The stub was half-buried in the ash.
He almost didn’t see it at first, just a torn edge of paper the wind kept teasing along the cracked pavement. His boot came down near it, and for some reason, maybe because it wasn’t a bone, or a rusted can, or another piece of useless scrap, he bent down and plucked it up.
It was a ticket.
A movie ticket, edges browned from fire, the print half-faded.
Admit One.
He turned it over in his fingers, as if there might be more to it, a name, a date, some clue. There wasn’t. Just Admit One, inked in cheerful block letters, and a jagged tear where an usher must have once ripped it in half.
His hand trembled as he tucked it between his fingers. Not from cold. He had stopped feeling cold years ago. It was from age. His joints were little more than gravel in skin, his knees screaming with every movement. The walk here had been long. Too long.
The theater loomed ahead like the skeleton of some old dream, its chrome and neon gutted by fire. Once, it must have been a palace, glowing bright enough to draw whole crowds in from the cold. Now its façade sagged inward, girders twisted into sharp ribs. The big art-deco marquee hung forward at a dangerous angle, as if bowing in defeat. Beneath the soot, a few warped letters still clung to the sign, stubborn and unreadable: G___D FINA__. Showtime 7:30. A show no one came back for.
A yellowed radiation warning clung to a wall near the entrance, its paint blistered and peeling. Above it, the ghost of a propaganda poster still clung to the brick: a smiling family beneath a bright dome, the words "Safety Awaits the Prepared!" cracked and half-eaten by mold.
He shuffled forward, ticket in hand.
The doors were warped but still standing, their glass long gone. He pressed a shoulder to them, wincing at how little strength he had left, and they groaned open like a dying thing.
Inside, the air smelled of mildew, char, and something older, like wet plaster rotting in its own skin. The lobby floor was a graveyard of shattered glass and scraps of glossy posters, their colors bleached to ghosts by sun and time. He remembered standing in a place like this once. He couldn’t say when. Shoes sticking to a floor tacky with spilled soda, popcorn grease on his fingers, his son’s small hand pulling him toward the candy counter.
He limped down the dark hallway, brushing past what was left of a velvet rope, now just a frayed cord tied to a rusting stanchion.
The theater opened up before him.
Rows of seats, most melted or burned down to their frames, a high domed ceiling that was mostly gone now, a jagged mouth gaping at the sky. A tattered screen still clung to the far wall, full of holes, waving gently in the breeze that came through the gaps. Dust floated in the sunbeams like static, catching on the edges of his vision.
He stood there for a moment, just breathing, his chest hitching with the effort.
His knees ached as he lowered himself into one of the few intact seats. Dust puffed up around him, settling in his hair and clinging to the deep lines of his face. The cushion sighed under his weight, what was left of him, like even it was tired of holding on. He looked at the stub in his hand.
“Got my ticket, Mae, made it on time.” He whispered, voice rasping in the emptiness.
He turned to the seat beside, slow and deliberate, like his body still remembered what it meant to share a moment.
And there she was.
Not as she had been at the end, thin, coughing, hollowed out, but as she had been before. Mae, coat draped over her lap, hands folded just so, looking at him with that patient amusement that made him feel young again.
“I can’t wait to see this one,” he said softly, like they were back on one of those Friday nights when the world still turned. And maybe she smiled. Maybe she had been waiting for him all along.
He leaned back.
The light coming through the torn roof dimmed. For a moment, he swore he saw the flicker of a projector behind him. He imagined the reel whirring to life, that warm, rhythmic click it used to make as it spun. On the screen, a bright flash of white, then color.
The seats around him filled with shadows, an audience of memory. He could almost hear them whispering, shifting, laughing. He smiled, just barely, and let the images play.
The wind moved through the ruins, making the screen ripple like water.
His fingers slackened.
The stub slipped from his hand, tumbling to the floor and skidding a little under the seat in front of him.
The wind picked up again, lifting the stub and carrying it out through the broken doors, across the empty street, and onto the cracked pavement.
The End.
I’m Jason, a science fiction writer obsessed with the places where technology, military life, and human nature collide - often in spectacularly messy ways. With a background in tech and the military, I love crafting stories full of sharp dialogue, immersive worlds, and unexpected humor. Follow along if you enjoy these kinds of stories or want to learn more about my writing and upcoming novels.