Mara hesitated, remembering the old saying about streets of gold. Then a smile curled her lips. “Time,” she answered.

She found a narrow alley where a small crowd gathered around an old woman knitting a tapestry of silver thread. The woman’s name was Ilara, known for “seeing the unseen.” Mara approached, and Ilara’s needle paused mid‑stitch.

Mara walked the main boulevard, feeling the vibrations through the soles of her boots. The city’s people moved like shadows—heads down, shoulders hunched, eyes fixed on their own burdens. No one looked up at the sky, and none seemed to notice the subtle, rhythmic hum that rose from beneath their feet.

She pressed the rose to her chest, feeling the faint pulse of the city’s heartbeat sync with her own. The rose began to glow, its petals unfurling into a radiant crimson, releasing a fragrance that seemed to awaken the air itself.

“Traveler,” he intoned, “to pass you must answer: what is more valuable than gold, yet can be spent without a coin?”

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