Janelle Monae

“The Last Dance”
By Janelle Monáe

The world had grown silent. No music echoed through the streets, no rhythm pulsed in the hearts of the people. The Ministry of Order had seen to that, declaring dancing a dangerous act of rebellion. They said it stirred unrest, sparked chaos, and made people dream of freedom. And dreams, in this world, were forbidden.

I lived in Metronome City, a gray labyrinth of towering concrete blocks, where every movement was measured and every heartbeat monitored. Cameras perched like vultures on every corner, their unblinking eyes searching for signs of rhythm in our steps. The Ministry had even developed “Anti-Tempo Shoes,” clunky, heavy things designed to prevent anything resembling a dance.

But deep in the underground, there were whispers of resistance.

I first heard about the Pulse from a woman named Andra. She worked in the textile mills, her hands raw from weaving the lifeless gray uniforms we all wore. One night, as we stood in line for rations, she leaned close and whispered, “There’s a place where the music still lives.”

I laughed bitterly. “Music? That’s a death sentence.”

She smiled, her eyes gleaming with defiance. “So is living like this.”


That’s how I found myself sneaking through the abandoned subway tunnels beneath the city, my Anti-Tempo Shoes wrapped in rags to muffle the sound. Andra led the way, her steps light and sure. We moved in silence until we reached a rusted metal door. She knocked in a peculiar rhythm—three quick taps, a pause, then two more.

The door creaked open, revealing a hidden world.

Inside, the air vibrated with basslines, and the walls pulsed with colorful lights. People moved in ways I had only read about in forbidden books. They twisted, turned, and leapt, their bodies defying gravity and the oppressive weight of the world above.

I froze, overwhelmed by the energy, the beauty.

Andra nudged me forward. “Welcome to the Pulse.”


I became a regular at the Pulse, learning to dance in secret. At first, my movements were stiff and awkward, but the music taught me. It flowed through me, awakening something I hadn’t felt in years: joy.

The leader of the Pulse was a man named Tempo, a former choreographer who had been exiled for defying the Ministry. He spoke of the old world, where dancing wasn’t just allowed—it was celebrated.

“Dancing is freedom,” he told us one night, his voice carrying over the beat. “It’s the one thing they can’t take from us. Not really. As long as we remember the rhythm, we’re still alive.”


But the Ministry’s reach was vast, and their spies were everywhere. One night, as we danced, the door burst open, and black-clad enforcers stormed in.

“Freeze!” they barked, their weapons trained on us.

The music stopped, and for a moment, so did my heart.

Tempo stepped forward, his hands raised. “We’re not criminals,” he said. “We’re just dancers.”

The lead enforcer sneered. “Dancing is rebellion. And rebellion will not be tolerated.”

I don’t know what came over me, but as they moved to arrest Tempo, I stepped forward and began to dance. Slowly at first, then faster, my body moving to a rhythm only I could hear.

Others joined in, one by one, until the entire room was alive with motion.

The enforcers shouted, but we didn’t stop. The music had taken over, and in that moment, we were unstoppable.


The Pulse was raided that night, but the spark had been lit. The next day, I saw a man tapping his foot in the ration line. A woman swayed as she carried water. The rhythm was spreading, and no amount of oppression could silence it.

Dancing was forbidden, but the Ministry had forgotten one thing: you can’t kill the beat.

And as long as the beat lived, so did we.

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