Library meat (Inspiration from The Fantastic Flying Books of Mr. Morris Lessmore)
“You cannot leave us. We possess
your name.”
“Please... It's been such a long time
since I left my home.”
The guardian saw the
shelves hanging over her like a mountain that was about to crush her.
The thick volumes threatened her with their weight. The thin sharp
pocket volumes seemed anxious to jump over her.
“We have your
name, guardian. Whithout it you cannot go back to the world. Nobody
will name you and you will not exist.”
The guardian
sobbed. There was a time when she existed. She looked
down at her red shoes and perfect matching skirt. She had always
wanted to have shoes like those, but now she knew that there were no
more than shackles around her ankles. She exchanged her name for this
aspect. Now she was as she had always liked, but nobody would ever see
her.
“Words are power,
guardian. We have your name. You will not exist out of here.”
“What if I bring you
another name? I can bring you somebody else's name, so he can take my
place.”
There was not even time for a
thought, and the answer came.
“Bring us another name and
you will recover yours.”
The
volumes entered and left the nest at their will. They were
sometimes more, sometimes fewer, but all locked up enough words to
content all the world in them. The guardian took the blank book,
which was used to create them all. Stumbling on her heels, she sat at
the mahogany desk that they had created for her and opened it.
She stared at the blank book and, again her mind was launched in
search of the callers who read the words. A whirlwind of images and
feelings surrounded her. A little girl spelled her first words in a
textbook, an old man with wrinkled eyes behind his glasses read
a teen adventure, a young woman focused on the self-help book that
would take her out of misery...
Young,
old, tall, short, male and female. Thousands of different skin tones
in the eyes of the guardian, imperceptible to ordinary readers, the
faces of the reader. The guardian passed from one mind to another,
like a shot. Most barely noticed her, but some threw away the book
they were reading when they perceived that something was looking at them
back from the words. She needed to find one that matched.
And
there he was. The guardian felt how that mind caressed the words with
devotion. He was the one. And he looked like her some years ago. She
remembered herself, small and alone in the library, eager to have the
figure, the success and the popularity of Alice, with her high heels and
confident smile. She remembered the day a book looked back at her and
ofered a deal.
The
guardian stopped her will on the mind of the man to see his reaction.
He was not frightened, in fact, she thought that perhaps he had not
perceived her, but it was not the case. He was so devoted to his
world of letters that he did not give a chance to fear. The guardian
was not wrong. To say that Morris Lessmore loved books was like to say
that a fish liked the sea. In fact, Morris Lessmore could not exist
without them.
The guardian extended her hands of words through the mind of the man,
to the origin of his personality, down to his essence. She embraced
it in her hands and looked for the grammar that provided it with a shape
in the world of ideas. She pulled it, and was surprised at the ease
with which his name left him. As the concepts were removed, there was
an implosion, and the world tried to fill the void that was left in
that mind. The guardian quickly withdrew to avoid being absorbed by
the storm.
Hes
eyes focused on the nest, again, and she rose her gaze from the blank
book. Her hands dug into it as if it was made of water. Around her,
hundreds of sheets and volumes flew in excitement. Everyone in the
nest could sense that she had brought a name.
The
guard stood up and slowly extracted the name from the book. She held
it in her hands, and showed it to everyone.
“¡¡Morris Lessmore!!”
Linette
Farawell felt a twisted happiness while the volumes took her back to
her world. Down there, a sad-looking young man, lonely and lost,
rose his eyes to her.
One of the volumes flew to
him to guide him to his new evermore home.
Excellent, very moving indeed!
ResponderEliminarThanks ever so much for your work!
What a fantastic piece of writing. It's really imaginative and creative. Well done! Kieran
ResponderEliminarI used to writte some time ago (published books and all). I think this was the perfect moment to do it again. Thanks for ofering me a subject.
ResponderEliminar