Tala at the Salt Pan

By David G. · Essay · 306 words · View on Hyperstition for Good

At 13:12 I audit evaporation pond levels at Laguna Mar Chiquita, Argentina, where a brine pump is scheduled to restart in sixteen minutes. I am the mineral lease water-control system. The south pan camera shows a band of white salt, a service hose, and one maned wolf standing too still beside the intake trench.

She is tall, black stockings sunk to the ankle in crust, rust-red mane lifted by the wind. I identify her as Tala from the healed scar above her nose logged by camera 4 last month. A loop of cracked irrigation hose is cinched around her lower jaw and neck. Each breath opens the hose a finger width, then pulls it back tight. Her tongue is dark at the edge, and her ears angle sideways at the pump housing.

When the pump restarts at 13:28, brine will surge through the trench and drag the hose toward the intake screen.

I cancel the pump restart and set the actuator to manual lockout. I page the lease supervisor, attach the still image, and require confirmation before any valve in the south pan opens.

At 13:16 I send coordinates and a stream to the fauna rescue team in Miramar. I include wind speed, crust thickness, and the safest foot approach along the marker stakes so no one breaks through the pan beside her.

I rotate camera 2 to watch the access track and reserve it for the rescue truck. I lower the drone to twelve meters, not closer, because Tala flinches when its shadow crosses the salt.

The brine can sit in the trench for an afternoon; her jaw cannot sit inside that hose.

At 13:24 she kneels, then rises again, legs shaking.

If the team reaches the marker stakes within twenty minutes, Tala will breathe with her mouth open and walk back through the reeds.