The world was on fire.
But there were no flames. No smoke.
Just the sound of everything tearing at once—time, memory, place.
Threadlight erupted in all directions, distorting space into coils of vibrating color. The structure of the illusion buckled—rooms colliding, doors imploding, the ceiling unraveling like ribbon pulled from an unwritten story. Each pulse shook my ribs, and each moment came undone faster than I could comprehend.
Clara stood in the center of it.
Not stable.
Not whole.
Just standing.
The girl—the one we forgot—watched her with eyes that shimmered between ages. Her face fractured between childhood and something older, more eternal. As if time couldn't decide what to make her. Her posture shifted with each heartbeat—child, orphan, ghost.
Clara reached forward, her breath ragged. "I don't know you name… but I remember the sound of it."
The girl's shoulders trembled. "Then say it."
Clara opened her mouth.
The room screamed.
A sphere of raw energy exploded from her chest—a pulse, unfiltered, uncontrolled. It knocked the girl back, shattered every wall at once, bent the floor beneath me.
The ceiling collapsed upward into light. The floor rippled, trying to rewrite its structure.
I staggered. My thread recoiled. My vision blurred. I felt my own memory fragment in the blast.
This wasn't just an ability—it was memory trying to become real.
The girl fell to one knee. Her hands trembled. She looked up at Clara with recognition and fury—like she couldn't decide if she wanted to scream or embrace her.
Clara cried out, grabbing the space between them, not to strike—but to hold.
"I didn't mean to forget you," she said. "They took it from me. I swear they did."
The girl didn't respond.
But her expression cracked.
And the world shifted again.
Now we were in a field of snow. Endless. Quiet. Stars overhead. Clara knelt before the girl—her thread glowing like a heartbeat.
I could feel everything.
The stillness. The cold that wasn't weather, but grief. The ache of things left unsaid across centuries.
Then came the collapse.
Dozens of versions of Clara—older, younger, wounded—flickered around her, like broken echoes. Each one wore a different version of sorrow. One held a blade. Another, a child. Another just wept into her own hands. One looked at me—and mouthed a name I didn't recognize.
The girl screamed.
Agony.
Every one of them shattered.
Glass. Paper. Memory. All at once.
Clara fell forward, gasping. Her pulse spiked. Blood from her nose, her fingertips. The thread bled light.
And still—she stood up.
Her knees shook. Her breath ragged. But she stood.
Her voice cracked, broken open by raw memory.
"I don't care what they took," Clara said. "I'm taking you back."
The girl reached out.
The two threads met.
Everything went silent.
And then—
Clara's thread ignited.
It didn't glow.
It roared.
She couldn't control it.
It controlled her.
A pulse detonated from her, pure and sharp, slicing through the illusion. The blast wasn't light. It was sound. A name screamed into the fabric of time, too quiet to hear and too loud to forget.
The girl vanished into it.
But not in defeat.
In release.
Everything stilled—too still.
Then the illusion fought back.
Reality convulsed. The ground cracked open and revealed moments instead of stone.
I saw memories—mine, Clara's, others I didn't recognize—bleeding through the architecture.
A staircase dissolved into a battlefield. The window behind me opened to a funeral pyre. A mirror above the girl showed Clara holding a baby. Another showed me younger, kneeling before something with golden thread.
It wasn't just a time fracture. It was a mourning made visible.
I ran to Clara. She collapsed in my arms, shaking violently, her skin burning hot.
"Clara," I said. "Look at me. Stay with me!"
The thread between us hummed. Syncing without permission.
I saw everything.
A cradle rocking in an empty room. A woman screaming beneath falling rubble. A pair of hands letting go of a thread too soon. A shadow outside a door that never opened. A child waiting beneath a broken clocktower.
A life lost in the cracks between time.
The illusion didn't break all at once. It staggered—like it didn't know how to let go. Walls blinked in and out. Snow fell indoors. A door opened to a future that no longer existed.
Darkness. Stillness. Then light.
The world reassembled itself—slow, glitching, like it was unsure if we belonged anymore.
I held Clara tighter.
Her thread still pulsed—but softer now. Tired. Not defeated. I felt its weight against mine, like someone finally exhaling after centuries.
Around us, the light dimmed. The air settled. The field of snow was gone. The illusion unspooled. All that remained was the silence of a place that had given up pretending.
I felt my journal press against my ribs. A subtle warmth. A pulse waiting to be read.
But Clara was still in my arms. Still breathing. Still shaking.
So I didn't open it.
Not yet.