The world around us shimmered like a mirage, the edges of reality bending and twisting. I staggered back, gripping the railing of the bridge to steady myself. Mirae stood in the center, completely calm, her notebook glowing faintly in her hands.
"What's happening?" I shouted, my voice barely audible over the roaring wind that seemed to come from nowhere.
"This is what you wanted, isn't it?" Mirae said, her tone oddly serene. "Answers."
"I didn't ask for this!" I shot back, panic rising in my chest. "What is this place?"
She looked at me then, her dark eyes piercing. "This isn't a place. It's a thread."
"A thread?"
"The thread of your life. My life. All lives." Her voice was steady, as if she were reciting something she'd memorized. "And now, you're caught in it."
The glowing symbols in her notebook pulsed, their light growing brighter. The world blurred further, and suddenly I wasn't standing on the bridge anymore.
---
I found myself in a vast, empty expanse. The ground beneath me was smooth and white, stretching endlessly in all directions. Above, the sky—or what I thought was the sky—was a shifting tapestry of colors, threads weaving and unweaving in a mesmerizing dance.
"What… is this?" I whispered, turning in a slow circle.
"The Loom," Mirae said from behind me.
I spun around to find her standing a few feet away, her notebook now closed.
"The Loom?"
She nodded. "The place where all threads of fate are woven. Where lives intersect, diverge, and… sometimes end."
Her words sent a chill down my spine. "What does this have to do with me?"
"Everything," she said simply.
"That's not an answer!" I snapped, my frustration boiling over. "Why am I here? What's going on? And what are you hiding?"
Mirae's expression softened, just slightly. "I didn't want you involved, Jiho. But the threads… they've already chosen you."
"Chosen me for what?"
"To rewrite fate."
---
Her words hung in the air like a thunderclap. Rewrite fate? What did that even mean?
"You're not making any sense," I said, taking a step toward her. "Start from the beginning. What is all this? And why me?"
Mirae hesitated, glancing down at her notebook. When she looked back up, her eyes were filled with something I hadn't seen before: regret.
"There's no easy way to explain," she said quietly. "But you've seen the app, haven't you?"
My stomach twisted. "You know about the app?"
She nodded. "It's part of this. Part of the Loom."
I pulled out my phone, the screen still displaying the glowing progress bar. "This thing… it's been guiding me. Telling me to follow the threads. Is that what this is about?"
"Yes."
"And the notebook?" I gestured to the object she was clutching tightly.
She hesitated again, then slowly opened it. The pages glowed faintly, the strange symbols shifting and changing as if alive.
"This notebook is my thread," she said. "My life. My choices. My… mistakes."
I stared at the glowing pages, feeling a strange pull toward them. "But it was blank before."
"It's not blank to me," she said softly. "And now that you're here, it won't be blank to you either."
---
Before I could respond, the Loom seemed to ripple, the threads above us vibrating violently. Mirae's expression darkened, and she snapped the notebook shut.
"They're coming," she said, her voice low.
"Who's coming?"
"The Weavers," she said, her tone urgent. "They maintain the Loom. And they don't take kindly to anyone tampering with the threads."
"Wait, tampering?" I took a step back. "You're making it sound like we're breaking some cosmic law!"
"We are," she said bluntly. "But it's the only way."
"Only way to what?"
"To change what's coming."
The air around us grew heavier, the colors of the Loom darkening. A low, ominous hum filled the expanse, and I felt a cold dread settle in my chest.
"We need to go," Mirae said, grabbing my arm.
"Go where?" I asked, but before she could answer, the hum turned into a deafening roar.
---
Figures began to emerge from the darkness—tall, shadowy forms with eyes that glowed like embers. Their movements were fluid, almost otherworldly, and they carried long, slender tools that looked like glowing needles.
"The Weavers," Mirae whispered, her grip on my arm tightening.
One of the figures stepped forward, its gaze fixed on us. "Unauthorized interference detected," it said, its voice a chilling monotone.
Mirae pulled me behind her. "Stay close," she said, opening her notebook again. The pages flared with light, and the symbols began to swirl and shift, forming a barrier of sorts between us and the advancing Weavers.
"What do they want?" I asked, my voice trembling.
"To erase us," she said simply.
"Erase us?!"
"We've disrupted the Loom," she said, her voice calm despite the chaos. "And the only way to fix it is to remove the disruption."
The Weavers advanced, their glowing needles slicing through the air. The barrier Mirae had created flickered and wavered under their assault.
"We can't hold them off forever," she said, her tone grim. "You need to decide, Jiho."
"Decide what?" I shouted, panic overtaking me.
"Whether to stay in the Loom and fight… or return to your thread and forget this ever happened."
Her words hit me like a punch to the gut. "What happens if I stay?"
"You'll become part of this," she said. "Part of the fight to rewrite fate. But it's dangerous, Jiho. You might not survive."
"And if I go back?"
"Your life will return to normal," she said. "But the Loom… and everything tied to it… will be beyond your reach."
The Weavers were nearly upon us now, their glowing needles slicing through the barrier like it was paper.
"Decide!" Mirae shouted, her voice cutting through the chaos.
I looked at her, at the Weavers, at the swirling threads above us. My heart pounded in my chest as the weight of the decision pressed down on me.
What would I choose?