The Last Thread
The scent of lavender lingered in the air, warm and dusky, as if it were trying to soothe the house into forgetting what was happening inside it.
Aelira knelt by the hearth, grinding dried herbs with a mortar far older than she was. Outside, the wind whispered through the cedar trees, carrying the distant hush of storm clouds gathering over the valley. She liked the quiet days, when it was just her and her mother in the cottage, the world small and manageable.
But today, the quiet felt wrong.
She glanced toward the back room where her mother lay, her breathing shallow and uneven. It had started two days ago: a sudden collapse, skin hot as burning stone, sweat beading along her brow despite the cold. Aelira had tried every remedy her mother had ever taught her—birch bark, feverfew, willow tea. Nothing had worked.
“Ma?” she called softly.
No reply.
She left the bowl and crossed the threshold, heart thudding. Her mother was still, her chest rising only faintly beneath the woolen blanket. She looked pale, like a winter moon, the glow beneath her skin fading by the hour.
Aelira sank beside her, brushing damp hair from her face. “You have to drink something,” she whispered. “Please. Just a little.”
One hand, dry and trembling, reached up. Fingers found Aelira’s wrist and squeezed, weak but deliberate.
“Listen to me,” her mother rasped. “You have to go. When I’m gone... find your aunt.”
Aelira froze. “You said she was dead.”
“I lied, I needed to keep you safe.” Her mother’s voice cracked like thin ice. “She sees, like you. She’ll help you understand.”
“Understand what?” Aelira’s voice rose. “I don’t see anything. I feel... too much. All the time. It’s overwhelming sometimes. I don’t know what’s wrong with me.”
Her mother smiled, a faint and tired smile. “The threads don’t lie, little star.”
Her mother’s grip faltered. Her gaze turned distant.
“No,” Aelira choked. “No, no, stay with me.”
Before Aelira could ask what she meant, her mother’s hand slipped from hers.
“No,” she whispered. “Please.”
Tears welled. Her hands clutched her mother’s, trembling. And then—something changed.
A wave of pressure rippled through her chest. The world stilled.
And she received the sight to see them.
Threads.
Everywhere. Spun of light and breath and something she didn’t have a name for—silver, violet, ash-gray, red. They wove through her mother, flickering faintly, and from her chest surged a line of gold, taut with grief, connecting her to the woman fading before her eyes.
She couldn’t believe her eyes.
The threads shimmering from her mother’s fading form began to twist and burn to black, as if scorched by unseen flames, crumbling like ash in the air.
Then, just as the last silver strand smoldered and broke apart, her gaze caught a new thread—thin, fragile, yet glowing with a steady blue light that wove through the shadows of the room. It pulsed like a heartbeat, faint but unmistakable.
Her mother’s voice, barely more than a breath, echoed in her mind: “Find your aunt.”
Clutching the fragile thread, Aelira knew this was no longer just about her mother’s fading life. It was about understanding the unseen world she’d only just begun to glimpse. Somewhere out there, her aunt was waiting—a guide through the tangled web of emotions and magic.
Wiping away tears, Aelira rose, determination steadying her trembling hands. The path ahead was uncertain, but she had no choice. She had to follow the thread, no matter where it led.