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Chapter 1 - Threads

Morning arrived without ceremony. The alarm buzzed once before it was silenced. Kai lay still for a few seconds longer, staring at the ceiling where faint cracks traced thin lines through the paint. The house was quiet—always quiet at this hour. The foster family he lived with moved in predictable patterns, the kind that never collided with his. He sat up slowly. The room was small, containing only a bed, a desk, and a narrow closet. Nothing personal covered the walls, nothing sentimental lingered in corners. He preferred it that way; objects had weight, and weight made things harder to leave.

When he pulled his shirt over his head, the morning light caught along his ribs and revealed the scar. It stretched from the lower curve of his left ribcage toward the center of his torso, thin and dark, looping in subtle curves that didn't resemble any normal surgical line. It looked as if something had stitched him together—like yarn pulled tight through skin. He pressed his fingers against it out of habit rather than curiosity. It didn't hurt. It never did although its been a sore spot lately. After a moment, he dressed and left without another thought.

The walk to school was uneventful. Wind moved through the trees in soft intervals while cars passed and people drifted along sidewalks. Kai noticed patterns more than faces. The woman at the corner store always unlocked the door at exactly 7:12. The bus brakes hissed before the doors opened. The traffic light at the crosswalk stayed red four seconds longer than necessary. These were small things, predictable things, and he preferred them that way.

Classroom noise rose and fell like static when he arrived. Kai took his usual seat by the window—not too far back and not too close to the front—where he could see everything without being seen too much himself. He didn't dislike people; he simply didn't feel the need to be close to them. When the teacher cleared his throat and announced they had a transfer student, the room shifted with quiet curiosity.

She entered without hesitation. Her long black hair fell straight down her back without a strand out of place, and her posture was upright, almost rigid. Sharp amber eyes scanned the room once—not searching, just assessing. There was no smile, no attempt at warmth; her expression was composed to the point of indifference. "This is Yuna," the teacher said, and whispers spread through the class. Yuna didn't react. Her gaze passed over rows of faces before pausing briefly on Kai—just long enough to register him—before she looked away and took a seat near the back, alone.

The lesson began with ancient civilizations and myths of lost cities. As the teacher spoke about early belief systems, he mentioned that some cultures believed there had once been a doorway between worlds, a place where the boundary between realms was thin. The words drifted through the room, but something about them lingered with Kai. His eyes shifted to the sunlight pooling across the classroom floor, where dust floated lazily in the beam. For the briefest moment, it didn't look like dust. It looked like a single strand suspended in air—thin, almost invisible, like thread catching light. He blinked, and it was gone. Just dust. He looked away.

The day ended without incident. Students spilled out through the gates in clusters filled with laughter and plans, but Kai left alone. The streets grew quieter the farther he walked from campus, and he took the longer route home through a narrow side street between two older buildings. It was quieter there, with less traffic and fewer interruptions. As he entered the alley, the wind shifted—not strongly, but differently. The air felt denser for a moment, heavy in a way that didn't match the temperature. He slowed, not out of fear but instinct. A subtle, directionless sensation brushed the edge of his awareness, as if something just outside his vision had moved.

He turned his head. The alley appeared empty: trash bags near a metal door, a fire escape ladder overhead, faded brick walls stretching upward. Nothing else. He stood there a second longer than necessary before continuing forward. Behind him, the air bent—not visibly or violently, but enough to displace the faintest shimmer of light. And something stepped forward within that light without making a sound.

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