Here, the end was not a slow fade, but a vibrant, suffocating consumption. The equatorial city was swallowed whole. The air, thick and hot, hummed with the lives of a billion insects. The asphalt of the roads, softened by the relentless humidity, was pierced by the buttressed roots of kapok trees that now formed a solid, living roof hundreds of feet high.
The buildings were not so much broken as they were digested. Vines as thick as a man's arm strangled the concrete pillars, pulling them in a slow, green embrace. White orchids and blood-red bromeliads bloomed in the gutters and on ledges, their roots drawing moisture from the air alone. A Jaguar, its coat a ripple of shadow and fire, slept on the moss-cushioned hood of a long-dead car, now just a lump of reddish oxide.
The sounds were a layered cacophony of life. Howler monkeys proclaimed their territory from the canopy that now enveloped the radio towers, their roars drowning out the memory of traffic. Parrots, flashes of emerald and sapphire, nested in the hollowed-out air conditioning units. At night, the chorus of frogs was so loud it felt like a physical pressure, and the bioluminescent fungi that grew on the decaying walls pulsed with a soft, green light, turning the city into a fairy-tale grotto.
The sheer biomass was overwhelming. Fungus devoured the paper in the offices, turning legal documents and love letters into a soft, white fuzz. Termites had reduced entire libraries to fine, brown dust held in the shape of shelves. The steel skeletons of the structures were the last to go, but even they were being dragged down, wrapped in a living shroud of lianas and roots, becoming mere trellises for the jungle. There was no silence here, only the deafening, triumphant noise of life reclaiming its own with feverish, tropical speed. The city had become a part of the jungle's diet, and it was feasting.












