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The Guardian of the Threshold
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The Guardian of the Threshold © 2026
By Laura Marco | www.lauramarco.es
The door was still there.
It was not just any door, even if the world insisted on treating it as one. It was old, rough, carved by wounds no paint and no prayer could ever conceal. The wood was cracked like the skin of an elderly hand, and the iron, holding its hinges, seemed to weep rust in silence. If one stopped long enough to truly look, they could see in it the trace of countless days: rain that struck without mercy, sun that burned without care, nights that leaned into its shadow as if seeking shelter.
But the door remained.
And in front of it, every morning, the woman appeared.
She did not arrive in haste, nor in fear. She did not walk like someone escaping, nor like someone searching. She walked like someone accepting. Like someone who knows fate is not something to argue with—only something to cross… or to stand before, at its edge. Her steps were calm, almost solemn, as if the ground beneath her feet were an altar worn down by centuries of invisible pilgrims.
She never touched the knob. Never tried to open it.
Not because she could not, but because she knew opening it would change nothing. The door did not hide paradise on the other side. No answer. No late salvation. It was, instead, a symbol. A boundary. A reminder that some things time leaves behind, and others time drags forward without asking forgiveness.
The woman would stop at the threshold and look. Sometimes into the dark interior hinted at through the cracks; sometimes up at the sky, as if measuring the hours by the colour of the clouds. She stood still, her basket resting against her leg, as though the entire world were a stage and she had learned the hardest role of all: to remain. There with her basket and the asparagus cutting.
She was a witness to time.
Not the gentle kind of time, not the time celebrated in birthdays or trapped in photographs. No. She was a witness to true time—the kind that cannot be tamed. The kind that devours.
Time was a silent animal. It did not roar. It did not bare its teeth. It did not need to announce itself. It arrived like dampness, seeped into walls, into beams, into memory. It invaded everything without raising its voice. And by the time you noticed it, it was already too late: the roof had sagged, the ground had cracked, the paint had surrendered, the flowers had died without anyone mourning them.
Around her, the stones of the old building crumbled as if they were tired of carrying history. Edges collapsed slowly. Walls leaned with tragic patience. There was a smell of dust and past, of things that once had names and were now only decaying matter.
The world was growing old. She had learned that everything we love wears down.
Bodies wear down. Promises wear down. Laughter wears down. Places wear down. People wear down.
Even memories wear down.
At first, she believed memory was a kind of eternity. She thought that if she held a moment inside her heart, it would remain untouched—like an object locked inside a glass box. But it was not true. Over the years, memory also frayed. Faces blurred. Voices mixed together. Details evaporated like water on sun-heated stone.
And still… she kept them. She kept them in her basket.
No one knew exactly what she carried inside. Perhaps no one dared to ask. It could have been dried flowers. Letters. Photographs. Pieces of cloth. An old handkerchief. A key. A broken doll. A piece of bread hardened like the winters of long ago. Small things, meaningless to the world, but immense to a heart that refused to forget.
She was not the guardian of the door because she believed the door could be saved. Nor because she believed the building could be restored. She was its guardian because someone had to look. Someone had to remain long enough to say—if only in silence: this existed.
Sometimes, when the wind blew hard, the door creaked. And that creak sounded like an old voice trying to speak. In those moments, the woman would lift her head as if hearing a name called from far away. As if part of her still expected the past to return something, even if it was only a sigh.
But the past never returns. The past only weighs. The woman knew this.
And yet… there was in her a kind of hope.
Not an innocent hope, not the bright hope written in youthful poems. It was a small hope, almost invisible, like an ember hidden beneath ash. A hope that did not promise to save everything, but refused to accept that everything had been meaningless.
It was the hope that something—however small—might endure.
She could not stop time. No one can. But she could accompany the ending. She could watch decay without turning away. She could hold—if only with her soul—the dignity of what was falling apart.
It allows us to exist, if only for an instant. It allows us to love. It allows us to dream. It allows us to create beauty, however fragile.
And that instant, however small, matters.
Not because it is eternal, but because it was real.
The woman removed her hand from the door. She looked down at her basket. She smiled faintly, like someone accepting a truth both bitter and sweet. Then she turned and began to walk away slowly, leaving the threshold behind.
Not with certainty of returning. Not with certainty that anything would change.
And as she disappeared into the distance, the door creaked once more.
As if it were saying goodbye.
As if time itself, for a second, had recognized her.
The wind lifted her hair, which moved like a pale wave, and she, with steady steps, walked away, knowing she would return, again and again, because that door was part of her, like her breath, like the weight of her memories, like the time that, though it devours, never truly leaves her. And so, she faded into the evening, like a memory that still waits for its moment to return.
She is guarding what time cannot carry:
the last memory before silence.
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