Darkness surrounded me.
Utter, profound darkness—deeper than any I'd known, thicker and heavier than any midnight could ever become. A darkness so absolute, it swallowed thought and memory alike. I floated, alone and invisible, suspended in this infinite void. My consciousness, however it existed, stretched thin into eternity, feeling impossibly small against this vast, impenetrable nothingness.
The universe was gone.
There were no stars to guide my eyes, no distant galaxies shimmering softly, no comforting Earth beneath my nonexistent feet. Everything I'd ever known—every person, every creature, every world, every speck of matter, every atom—was obliterated. All that remained was me, stripped of form, suspended alone in the unending emptiness.
Why?
The question reverberated silently within me. Why had everything else vanished, burned into oblivion, yet left me intact? How was it possible that I remained, when everything else had become nothing? Memories surged through me: my family, their faces warm and familiar, the people I'd known, the world I'd called home—all destroyed, erased as if they had never existed.
But I was still here. Still floating, still existing. Why was I the exception?
I tried shouting into the void, my consciousness screaming out the singular, desperate question into eternity:
"WHY?"
There was no echo, no reply. My cry vanished instantly into the immense silence, absorbed without trace or acknowledgment. The nothingness remained untouched, unmoved. My desperate plea—my demand for understanding—was meaningless to the indifferent void.
Silence wrapped itself around me, indifferent and timeless.
I was alone in my agony, alone in my confusion. Alone in my consciousness, with no body, no anchor, nothing tangible to hold onto. I was an observer with nothing left to observe.
I drifted, untethered, unable to perceive time’s passing. Was I suspended here for mere moments, or had eons already slipped silently by? Could centuries or millennia have dissolved into insignificance within this endless emptiness? Perhaps I had existed here longer than time itself—had time also perished along with everything else?
I felt disoriented, confused. Fragments of thoughts emerged, tangled and incoherent, wrestling with ideas too vast for my comprehension. I questioned not only why I remained, but why I had ever existed at all. What was existence itself, if it could be reduced to nothingness in a heartbeat?
What was my purpose, now that purpose itself had ceased to have meaning?
I drifted silently, thought stretching and fraying, dissolving slowly into despair. Maybe, I began to wonder, the universe never truly existed at all. Perhaps it had always been just me, imagining life, love, pain, hope—everything merely figments created by a lonely consciousness suspended in infinite emptiness.
Or was this punishment? Had I done something unimaginably wrong, something I couldn’t recall, something terrible enough to condemn me to eternal solitude? The possibility terrified me, gnawed at the edges of my sanity. Panic fluttered within me, helplessness pressing down like invisible hands.
Yet there was no relief, no resolution. Only questions, echoing unanswered, endlessly in my thoughts:
Why had it all ended?
Why did I remain?
And why, after all, did anything exist in the first place?
No matter how desperately I searched within myself, answers eluded me. I remained suspended, forever floating in the impenetrable darkness, an observer lost and alone, trapped between existence and oblivion.
Then, just as I thought I might fade into madness, or perhaps into nothingness itself, something impossible stirred the void.