Erbil Master Plan Dwg File
Leila reached for her phone. She called the only person who would believe her: Tariq, the 72-year-old cartographer who had drawn the first hand-sketched master plan of Erbil back in 1987, using pencils and tracing paper and a secret map his father had hidden from the Ba'athists.
Leila rubbed her eyes. She hadn’t slept in 36 hours. But when she looked again, the stick figures had rearranged themselves around the geothermal probe. They were pointing. Not at the probe—at a blank patch of land between the old Christian cemetery and the Syriac Cultural Center. A patch that, in the official master plan, was zoned for a high-rise hotel.
She looked back at the screen. The red circle was gone. In its place, the stick figures had formed a single word in Kurmanji script: Erbil Master Plan Dwg
Leila switched off the Citadel layer and watched the city breathe. The outer ring road—120 kilometers of planned asphalt—was supposed to decongest the brutalist chaos of 60th Street. But the drawing showed a new deviation: a spur line cutting southwest through the Baharka Valley, directly through a protected wetland that had miraculously reappeared after last winter’s record rains. The annotation read: "Concession 19-B, KAR Group."
By the city itself.
Most architects never drew people into their master plans. Leila did. On a hidden layer she called "Ruh" —the Kurdish word for soul—she had placed thousands of tiny stick figures. They clustered in the bazaars of Qaysari, queued at the bread stalls in Raperin, and sat on the crumbling retaining walls of Ainkawa. Tonight, she copied the new red circle from the Citadel layer and pasted it into Ruh .
— Remembrance.
Silence. Then a dry chuckle.