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Chapter 1 - Chapter One: Unseen Threads

I didn't sleep well that night.

I got up slowly and went to wash my face at the water pond, walking barefoot.

I opened an old wooden door that let out an annoying creak, and a cold breeze struck me. I looked up at the sky and whispered:

"I hate myself…"

Psychological pressure weighed heavily on my chest as I stepped outside toward the pond.

I washed my face; the wind was very cold, but I didn't care, as if I did this every day.

I wiped my face with my dirty clothes, full of holes and dangling threads.

Suddenly, I heard someone calling my name:

"Kaelen… Kaelen!"

I looked toward the source of the voice and saw an old man shouting my name angrily:

"Kaelen, are you deaf?

I've called you ten times and you didn't hear me!"

I apologized:

"Sorry, uncle, my head was hurting… what do you want from me?"

The old man said:

"I want you to buy me some bread."

I replied:

"Give me the money so I can buy it for you."

He handed me the money, his hand trembling—nothing but bone and flesh. He had grown very old.

I took the money and headed toward the bread seller, still barefoot. My foot stepped on a small stone and hurt, but I endured the pain.

I reached the seller and said:

"I want bread."

He looked at me with contempt and said:

"Do you want it for free, beggar?"

I held the back of my head and said calmly:

"I'll buy it."

I threw the money at him and said:

"Quickly."

The bread seller was shocked, his expression changing immediately, and he said:

"Alright, sir."

As if money changes people.

He gave me warm bread, light orange in color, with a pleasant smell rising from it.

I took the bread and headed back to the old man, while my head still ached.

I thought to myself:

"I don't know what's happening to me…"

I reached his house without noticing the passage of time. My thoughts were scattered.

I knocked gently, as if knocking on the door of someone dear to me.

The old man came out shouting:

"You're late!"

I held his hand and said:

"Don't be angry, your condition isn't good."

Suddenly, he began to cry, his tears falling onto my hand, and he said:

"My wife took my daughters away from me when I became bankrupt… I lived alone all these years, and I don't know how I'm still alive. If it weren't for you, I would have died of hunger… you were the one who always brought me food."

My tears fell without me noticing. I hugged him and said:

"Don't cry… maybe your daughters will return one day. Don't lose hope."

I took him inside his house, then returned to mine, thinking about his life, his wife's departure, and his severe illness.

Suddenly, the pain in my head intensified until I couldn't bear it anymore. I lay down on my bed, hoping the pain would go away.

In the morning, I got up feeling sick.

I stepped outside and looked up at the sky…

It was filled with countless threads, and the sky was a strange yellow color, as if I had lost my ability to distinguish colors.

I rushed to the pond and washed my face to see my reflection:

Messy blue hair, and blue eyes.

I raised my head, but the small threads were still floating in the sky.

I feared that I was sick—or that something else was happening to me.

Then I noticed that the old man's door was open.

I headed toward his house, calling out:

"Uncle… uncle, where are you?"

I entered the kitchen and found him lying on the floor, holding the bread I had bought for him… now cold.

I screamed in panic:

"Uncle! Wake up! Wake up!"

I placed my hand on his chest…

No pulse.

I felt a powerful shock, as if someone had struck me hard. I sat there crying for long hours, screaming only one word:

"Damn it…"

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