I was seven at the
time and my brother was around 10, when my parents put us in the car with no
explanation of where we were going. “You will see when we get there,” they
repeated time after time. The drive, as usual for us, was long and boring but
after about three hours we were traveling down an old, beaten up, lifeless grey
cobble road. Most roads in Italy look similar but something about this one
looked deathly almost. We were in one of few wooded areas in Sicily, and the
area around us was overgrown and un-kept. After a bit of a drive up this
lifeless road, we arrived at a building. It was a small square building with
the same color palate as the lifeless cobble. The cement walls were chipped and
cracked, with few spots of graffiti in Italian, most screamed warnings of
curses and hexes. I could only think of the few hoodlums who were dared to near
this building, to spray their art and scamper off with a new vote of confidence
from their friends. It smelled of musty historical importance; I don’t know how
else to explain the smell, but it is of maybe old books, and alabaster.
We
got out of the car and approached the only opening in the wall that was large
enough, and shortly after climbed in. The eeriness that radiated from this
building made my hair stand on end and my childish curiosity peak. There was a
short moment of silence coming from the hollow abandoned building before my father’s
face popped out of the window with a look of assurance. “Okay,” he said.
He helped my brother and I into the building,
and my mom climbed in last. Once inside we all gaped at the magnificent
paintings covering the walls, all the
dreams and insane ideals covering the floors broken by people scared of what
they don’t understand. I took a step forward watching, my balance on the
crumbled pieces of wall and ceiling, feeling the crushed maniac’s life under my
feet.
On
all the doorways there was scripted Enochian rolling with the foundation, an
endless babbling of words in different languages coating the walls. I later
found out that we were at Aleister Crowley’s, Abbey of Thelema. Aleister Crowley
was irrefutably a mastermind of all things out of ordinary. He was, in no other
way to describe it, an insane genius. The musty smell from outside was only
amplified from inside the building. With each step of my family, I could hear
the crunching of his work, his life. The building was semi-average
comparatively to a normal house. There was a living room, kitchen and another
room, maybe a bedroom, but all of the furniture had been removed over time. The
texture of history was undeniably there, falling apart, fragile, old.
My
mother to this day is obsessed with history and all things old, and over time I
learned fascination about these things as well. I remember her saying, “Not
looking at everything, but feeling it,” not with our hands but a sort of
combination of all the senses put into one, to get a feel of the general area.
Thinking back on it, I wish I had been old enough to appreciate the historical
and social value of going to this place of mysteries, this place of a mad man
who was so sorely misunderstood. The feel of fear that radiated from the
unknown only peaked my interests more.

Has so much imagrey, and a lot of description really good.
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