The corridor was infinite, paneled in a wood so dark it seemed to absorb the light of the flickering sconces. I was running, though I couldn't remember what I was running from, or perhaps, what I was running toward. My skin felt tight, humming with an electric tension that blurred the line between pleasure and a dull, pulsing ache.
The gym floor dissolved into a damp forest floor. The gray light of a dying sun filtered through skeletal trees. I was no longer an athlete; I was a soldier, or perhaps a predator. The weight of a rifle felt like an extension of my arm. I saw a figure moving through the mist—a mirror image of myself, wearing a uniform from a war that hadn't happened yet. Una Vieja Historia Jonathan Littell epub
The cycle wasn't a prison; it was the only thing that was real. The corridor was infinite, paneled in a wood
I burst through a heavy oak door and found myself in a gymnasium. The air smelled of salt and old leather. There, under the harsh hum of fluorescent lights, stood the others. They were faceless, yet intimately familiar. We moved in a choreographed violence—a dance of limbs and sweat where every impact felt like a homecoming. We were brothers, enemies, lovers, and ghosts all at once. Then, the shift. The gym floor dissolved into a damp forest floor
In the spirit of Jonathan Littell’s Una Vieja Historia (A Old Story), the narrative is a claustrophobic, recursive loop—a fever dream where the walls of reality are constantly shifting.
I didn't fire. I approached. As our eyes met, the forest began to peel away like wet wallpaper.
Behind the trees were the same dark-paneled walls. The same flickering sconces. I was back in the corridor. My heart hammered against my ribs—a rhythmic, suffocating sound. I reached for the handle of the next door, knowing that behind it, the story would begin again, slightly altered, eternally the same.