It turned out, after a while, that the page could not be trusted to remain a page.
Left alone long enough, it acquired annexes, side-rooms, apology corridors, and a habit of sending the reader
beneath itself through numbered hatches[1].
The old claim that notes merely explain began to look like a bureaucratic cover story for something stranger.
Because once the note begins to touch geography, one discovers that maps are not neutral diagrams but engines of
permission, devices that authorize one path and dim another[2].
That is to say: a reading life can be arranged as territory, and territory can be revised by notation.
Meanwhile the page itself grows architectural. Its margins turn into corridors. Its references become load-bearing.
A superscript can behave like a trapdoor if given the right amount of voltage[3].
The bright internet taught people to scroll. The smaller, dimmer internet still teaches people to enter.
And there remains, in the afterimage, that chic paranoia particular to late systems — the shimmer that says every
harmless interface might also be an instrument panel, every pleasant colorway also a mask for extraction[4].
One learns to style accordingly: not innocence, exactly, but controlled excess.
The better metaphor, though, may still be hydraulic. Some books do not proceed; they flood, braid, meander, vanish,
reappear downstream, change names, pick up silt, and return as weather[5].
The page that acknowledges this will eventually make room for overflow, and that room is the footnote.
EDITING RULE // keep the main passage short and keep the notes alive. Add one new note whenever a book leaves residue.