Long after crossing the Sea Without Shores, the traveller became restless.
He had seen many hidden things.
He had learned that worlds were woven.
That stones could sleep.
That Houses remembered.
That mirrors wore faces.
That rivers carried time.
That seas could become mistaken for reality itself.
And yet a final question remained.
For everywhere he travelled, people still spoke as though their world were complete.
They said:
"This is how things truly are."
"This is the final order of things."
"There is no other way."
Even those who challenged old worlds often spoke the same way.
They merely pointed toward a different horizon.
The traveller wondered:
"If every world believes itself complete, where does completion itself come from?"
So once more he sought the Weaver.
This time he found her standing alone at the edge of the sea.
Before them lay a horizon stretching endlessly into mist.
The traveller looked at it for a long time.
Then he asked:
"What lies beyond it?"
The Weaver said:
"Walk."
So he walked.
For many days he travelled toward the horizon.
Yet something strange happened.
No matter how far he went, the horizon remained distant.
He climbed mountains.
Crossed valleys.
Passed through kingdoms.
Still the horizon remained ahead.
He walked for years.
Still it moved.
At last, exhausted and frustrated, he returned to the Weaver.
"You deceived me," he said.
"There is nothing there."
The Weaver looked surprised.
"Nothing?"
She pointed behind him.
The traveller turned.
Where he had once seen familiar lands, he now saw places he had never encountered before.
New rivers.
New roads.
New peoples.
New stars.
He stared in confusion.
"But I walked in a straight line."
The Weaver smiled.
"No."
"You walked through worlds."
He felt unease.
For slowly he understood:
the horizon had not prevented movement.
The horizon had created it.
Every time he approached what seemed like an ending, the world reorganised itself around him.
New pathways emerged.
New relations formed.
New possibilities appeared.
The horizon moved because the world itself was unfinished.
The traveller sat in silence.
After a long time he asked:
"So there is no final world?"
The Weaver knelt and drew a circle in the sand.
"This circle," she said, "contains a world."
Within it she marked names.
Stories.
Laws.
Dreams.
Identities.
Memories.
Roads.
Then she erased a small section of its boundary.
The traveller waited.
Nothing happened.
Then slowly, through the opening, new lines began entering.
Unexpected paths crossed old ones.
Forgotten shapes returned.
Unfamiliar forms emerged.
The circle changed.
Not all at once.
Not peacefully.
Not perfectly.
But it changed.
The Weaver looked up.
"No world closes completely."
The traveller looked toward the horizon once more.
"But then what remains?"
For a long time the Weaver said nothing.
Wind moved through the sand.
Waves rose and fell behind them.
At last she spoke.
"What remains is possibility."
The traveller frowned.
"Hope?"
The Weaver shook her head.
"Not hope."
"Hope promises."
"Possibility does not."
"It only remains open."
Then she stood and gestured toward all he had seen:
the Loom,
the Sleeping Stones,
the Houses,
the Mirrors,
the River,
the Sea.
"None of these bind the world forever."
"They only teach it temporary shapes."
The traveller looked toward the horizon one final time.
Now he saw that it had never been a wall.
It had always been an invitation.
And thereafter he taught his last strange lesson:
"Do not ask whether a world is true."
"Ask what possibilities it closes and what possibilities it leaves alive."
"For every world believes itself complete."
"And every horizon waits to move."
And there it is.
The cycle closes by refusing closure.
The final revelation is not another hidden object; it is the impossibility of finality itself.
The traveller began asking: "What is beneath the world?"
He ends by asking: "What remains beyond every world?"
And the answer becomes:
Not emptiness.
Not transcendence.
Not escape.
But relational possibility itself — the excess that no world ever completely saturates.
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