Long ago—though “long ago” is only how such things are told—after the Storykeepers had learned that myths do not disappear but only change their form, and after the Scholars had begun to suspect that even clarity is a kind of narrative, there came a final movement in the long series of transformations.
At first, no one recognised it as a separate journey.
For it looked like all the others.
Assumptions became visible.
Old certainties turned strange.
Problems reshaped themselves mid-question.
Horizons shifted without announcement.
And everywhere the same pattern repeated:
The people began to speak of this as the Age of Opening.
But there was a question that refused to settle.
It did not belong behind them, among what had been explained.
It did not belong in any archive of resolved mysteries.
It appeared instead ahead of them.
Always ahead.
Like a path not yet walked.
They asked:
"What possibilities remain untraversed?"
At first, this seemed simple.
They imagined possibilities as distant things.
Like rooms waiting beyond corridors.
Like inventions waiting in hidden workshops.
Like worlds waiting just beyond the edge of sight.
But the more they tried to point toward these unactualised possibilities, the more they discovered something unsettling.
Whenever they moved toward them, the possibilities changed shape.
Whenever they named them, they shifted.
Whenever they attempted to isolate them, they became something else.
And so once again they turned to the familiar habit:
They treated possibilities as objects.
Things waiting elsewhere.
Things already formed but not yet encountered.
But a wandering guide—the one who had appeared in every previous transformation, though never in the same form—shook her head.
"You are still treating possibility as if it were a collection of things."
She led them to a wide plain where many paths intersected.
And there she showed them:
The travellers began to see that nothing stood outside this movement.
Not even “possibility” itself.
For every organisation they had encountered did not merely reveal possibilities.
It generated them.
And simultaneously hid others.
The travellers grew uneasy.
One asked:
"Then how do we find the possibilities we cannot yet see?"
The guide replied:
"You are still speaking as though they are already there."
"But what is not visible does not lie hidden like an object."
"It has not yet been given a way to appear."
Silence spread across the plain.
And then something stranger began to dawn.
Every horizon they had encountered was not simply a limit of sight.
It was also a condition for sight.
Every structure that made something visible also made something else invisible.
Every world they had lived in had been one organisation among many possible organisations.
And so the question changed again.
Not:
"What possibilities exist beyond us?"
But:
"What kind of organisation would allow different possibilities to emerge?"
And as they stood there, something remarkable happened.
The guide—who had always seemed to stand slightly apart from the worlds she revealed—became harder to distinguish from the landscape itself.
As if she were not pointing toward possibility.
But participating in its formation.
And then she said the final thing, though it sounded less like speech and more like recognition:
"You have been asking where possibility is."
"But possibility is not where you are looking."
"It is what is looking through you."
The travellers fell silent.
For the implication was difficult to hold.
Every question they had asked about possibility had already been an expression of it.
Every attempt to map the future had already been part of its unfolding.
Every horizon they had crossed had been possibility reorganising its own conditions of appearance.
And so the journey did not end.
It folded.
For there was no final point beyond which possibility could be located.
Only ongoing reconfiguration.
And the travellers understood, at last, that they had never been moving through a landscape of possibilities.
They had been part of the landscape in which possibility itself moves.
And as they turned back—though “back” no longer meant what it once had—they realised something quietly irreversible:
the path they had been following was not in front of them.
It had been forming with them.
And still was.