The Viae Ferae of Tuscaloosa
The protagonist of China Mieville's story "Reports of Certain Events in London" (also named China Mieville) obsessively looks for evidence of the Viae Ferae, the feral streets that come and go according to their own inscrutable, inhuman designs. Having read the story, I now find myself looking for similar phenomena in Tuscaloosa County. This photo, taken on Kicker Road, just south of Veterans Memorial Parkway, catches a house in the act of disappearing, or of appearing; it's hard to say. All that's visible is a disembodied set of outside steps that once led (or will lead) to the front door.
To snap this photo, I walked from the Subaru the long way around the steps and across Kicker Road to the Shell station across the street. As I returned to the car, I threw caution to the winds and actually walked up the feral steps. I made it back to the car, though. Eventually.
2 Comments:
There are some others on campus that are being preserved purposefully. Like the mound on the quad etc.
No, I don't count a venerated ruin or relic or archaelogical site, and certainly nothing with a historical marker. The Viae Ferae are more subtle than that. The evidence we have for them is simply THERE, unnoticed (and maybe unnoticeable) by 99 percent of passers-by, and it always indicates a passage or thoroughfare that no longer quite exists -- or does not quite YET exist -- at least not in our human plane. What others can we think of that fit all those criteria?
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