breathing hard.

Then he recognized it.

Los Angeles.

Or what remained of it.


The city lay in ruins.

Freeways sagged like broken spines, their supports collapsed into tangled heaps of steel and dust. Towering structures had either fallen or fused into jagged monuments of heat and time. Sand had begun reclaiming everything, drifting through streets and filling the hollow shells of buildings.

The ocean lingered in the distance.

Still there.

Still moving.

But even it felt distant—like a memory the land hadn’t yet let go of.

Aurelian turned slowly in place.

This wasn’t a flash.

This wasn’t a glitch.

He was here now.

Fully.

And the silence—

It was different from the harbor.

Not empty.

Not paused.

This silence had history.

It had aftermath.

Something had happened here.

Something final.


A faint sound carried through the wind.

Footsteps.

Measured.

Familiar.

Aurelian turned toward it.

From between two collapsed structures, a figure emerged—walking steadily across the broken terrain, staff in hand, robes trailing lightly in the dust.

Aurelian’s breath caught.

It was him.

The man he had seen from a distance before.

The one walking beneath the dying sun.

Now close enough to see clearly.

Weathered.

Calm.

Eyes steady, as if none of this—none of the collapse, the shifting worlds, the impossible fractures—surprised him anymore.

The man stopped several yards away.

They stood facing each other in the ruins.

For a long moment, neither spoke.

Then—

Aurelian realized something unsettling.

He wasn’t just recognizing the man.

He was recognizing himself.

Not physically.

Not exactly.

But something deeper.

A shared awareness.

A shared… displacement.

The man tilted his head slightly.

“You’re not from this layer,” he said.

His voice was calm. Certain.

Not a question.

Aurelian swallowed.

“I don’t know where I’m from anymore.”

The man studied him for a moment longer, then nodded faintly—as if that answer made perfect sense.

“Good,” he said.

Aurelian frowned.

“Good?”

The man stepped closer, planting his staff firmly into the cracked ground.

“If you still believed you belonged somewhere,” he said, “this place would break you.”

A gust of wind swept through the ruins, carrying dust between them.

Aurelian glanced around again.

“This… this is real, isn’t it?”

The man didn’t answer immediately.

Instead, he looked up at the sky.

For a brief second—

It flickered.

Just enough.

He saw it too.

Aurelian followed his gaze.

“…you saw that,” Aurelian said quietly.

The man looked back at him.

“I’ve been seeing it for a long time.”

Silence settled again.

But now it was different.

Not empty.

Not oppressive.

Shared.

Aurelian took a slow step forward.

“What happened here?”

The man’s eyes moved across the ruins.

The broken towers.

The buried streets.

The endless, creeping sand.

“Everything that happens everywhere,” he said. “Just… further along.”

Aurelian felt that settle into him.

Not as an explanation.

As a warning.

He looked back at the man.

“Who are you?”

The man paused.

For just a moment, something passed through his expression.

Something like memory.

Or loss.

Then—

“Aurelian Tharos.”

The words hit like a physical blow.

Aurelian took a step back.

“No… that’s—”

“Your name?” the man finished.

Silence.

The wind picked up again.

Dust swirled between them.

Two versions of the same man standing in the ruins of a collapsed world.

One who had just arrived.

One who had endured.

The older Aurelian studied him carefully.

“You’re earlier,” he said. “Before you understand.”

Aurelian shook his head, trying to ground himself.

“This isn’t possible.”

The older version gave a faint, almost sad smile.

“Neither is any of this.”

The sky flickered again.

Longer this time.

Both of them looked up.

And for a moment—

They saw it clearly.

The darkness beyond.

The endless rows.

The machines.

Watching.

Calculating.

Then—

The illusion sealed itself again.

The ruined sky returned.

Aurelian’s chest tightened.

“They’re doing this,” he said. “All of it.”

The older Aurelian nodded slowly.

“Yes.”

“Who?”

A long pause.

Then—

“Someone who thinks this is what we are.”

The words hung in the air.

Heavy.

Aurelian felt something shift inside him.

Fear.

Yes.

But something else too.

Understanding.

Or the beginning of it.

He looked around at the broken city.

At what humanity—real or simulated—had become here.

And for the first time, he didn’t just see destruction.

He saw intention.

Design.

A test.

He turned back to the older Aurelian.

“What do we do?”

The older man didn’t answer right away.

Instead, he looked out over the ruins.

Toward the distant ocean.

Toward a horizon that felt both real and artificial at the same time.

Finally, he spoke.

“We find the cracks,” he said.

“And we make them wider.”

The wind rose again.

The city groaned softly in the distance.

And somewhere beyond the sky—

The machines continued to hum.

 

Monday, March 30, 2026

This World is Broken

The hum deepened.

It pressed into Aurelian’s bones now—no longer a distant vibration, but something inside the world, as if the very structure of reality were beginning to strain under its own weight.

The lantern beside him flickered violently.

Once.

Twice.

Then shattered into darkness.


The harbor vanished.

Not faded—

ripped away.


Aurelian fell.

There was no ground beneath him—only a violent tearing sensation, like being pulled through layers of existence too fast for the mind to follow.

Fragments flashed around him:

The airport line—faces twisted in anger.
The ancient port—empty, silent, abandoned.
A child in a sunlit alley staring up in confusion.
A warplane screaming across a sky that didn’t belong to it.

All of it overlapping.

All of it collapsing inward.

Aurelian tried to breathe—but there was no air, only pressure, distortion, a sense of being stretched across multiple moments at once.

Then—

Impact.


He hit hard.

Dust exploded around him.

Air rushed back into his lungs in a violent gasp.

For several seconds he couldn’t move.

Couldn’t think.

Only feel the rough, broken ground beneath his hands.

Heat.

Dry.

Oppressive.

He rolled onto his side, coughing.

When his vision finally cleared—

He saw the sky.

Burnt orange.

Choked with ash.

The sun hung low and distorted behind a veil of smoke, casting long, sickly shadows across a landscape that looked like the remains of something that had once been alive.

Now—

Dead.

Aurelian pushed himself up slowly.

Every movement felt wrong.

Heavy.

Unstable.

As if gravity itself hadn’t fully decided how it should behave.

He looked around.

Ruins stretched in every direction.

Not ancient.

Not historical.

Recent.

Buildings collapsed inward, their steel frames twisted and exposed like broken ribs. Roads were cracked and half-buried beneath drifting sand. Vehicles sat abandoned where they had died, their windows shattered, their metal corroded by time and neglect.

A city.

Or what was left of one.

Wind moved through it in long, hollow breaths.

Carrying dust.

Carrying silence.

Aurelian staggered to his feet.

“What is this…”

But even as he asked it—

He knew.

Not consciously.

Not logically.

But somewhere deeper.

This wasn’t just another place.

It was a future.

Or a possibility of one.

His head spun.

The airport.

The harbor.

This.

They weren’t separate.

They were connected.

Layers.

Outcomes.

All existing at once—

And now colliding.

A distant sound echoed across the ruins.

A metallic groan.

Then—

Movement.

Aurelian turned sharply.

Far across the broken cityscape, something shifted between the skeletal remains of a collapsed structure.

A figure.

Walking.

Slow.

Deliberate.

Not searching.

Not wandering.

Moving with purpose.

Aurelian’s heart pounded.

“Hey!”

His voice cracked against the empty expanse.

The figure didn’t respond.

Didn’t even slow.

Just continued walking through the ruins as if Aurelian didn’t exist.

Or worse—

As if this was its world.

And Aurelian was the one out of place.

The ground beneath him trembled suddenly.

A low rumble rolled through the city.

Aurelian looked down.

The cracks in the pavement were shifting.

Not breaking—

Rearranging.

As if the world itself were trying to stabilize around him.

Or reject him.

The sky flickered.

For a split second—

He saw it again.

Darkness beyond the sky.

And within it—

Rows.

Endless rows of towering structures.

Servers.

Then—

Gone.

The ruined sky snapped back into place.

Aurelian staggered again, clutching his head.

“No… no, no—”

His thoughts fractured.

Nothing held together.

The airport felt like a memory.

The harbor like a dream.

This—

This felt like the truth.

And that terrified him.

The figure in the distance stopped.

Slowly—

It turned.

Even from this far away, Aurelian felt it.

Awareness.

Recognition.

The figure saw him.

The wind died instantly.

Silence fell over the ruins.

Aurelian stood frozen.

Because something deep inside him understood—

This wasn’t random.

This wasn’t an accident.

He wasn’t just moving between places.

He was being pulled.

Toward something.

Toward someone.

The figure began walking toward him.

And with every step it took—

The world around them flickered harder.

Reality thinning.

Breaking.

Struggling to hold itself together.

Aurelian’s breath came fast now.

His mind racing, trying to grasp something solid.

Anything.

But there was nothing left to hold onto.

Only one thought remained.

Clear.

Unavoidable.

This world is broken.

And somehow—

So was he.

And before his eyes, the world morphed into the ruins of an ancient civilization.

 

Sunday, March 29, 2026

Always Preparing

At the edge of the garden
a man builds a gate—
measuring, refining, waiting.

“I will walk through
when it is perfect,” he says.

Seasons pass.
The koi grow old in the pond,
circling without rehearsal.

The monk sits beside him,
watching petals fall
into water that does not wait.

The man gathers plans
like dry leaves—
afraid to step forward
until the wind is right.

Winter comes quietly.
Snow covers the unfinished gate.

His breath slows—
still preparing.

The monk closes his eyes.

A petal lands,
lives fully in its falling,
and is gone.

The gate remains unopened.

 

Saturday, March 28, 2026

I and I

In the quiet garden
raked lines circle nothing—
yet nothing holds them all.

A koi turns beneath the surface,
ripples becoming sky,
sky becoming water.

The monk watches—
then forgets
who is watching.

Stone, sand, and fin
move together
without agreement.

The pond reflects the moon,
the moon reflects the pond—
which one is real?

A breeze passes—
the garden shifts,
but nothing leaves.

You are not in the garden.
The garden is not outside you.

Like the koi
swimming through its own reflection—
the universe
turns within itself,
and calls it “I.”

 

Friday, March 27, 2026

Under the Rising Sun

The monk sits beneath a blooming tree,
yet his mind wanders
through seasons that have not come.

Petals fall here—
but he gathers them
in a place that does not exist.

A crow calls once
into the empty valley—
the echo is carried
to a distant yesterday.

He chases tomorrow
up the snow-covered mountain,
never noticing
the moon already at his back.

Breath enters, leaves—
unnoticed.

The wind moves through branches—
unheard.

At last,
tired of traveling nowhere,
he rests.

And in that stillness,
the elsewhere dissolves—
like frost
under the rising sun.

 

Thursday, March 26, 2026

The Pressing Truth

The line surged again—

Voices rising.

Someone shouting.

A child crying.

Aurelian took a step forward—

—and the world broke.

Not gradually.

Not subtly.

It collapsed.


The fluorescent lights overhead stretched into long, blinding streaks.

The sound of the crowd warped into a low, dragging hum—like a machine slowing down.

Faces blurred.

Edges dissolved.

For a single, impossible moment, everything around him seemed to unrender.

Then—

Silence.


Aurelian stood still.

No line.

No airport.

No people.

The air was warm.

He blinked slowly.

The ground beneath his feet was no longer polished tile, but worn stone—uneven, ancient, smoothed by centuries of footsteps.

A soft wind moved past him.

Carrying salt.

He turned.

Before him stretched an ancient port city at dusk.

Stone buildings lined narrow streets that wound toward a quiet harbor. Their walls were sun-worn, painted in faded earth tones, edges softened by time. Wooden shutters hung slightly askew. Lanterns flickered dimly in doorways, casting long shadows across the empty paths.

Beyond the buildings, the sea stretched outward—darkening beneath a deep violet sky.

Ships rested silently in the harbor.

Tall-masted.

Sails furled.

Ropes creaking softly as they swayed.

No voices.

No footsteps.

No life.

Aurelian’s breath slowed.

“What… is this?”

His voice echoed faintly through the empty street, swallowed quickly by the stillness.

He stepped forward.

The stone beneath his feet felt real.

Solid.

More real, somehow, than the airport had just moments before.

He moved toward the harbor.

Each step carried a strange weight—not fear, not panic, but something deeper.

Recognition.

As if this place existed somewhere inside him.

Or had once.

Aurelian reached the edge of the water.

The docks stretched out in long wooden paths, worn smooth by time. The tide lapped gently against their posts, the sound rhythmic, calming.

Too calm.

He looked out across the sea.

The horizon shimmered faintly.

At first, he thought it was heat rising from the water.

But no—

It was something else.

The same distortion he had glimpsed before.

Like a surface struggling to hold its shape.

Aurelian narrowed his eyes.

“What are you?”

The question wasn’t directed at the sea.

Or the sky.

It was directed at everything.

The city.

The silence.

The feeling that this place was not just abandoned—

But paused.

As if the people who belonged here had been… removed.

Or never fully rendered at all.

A faint creak sounded behind him.

He turned sharply.

One of the ships shifted slightly in the harbor.

Its ropes tightening.

Its hull groaning softly.

For a moment, Aurelian thought he saw movement on its deck.

A figure.

Standing still.

Watching.

Then—

Nothing.

Empty again.

The air grew heavier.

The light dimmed further as the last edge of the sun slipped beneath the horizon.

Lanterns flickered.

But no one lit them.

They simply… were.

Aurelian stepped onto the dock.

The wood groaned beneath his weight.

He moved slowly toward the nearest ship, eyes fixed on the place where he thought he had seen the figure.

Halfway down the dock—

The world flickered.

Harder this time.

The sky above him fractured into thin lines.

For a split second, he saw something beyond it—

Darkness.

And within that darkness—

Rows.

Endless rows.

Of something tall.

Something mechanical.

Then the sky snapped back.

The stars began to appear.

Aurelian staggered, gripping one of the dock posts.

His heart pounded now.

Not from fear.

From realization.

“This isn’t real,” he whispered.

But even as he said it, his hand pressed against the rough wood felt completely real.

The wind on his skin.

The salt in the air.

The sound of water against the dock.

All of it undeniable.

Which made the truth worse.

“If this isn’t real…”

He looked back toward the empty city.

“…then what is?”

A low hum began to rise.

Faint at first.

Barely audible beneath the sound of the sea.

But growing.

Deep.

Mechanical.

Familiar.

Aurelian froze.

Because he recognized it.

Not from here.

From somewhere else.

A place he couldn’t quite remember.

The hum grew louder.

The lantern light flickered erratically.

The ships creaked harder against their moorings.

The horizon began to distort again—

And this time it didn’t correct itself.

Aurelian turned slowly in a full circle, taking it all in.

The empty streets.

The silent harbor.

The sky barely holding together.

And beneath it all—

That hum.

The sound of something vast.

Something hidden.

Something watching.

His chest tightened.

And for the first time, the thought fully formed—not as a question, but as a truth pressing against his mind:

I’m not where I’m supposed to be.

The dock shuddered beneath his feet.

The world flickered again—

Holding…

For now.

 

Wednesday, March 25, 2026

Unconcerned

I hurt easy—
so the stone says nothing
as the rain falls.

A passing wind
breaks a branch somewhere—
no one notices the tree grieving.

Sixty seconds—
a lifetime
between two breaths.

The monk lowers his gaze,
then lifts it to the sky—
falling and rising
are the same path.

Truth gathers like clouds,
thick and convincing—
until the moon passes through them
without resistance.

He smiles at his own reflection
in the still water—
loving what was never there,
rejecting what has always been.

Petals drift,
unconcerned
with who feels their fall.