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Lucía Andrea Illanes Albornoz


Systemprogrammiererin | Systems engineer


𒄿𒉡𒄴𒅁𒊭𒄴𒇷𒅁𒁀𒊭𒆷𒁀𒌅𒀭𒈹

English | German / Deutsch | Spanish / Español
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Impressum

The Pool

Her daily ritual called for the obligatory recording of the daily events in her journal. She was sat on the floor on a pile of comforting pillows. She seized her reed pen, the paper, the empty canvas she was to cast words upon, lay waiting in front of her. She attempted to gather the turmoil of her thoughts into a coherent stream of words. After a moment, she had to admit that she had little recollection of what had indeed transpired on this particular day that had not already the day preceding this day, or that day, or any other. Time had become the stream from which her dreams travelled gently into her days and thence returned. Only fading memories remained in the distance as though mirages in some desert.

She arose. As she was stood, she idly cast a glance or two across the room into the small window adorned with delicately crafted woodwork. She decided to leave.

Although it had not rained in a great while, outside in the courtyard there stood, in the shade of a palm tree, a pool replenished by some remote source. Suddenly, she felt very, very tired and worn out, as if the fraying tapestry of her very being began to surrender to the indefatigable will of time and age. Her task, her mission, of supreme and utmost importance, or so she had been told, as it would appear, had at no point surrendered very much in the way of good sense. Sometimes she thought that she had little reason to continue holding on to it but she did nonetheless, for reasons she did not dare delving into. Not that the matter at hand was difficult or complicated. It was, in fact, very simple. She sighed. She retrieved with monotonous obeisance, rendered to an unspecific entity, from her comforting robe the letter bearing all the official seals and signature, in their correct places and manners of placing, required in order to vest it in authority due. Then, ceremoniously, she bore the letter in her hands and read:

"You are to, at once, repair to the village by the name of (illegible) in the province of (illegible) in order to ascertain"

Signed:
High Commissioner José Francisco de Azevedo e Silva
Commonwealth of the Pale
13 August 1911"

As she had come to notice, there was little to ascertain, or to ascertain the particular objects of ascertainment thereof, or whether there was anything to ascertain at all, or what, or why, or, for that matter, where, if anywhere at all, she was.
Not that there was, as such, nothing. In fact, there was a great deal of what was clearly not nothing in the slightest. If only for its peculiarly persistent refusal to subject itself to being recorded or even regarded with any reasonable amount of consistency: what was at once there and appeared to be such and such, the next week, or morning at times, or even a half-day later, was either no longer there at all, or rearranged sometimes subtly, sometimes dramatically, or replaced with something entirely unexpected. A singular pillar of ancient, antediluvian even, appearance, stood upon a hill with majestic stature surrounded by a patch of white lilies in an odd hexagonal pattern that bore, at first, cuneiform she could not manage to decipher and then, Ancient South Arabian she equally failed at deciphering, and eventually, an appendix of the "Book of the Misers" by al-Jāḥiẓ containing 9th century Baṣran cooking recipes that, after 3 weeks, turned into a monumentally humongous spear, piercing the occasionally appearing cloud, surrounded by a patch of smaller spear-flowers, each bearing miniscule spears on its spear-shaped petals, surrounded by spear-shaped bees busily casting spear-shaped appendages at it. A door that, for almost one half-year, most stubbornly refused to offer any means, no matter how much creativity and persistence was invested into this task, to open it, lay open the day after the half-year had passed to then lead to the same door in a completely different village that was, for some reason, entirely bereft of any other doors and of sunlight, perpetually bathed in treacherous moonlight. Seemingly endless paths, streets, alleys, roads, trails, and stairways that although led hither and thither, turned more absurd and bizarre the further one should choose to explore them, until their geometry assumed such grotesque nature that all volition to entertain this whole trail of thought vanished and, as soon as this had become manifestly clear, vanished themselves only to be replaced by a map thereof that now no longer referred to any territory except for its own. A hudhud bird that sang words in old Andalusian metres from which more hudhud birds emerged which busily drew trees made of letters in old Andalusian script of impressive calligraphic qualities where more hudhud birds then hatched until nightfall, at which point they all feasted upon the letters and words of their creation, only to then repeat this process, ad infinitum, the next day by the coming of dawn.

Page after page after page - the fact that she was evidently in possession of an infinite number of pages and reed pens no longer bothered her nor where they came from - of endless phenomena of this sort, or these sorts, for at first she had attempted to subject the same to rigorous phenomenology, a futile task that soon faded into the infinity of the Pale. The more of it there was, the less of her there seemed to be.

An inexplicably haunting atmosphere of the uncertain and ineffable surrounded her. The pool by the palm tree that was now her pleasant refuge from the midday sun had, almost certainly, not been there last night. Nor the courtyard nor her very room, although phenomena of this sort had curiously ceased to induce anything but indifference within her since soon after her arrival. Her arrival. She could hardly remember having been anywhere else, for where she was, was anywhere and everywhere at all times, it seemed. None of the inhabitants of the village she had spoken to seemed to take note of this either. Were it not for her obligation to record the daily events in her day, she surely would have become one of them as well: fading in and out of existence, going from the furthest place to the most distant time, formless and free.

On what she had now, for unspecific reasons, ascertained to be the 777th day, the calmness of clarity descended upon her. Everything, finally, made sense. She went back upstairs to record her last journal entry and then left the village by descending into the pool towards its remote source, towards the remote outskirts of wherever it was she was spoken of to later, in a week, arrive at her destination, the planet of Venus. Perhaps.

"After 777 days, I have, with supreme and utmost certainty, ascertained that this village does not exist. Nor, by all appearances, do I."