MeeraDhal5
The world didn't end with a bang.
It ended with a sigh that never finished leaving the air.
Roofs sagged under memories, streets split like old scars, and the wind tasted of rust and dust- and something watching. Power lines drooped like dead veins. Smoke rose from chimneys no one fed anymore, curling through towns whose names were swallowed by time.
Silence ruled, because sound carried more than echoes. It carried attention. Souls that never learned how to leave lingered in doorways. Ghouls still walked, stubborn and half-alive, refusing decay out of sheer will. Ghosts stared from reflections- cracked mirrors, still water, polished metal- never blinking, never kind.
People survived anyway. Small communities clung together, fragile as glass. Walls weren't protection; they were promises. Fires stayed low. Gardens grew in poisoned soil. Children stayed close, elders closer. Arguments were whispered, because even anger could invite the wrong kind of listener.
I passed through one settlement- crooked fences, a weak well, a roof patched with scrap. Stones marked a path that led nowhere, or maybe somewhere no one dared to go. People watched me with careful eyes. Not curiosity. Calculation. Survival teaches distance.
I saw a group of teenagers hauling scavenged supplies, laughing softly despite hunger and bleeding hands. A jar shattered. No one shouted. They picked it up and moved on. Persistence mattered more than hope now.
As the sky bruised orange, shadows stretched too long and didn't always match their owners. And somewhere nearby, I felt it- a presence not helping, not harming. Just watching. A figure moving like he belonged to the fractures of the world itself, walking calmly through a land where even the dead refused to rest.