Archive for May, 1925

Somnium Stage

Tuesday, May 19th, 1925

Before it was Somnium Stage, the space it occupied didn’t exist—at least, not in any way a map could track. The alley that led there ended in a brick wall, half-covered in ivy and broken-glass graffiti. The ground was always damp, as though it remembered rain that hadn’t fallen in years. People hurried past it, even when they had nowhere to be. They felt something there, on the edge of their knowing. A pressure. A hush. The kind of silence that belongs to moments before something breaks—or begins.

Caligo Vire arrived on a Thursday, though no records place him in the city before or after that day. He carried no luggage, no identification, only a walking cane topped with a sphere of dull glass. His eyes, when people remembered them, were always described differently—“silver,” “midnight blue,” “like looking through the wrong end of a telescope.” No two accounts agreed. That, people later realized, was the first sign that something unusual was unfolding.

He found the alley. Or perhaps, the alley found him.

Caligo stepped through the wall at the end, and the air rippled. Not like a mirage—more like a curtain. And behind it, there was room enough to build something that didn’t belong to this world.

He didn’t use tools. No scaffolding, no nails. What he built was summoned. Woven. The floorboards were crafted from forgotten places: the creaky steps of childhood homes, the floor of a dreamt-of ballroom, the deck of an imaginary ship. The walls flickered between wood and velvet, depending on how you looked at them. The air inside always smelled faintly of stories—of old books, phantom perfume, and the soft dust of the mind’s eye.

He called it Somnium Stage.

The first performance had no audience. Caligo stood center stage and simply imagined. He thought of a memory he never lived—a summer day beneath three suns, sand cool underfoot, laughter echoing from unseen mouths. And the stage became it.

The second performance had one guest: a woman who’d lost her voice after a heartbreak so deep it unthreaded her identity. She stepped onto the stage and whispered a wish. The lights dimmed. Curtains drew. When they opened again, she stood surrounded by a forest of glass trees that shimmered with her unspoken grief. And then she sang—not in words, but in pure, clear tones that hadn’t been heard on Earth.

Word spread, quietly. There were no posters, no announcements. But those who needed it found it—wanderers, dreamers, the broken-hearted, the curious, the dangerous. Each stepped through the curtain at the alley’s end and discovered that Somnium Stage didn’t show you what you wanted—it showed you what you needed.

Sometimes that was a memory, played back in perfect detail. Other times, it was a version of reality that never had the chance to be real. A “what if.” A “why not.” A “what now.”

And the strange part? People changed. They left lighter, or heavier, but always more true. They remembered parts of themselves they thought were lost. Some even forgot they’d ever been anyone else.

As for Caligo Vire—he never aged, never tired, never charged a coin. He asked only one thing of his guests: “Leave something behind. A truth. A lie. A fear you no longer need.” He collected them in a little glass jar on the edge of the stage. Over the years, it filled with glimmers—tiny, shifting motes of light and shadow, each a fragment of someone’s real or unreal self.

Then one day, the jar was full. And Caligo was gone.

Some say he became part of the stage itself. Others believe he built another venue, somewhere else where the veil runs thin. A few whisper that he never existed at all, and that the Stage dreamed him the way he dreamed it.

But Somnium Stage remains.

Tucked behind that same unremarkable alley. Unchanged by time. Its lights still warm. Its air still thick with the promise of transformation.

And every night, before the curtains rise, if you sit quietly and listen—really listen—you might hear Caligo’s voice, soft as a sigh, brushing against your ear:

“Welcome. The story tonight is yours.”