The sun, a single red eye, burnt what was left of the earth, holding
everything beneath it in a heavy, never-dimming glare. It never left
the sky, not even in those hours once reserved for night and the stars.
The land lay red and uneven under it like flayed flesh, gorges deep
and hills steep. Almost nothing remained, all flora and fauna dried to
dust and indistinguishable from the dirt already there, water reduced to
trickles, air clogged with the stench of the dead.
Birds, fish, and anything on four legs, even the most-lowly crawling
ant or roach, had long disappeared, victims of heat and dissolution.
It was more than a desert. It was Hell raised to the level of an earthly horizon.
All one could see through the dense, dusty glare was a stack of
triangular oddities, books they had once been designated when language
had use and a scant few could read them: hard-backed and leather-bound,
containing all that had once been cherished: story, song, law, history,
mathematics, science, theology…. No other evidence existed of these
aspirations. A hapless soul had abandoned them there in child-like hope
then disappeared into anonymity.
Then
they came.
The marauders, man and animal conjoined, naked, tattooed, pierced,
eyes dead, mouths full of their own blood, their own flesh. At times,
bumping against each other, they gave the impression of being one thing,
a single monstrosity; then, parting again, they revealed their
individual obscenities. They tore across the hot, dead, powdery plain
in a pack, yapping at each other, moving their red mouths but saying
nothing, yelling and bellowing, snapping like crazed dogs after
fleshless bones.
They had come from elsewhere, nowhere now, having dismantled the
temples, torn down the monuments, crashed the statues, erased the noble
names, obliterated anything beautiful and true with their bile, their
blood, their feces.
Even in the throes of their chaos, they spotted the small tower of
books, as a leopard catches glimpse of a hapless gazelle. The scent of
authenticity reached them and nauseated them further, as blood is said
to madden the maws of dogs and turn them into killers. They growled,
they shouted, they fought each other for the opportunity to topple the
tower. They fell upon the books and rent them into pieces, flinging the
pages into the hot glare of the pitiless sun. They shoved pages into
their mouths and regurgitated them at once, unable to digest what they
could not understand. Shakespeare sickened them, as did Plato, as did
Kant, as did Euclid, as did Livy, as did all the others who had written
of what it had once meant to be human. They destroyed the books and
left the remains to the whim of the sand and sun.
And moved on. They left, blindly, the taste for destruction still
potent in their noses, their mouths, towards what else they must devour.
~~
Randall Ivey