The Shadow of the Skyscrapers

The First Challenge

As he ascended the steep stone staircase curling through residential alleys, memories surged in fragments. Twenty years earlier, the steps had been teeming with fellow porters carrying everything from coal to caged chickens. The constant thrum of bamboo poles against their shoulders had reverberated through the city like a heartbeat. Now, Zhaoming rarely saw another porter; elevators and drones had made his trade obsolete. But he carried on, convinced that his work was more than just a service. It was tradition.

Halfway up the climb, his knees shook under the strain. He stopped to steady himself, leaning against an ancient brick wall covered in crumbling propaganda posters from decades past. The rain’s patter slowed, and a stillness settled over the narrow staircase. Then he heard it—a faint, mechanical whine overhead. A delivery drone zipped by, its propellers cutting the silence like razors. He watched as it swooped down elegantly toward its destination, depositing a package with the precision of a hawk. No labor. No devotion. Just efficiency.

Zhaoming spat onto the ground. To the drone, this city was just a grid of coordinates—but to him, its alleys and stairways were living arteries. Each brick was a story; every step was the echo of those who had come before.

The Ghost of the Past

Night fell by the time he reached the summit of his climb, where an elderly woman waited at her doorstep. She smiled warmly as Zhaoming placed the crates at her feet. “Still at it, Zhaoming?” she asked, her voice soft with memory.

“Someone has to keep the streets breathing,” he replied with a wry smile, wiping his wet brow. As she handed him a chipped porcelain bowl filled with steaming tea, his mind drifted backward again. He’d first taken up the bamboo pole when he was barely twenty, following the footsteps of his father—a porter who had once been a local legend. “You’re the bridge,” his father had told him. “Between yesterday and tomorrow. If we don’t carry the city’s weight, no one will remember its soul.”

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But now there were no sons lining up to inherit the bamboo pole. Tradition was crumbling under the weight of progress, and bridges like Zhaoming were becoming relics.

A Symbolic Theft

On his way down the stairwell, the sound of voices stopped him cold. In a shadowed alcove, a group of teenagers crowded around something glowing faintly. Zhaoming approached cautiously, his piercing gaze cutting through the gloom. In their hands was a crude replica of a bamboo pole—this one outfitted with glowing LED strips and pivoting wheels. They laughed as one of them attempted to balance it on his shoulder, only for it to tumble awkwardly to the ground. “Look! I’m a Bamb Bam porter!” mocked a boy in fluorescent sneakers. The others exploded in laughter.

“Enough!” Zhaoming barked, his voice slicing the air. The boys froze as he stepped forward, his expression like stone. Slowly, he picked up the fake pole and examined it with visible disdain.

“Do you even know what this means?” he asked, his voice low but charged. “What it stands for?”

“It’s just a stupid stick, old timer,” one boy muttered, shrinking under Zhaoming’s glare.

“No,” Zhaoming said. His tone softened, though his eyes remained sharp. “It’s patience. Balance. Strength. It’s the weight of everything this city once was—and everything you still stand on, no matter how high your towers grow.” He handed the pole back and walked away, leaving them in stunned silence.

The Final Load

As Zhaoming reached the riverbank at the edge of the city, the rain finally stopped. A full moon broke through the clouds, casting silver light over the Yangtze. His reflection rippled on the water’s surface, warped by the currents. For a moment, he felt weary—not just in his muscles, but in his spirit.

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“Maybe it’s time to let go,” he murmured to no one. But even as he said it, his hands gripped the bamboo pole tighter. He knew the world would keep moving, just like the river, indifferent to those it left behind. And yet, to him, that was no excuse to stop. The love and labor woven into his work could not be measured in utility.

Somewhere high above, another drone buzzed, its red light blinking like an unblinking eye. Zhaoming smirked as he turned back toward the city. Behind every mechanical whir, every skyscraper, was still a human story. And he wasn’t finished with his.

Genre: Historical Fiction with Modern Themes

The Source...check out the great article that inspired this amazing short story: The Last Traditional Bang Bang Men of Chongqing

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1 comment

Alina
Alina

alaurin

omg this story is like totally relatable i mean i work at starbucks and people always think its just a job but its so much more than that its about the people and the stories behind the coffee and the people who make it happen

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