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Maya's escape

Maya had no map, only the weight she carried — shapeless, enormous, hers. The sky above was neither day nor night but something bruised between the two, a purple-black that pulsed like a held breath. Beneath her feet the ground shifted: soft and fibrous, threaded through with pale webs that clung to her ankles as she moved. The jungle around her was woven rather than grown — long ropes of something between seaweed and silk hanging in curtains, breathing gently though there was no wind. She had been here before. She always had been. The creatures came first as sounds — a dry, papery rustling, like old letters being unfolded. Then as shadows that peeled themselves from larger shadows. They were wispy things, edges unresolved, trailing behind them long dark filaments that snagged on the webs and made the whole jungle shiver. They did not chase her. They simply followed, close enough that she could feel the cold they carried. She walked anyway. The webs thickened ahead into a wall — d...

Alannah and Irham

The café on Gloucester Road was the kind of place that had survived everything — two recessions, a pandemic, and the great chain-store collapse of 2027 — by being stubbornly, almost defiantly, itself. Mismatched chairs, steamed-up windows, and a hand-written chalkboard menu that still listed a builder's tea for ninety pence, a price that hadn't changed in fifteen years out of what the owner called "principle." Alannah liked it here. So did Irham. "Do you remember," Irham said, "when we genuinely didn't know if it was going to be alright?" Alannah wrapped her hands around her mug. Outside, a woman pushed a pram through the January drizzle, her face tilted up rather than down — not at a phone, just at the grey Bristol sky, as though she was glad to be in it. That small thing still struck Alannah as remarkable. "I remember," she said. "Around 2025, 2026. That stretch where every morning felt like opening a door and not knowing w...