Saturday, October 11, 2025

For Nothing

The sky above the ruins of Los Angeles was the color of rust and smoke—an endless dusk that never quite gave way to night. Silen stood motionless on the dirt road that wound its way toward the shattered skyline. The wind carried the acrid scent of ash and decay, whispering through what was left of the city that once prided itself on dreams.

He pulled his hood lower against the biting air, though it did little to protect him from the memories that clawed at the back of his mind. The world hadn’t ended all at once. It had rotted from within. Piece by piece. Law by law. Lie by lie.

He remembered the speeches—the same hollow promises repeated with polished smiles. They spoke of safety, of equality, of the “greater good.” And the people had believed them. They’d traded freedom for protection, their voices for convenience. Every new restriction had come wrapped in virtue until no one noticed the chains being forged.

Now those politicians were gone, their marble offices reduced to rubble. Their banners fluttered as tattered ghosts in the smog-filled breeze. But their legacy remained—in the silence, in the hunger, in the distrust that fractured what was left of humanity.

Silen clenched his fists. “They burned it all,” he muttered under his breath. “For power. For control. For nothing.”

The wind picked up, swirling dust around his boots. Far off, a faint glow pulsed through the haze—a fire still burning somewhere deep in the city’s bones. He watched it for a long moment, his expression unreadable.

Somewhere beyond those flames, beyond the ruins and the rot, was a reason to keep going. A purpose. Maybe it was redemption. Maybe it was simply survival.

But he knew one thing: if the world was to have any chance at rebirth, it couldn’t come from the same kind of people who destroyed it. It would have to be rebuilt by those who remembered what truth once was—by those willing to bleed for it.

He adjusted the worn strap of his satchel, eyes fixed on the smoldering skyline. “This time,” he said softly, “they won’t take it from us.”

Then, without another word, Silen began walking—his silhouette fading into the swirling dusk, heading toward the ruins where the story of humanity’s downfall might, just might, find its beginning again.

 

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