The city lay in front of everyone, a model village to them, they had never felt so big. A city that once swallowed them up with its’ big skyscrapers and wall art now seemed all so small.
“London eye, London eye” a little child called out. A large spinning wheel now fit between his two fingers. He tried pinching it, but it wouldn’t seem to move. A panorama of symbols filled the landscape, from edge to edge a focus point merely blurring them out. They would never disappear.
Sprawled out before them, an extravagant banquet. A feast fit for royalty. often gobbled up by those who sat in quiet halls in which ceilings remained inexplicably high along with their standards of life.
There stood as many cranes as there were high-rises. A future that pointed towards the sky, hinting at growth, but only in the literal sense. What was the cost? Soon the skyline would be full each building bigger than the other, a concrete competition.
Yet, the people wouldn’t change, staying as they had been, even shrinking. An earth that could no longer feed them through the greed of those sat in their vast spaces. They would carry on starving as the towers would gorge themselves on the sun that reigned above them, casting a shadow amongst those that built them, that birthed these monstrous Giants of the sky.