In the First Age, before mountains remembered their names and before rivers knew their paths, there existed the Great Loom.
The Loom was not an object among objects.
It had no walls and no boundary.
It was the weaving of all things together:
stone with rain, speech with memory, king with peasant, stars with tides, dream with waking.
Every thread moved because every other thread moved.
No thread existed alone.
And yet the peoples of the world forgot this.
For they saw kingdoms rise and kingdoms fall and believed they had discovered the source of change.
They said:
"The world changes because mighty hands reshape it."
So they praised conquerors and prophets and kings.
"There," they said, "are the movers of the world."
Among these peoples lived a Weaver named Aeron.
Aeron had heard tales of hidden powers beyond the Loom itself.
Old stories spoke of a place at the world's edge where the Master Thread descended from beyond the heavens and entered the weaving of reality.
Whoever found it, they said, would command all change.
Whoever grasped it would become lord over becoming itself.
So Aeron set out.
He crossed forests whose trees whispered forgotten names.
He climbed mountains worn smooth by ages.
He sailed seas where stars floated beneath the waves.
Everywhere he went he asked:
"Where does the world end?"
"Where does the thread enter?"
The answers varied.
Some pointed east.
Some west.
Some upward toward the heavens.
Some downward beneath the roots of mountains.
So Aeron travelled farther.
Years became decades.
Decades became lifetimes.
Still he searched.
At last he came to a silent plain beneath a dark sky where an old woman sat beside a fire.
She was weaving.
But her loom was strange.
There was no frame.
No spindle.
No visible thread.
Her hands simply moved through the air.
Aeron said:
"I have travelled to the edge of the world."
"Tell me where the Master Thread enters the Loom."
The woman laughed.
Not cruelly.
As rivers laugh around stones.
"You have searched for a place that cannot exist."
Aeron frowned.
"Everything woven must have a beginning."
"Everything altered must be altered by something else."
"What moves the world if not a hand outside it?"
The woman reached into the fire.
To Aeron's astonishment she drew out a glowing thread.
It burned like sunlight.
She handed it to him.
"Pull."
He did.
Far away, mountains trembled.
Birds rose into the sky.
Rivers shifted course.
Clouds twisted overhead.
Aeron stared.
"I have found it!"
"This is the Master Thread!"
But the woman shook her head.
"Look again."
Aeron looked.
As he held the thread he suddenly saw what he had not seen before.
The thread did not descend from elsewhere.
It was woven into countless others.
Into rivers.
Into mountains.
Into songs.
Into memories.
Into his own hands.
And as he pulled it, he felt something stranger still:
the thread was pulling him.
His movements altered it.
Its movements altered him.
Neither stood apart from the other.
There was no outside hand.
No hidden lever.
No place where the world ended and another thing began.
There was only weaving.
The woman spoke:
"The powerful are not those who stand outside the Loom."
"There are none who stand outside."
"Some threads simply touch many others."
"When they move, much moves with them."
"But even they are moved in turn."
Aeron looked across the world.
He saw kings who believed themselves creators of history.
He saw revolutions claiming to destroy old orders.
He saw prophets announcing new ages.
And beneath them all he saw the same thing:
threads crossing threads crossing threads.
No hand entering from elsewhere.
Only the Loom rearranging itself from within.
Then Aeron asked:
"Can the world transform itself?"
The old woman smiled.
"What else could transformation ever be?"
And from that day onward Aeron ceased searching for the edge of the world.
For he understood at last:
there was no edge to find.
Only endless weaving.
And all becoming was the Loom remembering that it could weave itself differently.
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