A Way Back Home -

One evening, Elara fed her last echo into the machine. Instead of a spark, the Loom released a low, resonant chord that vibrated in her teeth. A thin, translucent silver line stretched out from her window, piercing through the smog and pointing toward the jagged northern mountains. She followed it.

Elara was ten when the threads broke, leaving her stuck in the City of Gears, a place of perpetual smog and ticking clocks, thousands of miles from her family’s coastal farm. For fifteen years, she worked as a scavenger, collecting "echoes"—tiny, glowing fragments of the broken threads. A Way Back Home

Elara didn't have enough thread left to go around. She looked at the fraying silver cord and realized it wasn't a physical bridge—it was a memory. She closed her eyes and stopped trying to see the way. Instead, she remembered the smell of wild rosemary and the sound of her father’s whistle at sunset. She stepped off the ledge. One evening, Elara fed her last echo into the machine

Most people used echoes to power lamps or heaters, but Elara was building something else: a . She followed it

The journey wasn't a straight line. The silver thread led her through the Whispering Woods, where the trees tried to mimic the voices of loved ones to lure travelers off the path. It led her across the Salt Flats, where the heat created illusions of shimmering lakes. Every time Elara felt her resolve crumble, she would touch the thread; it felt warm, like a hand held in hers.