I was nine years old when Las Alas Humanas—The Human Wings—arrived in our town.
Chillán, in those years, was a dusty, quiet place, where little ever happened, and only a few lucky souls owned a transistor radio to escape the monotony of daily life.254Please respect copyright.PENANAwqb6AZgM10
I don’t recall the exact date when this traveling caravan of wonders arrived—1965, perhaps—but I remember the atmosphere: the air thick with dust, voices, and promises; the streets stirred; the everyday murmur rising into expectation as the giant tent was set up in town.
It was as if something dormant in Chillán had suddenly woken.
Vivid colors appeared where once only muted tones lay; the scent of wood, canvas, and sweat filled the air, and the promise of gravity‑defying acrobatics made every corner tense with anticipation.
For a child, it wasn’t just a show.
It was a portal to the impossible—a moment when life felt bigger, more intense, almost dangerously real.
Inside the tent, dust motes hovered in shafts of light, and every held breath mingled with expectation.
For a heartbeat, time seemed to stand still.
The ringmaster stepped slowly into the center of the ring.
The lights dimmed until the arena was bathed in a pale, ghostly glow, and the crowd’s murmur faded into a thick, almost tangible silence.
Then, with a grave, solemn voice, he announced:
“Ladies and gentlemen, lovely young misses, and intrepid boys:
“Tonight, these acrobatics—including the death‑defying leaps of our aerial dancers—are performed in honor of our Homeland and all the brave souls who gave their lives defending it.
“There will be no safety net beneath their athletic yet mortal bodies. Should luck abandon them, the void and the thud against the stony ground shall be their final farewell.
“We ask the audience for complete silence, for what you are about to witness is no mere circus act. It is a trial of life and death, an extreme challenge demanding absolute precision and courage. One slip of hand or foot, and their fall will seal their fate in an instant."
The daring acrobats now ascend the trapeze, clinging to taut, trembling ropes. Every creak of the lines, every sigh of the wind, every pounding heartbeat forms the soundtrack to the impossible.
“Absolute silence, dear spectators; the moment is critical. If any of them should plummet from these heights—if they fall now, with no net to catch them—they shall render their final accounts to the Almighty or to Satan, depending on whether they were—or were not—worthy Christians.
“Hold fast to your seats, for what you are about to witness demands respect and, above all, profound faith.
“Here begin Las Alas Humanas. Cross yourselves, whisper a prayer—because in this dance with the void, the hard ground always has the final word.”
Epilogue: The Echo of the Applause
The silence the ringmaster had demanded broke—not by a fall, but by a thunder of applause that seemed to shake the stakes of the tent.
The acrobats, sweating and panting, descended from the heights like gods reclaiming their human form upon touching the earth.
For them, it was the end of just another day; for me, the world would never be the same.
But magic in Chillán was always fleeting.
The days flew by, and the circus moved on, taking its colorful tents, the laughter echoing from behind the scenes, and the lights that flickered like an artificial sky.
Just as they had arrived, they disappeared, leaving the town submerged once more in its dusty silence.
I was no longer at the center of the ring, nor part of the applause, nor one of the tightrope walkers soaring above the wire.
Yet every movement, every fall, every roar of the lion remained etched in me like an echo that refuses to fade.
Today, when I close my eyes, I can still smell the sawdust and old leather.
Life in the provinces was like that: bursts of wonder that reminded us the impossible existed—even if only for a fleeting moment.
And sometimes, in my darkest hours, I remember the ringmaster’s voice.
I understand now that we all, in some way, walk the tightrope without a safety net, entrusting our souls to the heavens and hoping that, at the end of the leap, fate allows us to land on our feet once more.
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