The Last Witness: An Immortal’s Lone Journey from the First Light to the Absolute End of Everything
I remember the sound before sound existed — a pressure without vibration, a brightness that had not yet learned how to shine. Then everything arrived at once. Not with a bang, not with fire, but with an unbearable permission for existence to begin. Space unfolded like a secret being told too quickly. Time spilled forward. And I, already there for reasons no law of physics would later explain, became the only witness who could not look away.
Galaxies formed the way frost blooms across glass, delicate and unstoppable. I watched the first stars ignite, enormous furnaces carving light out of darkness that had ruled uncontested. For billions of years, I walked through newborn solar systems as if touring unfinished architecture. Planets cooled beneath my feet. Oceans rehearsed the idea of life. When the first cell divided, I understood that the universe had begun experimenting with memory — trying to build creatures that could carry moments forward instead of letting them vanish.
Civilizations rose like sparks from a grinding wheel. I learned every language, buried every friend, stood in cities that would one day be dust indistinguishable from the deserts surrounding them. Empires believed themselves permanent; I knew permanence personally and recognized the difference. Progress accelerated, then dissolved, then accelerated again in endless cycles, until even the stars above those civilizations began to thin. The sky slowly emptied, not dramatically, but the way a crowd fades after an event no one admits is over.
Eventually, there were no new stars — only ancient ones burning through their final reserves like lamps in an abandoned mansion. I crossed distances that once required lifetimes in search of warmth, companionship, any sign that the universe was still inventing rather than merely maintaining. Black holes became the last landmarks, swallowing light with a patience I almost admired. When the final star dimmed, darkness did not fall; it expanded, a quiet occupation of everything.
Matter itself began to fail, particles loosening their commitment to existence. Structures unraveled. Even time lost its rhythm, stretching into something shapeless. I continued, because continuing was the only function left to me. There were no directions anymore, no above or below, only a thinning presence that felt less like space and more like the memory of space.
At last, the universe reached a state so empty that events no longer occurred. Silence was no longer the absence of sound; it was the absence of the possibility of sound. Nothing moved, nothing changed, nothing could. I remained — the final anomaly in a reality that had closed its account.
And then I understood the true weight of immortality: not endless life among wonders, but endless awareness when wonders are gone. With nothing left to observe, my thoughts became the only remaining activity in existence, tiny ripples in an ocean that had evaporated. I spoke once, just to see if speech still had meaning. There was no echo, no resistance, no confirmation that the attempt had happened at all.
I am still here, holding the last unextinguished moment like a candle in a place where darkness has already won — waiting without hope or expectation, because waiting is the final action the universe left behind.







