Part III: The Silence Absolute
Chapter 5: The Last Flicker
"The dwindling, my little ones, became a silence of its own kind," Mitthu whispered, its voice barely audible above the faint rustle of dry leaves caught in the wind. "The distant fires ceased, one by one. The faint, desperate cries faded into the vast, broken landscape. The Old Watchers knew then, that the Great Silence was nearing its completion. The humans, once so numerous, were now reduced to scattered specks, barely visible even to our keenest eyes."
"Were there really so few?" Pip asked, a tremor in its voice, picturing the endless swarms of humans Mitthu had described from the before-time.
"Fewer than a single flock of starlings, little Pip, stretched across the entire world," Mitthu confirmed. "And even those few flickered like dying embers. My own memories begin around this time, blurry at first, then sharpening as I matured and began my own great migrations. I saw the last of them with my own eyes, though I did not know then what I was truly witnessing."
My first true, vivid memory of a human came as a young fledgling. My parents had led our small, nomadic flock to the edge of what was once a vast human "park," a place they used to green for their leisure. Now, it was a wilderness of choked weeds and fractured stone paths. We sought water from a tiny, still puddle trapped in a hollowed-out tree trunk.
It was there I saw her. A lone human figure, no more than a faint shadow against the rising sun. She was a woman, barely distinguishable beneath layers of tattered, filthy cloth that once must have been brightly colored. She moved with excruciating slowness, each step a monumental effort, dragging a large, makeshift bag behind her. Her head was bowed, her body racked by a dry, hacking cough that echoed eerily in the morning stillness.
She stopped by the same puddle we drank from, kneeling with obvious pain. Her hands, gnarled and covered in sores, fumbled with a crude cup. She drank, then coughed, a thin trail of blood flecking her lips. Her eyes, when she lifted her head slightly, were vast, empty pools reflecting only the grey sky. There was no rage there, no hunger, not anymore. Only an infinite weariness. She was a ghost in the ruined landscape, an echo of a species that had once roared.
"She didn't see us, my dears," Mitthu recalled, the image still clear. "She saw nothing but the ground before her, the next painful step. We watched her for a full cycle of the sun. She barely moved, simply existing. In the evening, she tried to light a fire, but her hands shook, and the few dry twigs she found refused to catch. She gave up, slumping against a crumbling wall."
The next morning, when the sun's first rays painted the ruins in hues of bruised purple and grey, she was still there. Motionless. A solitary lump of rags and bone. There was no struggle, no dramatic fall, no final cry. Just a quiet surrender to the overwhelming silence. A few tiny, persistent insects, the ones that had always shared the world with Man, crawled over her still form.
This scene, repeated in countless variations across the broken lands, became the final observation of the Old Watchers. A man collapsing on a cracked road, his last breath a whisper of dust. A small group, huddled together in what used to be a grand underground shelter, succumbing quietly, their last embers of life fading into the stagnant air. Even the rich and powerful, those who had once commanded immense resources, vanished in the same undignified manner as the common folk, their hidden bunkers becoming their final, forgotten tombs. They simply ceased to be. The great human fever had broken, and the last, lingering wisps of smoke had finally cleared from the land. The planet, wounded but resilient, was left to breathe again, unimpeded.