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Intro - The Strawman Universe: Before the Barren

Long before the dust swallowed the sky, the world shimmered golden. Meadows of swaying straw danced in harmony beneath suns that shared their warmth without demand. Each strand in every Strawman was vibrant — woven from kindness, sacrifice, and truth. The horizon stretched endlessly, and laughter ran through the breeze like stitched melodies. But time frays all things. Choices became transactions. Promises turned to power. Straw dimmed, browned, and finally blackened — not from weather, but from within. Meadows were fed to the flame. Their music silenced. Now the air is brittle. Dust clings like guilt. And those who walk the land of ash no longer bend with grace — they creak with secrets. Yet somewhere, a thread remains unburnt. And it remembers.  The city breathes in silence. Strawopolis — once gilded — now creaks under its own decay, its towers leaning like tired sentinels. Dust swirls through alleys where light rarely dares, and whispers echo in places no ears admit to hearing....
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Page 5: A Straw too Dark

One thread. One moment. Kaaro stands at the edge of betrayal — not of the Council, but of the truth beneath the dust. Naara’s voice still rings in the chamber above, cracked with hope. Brukel watches, unmoved, eyes smoldering like old embers. The Silent Binder extends a hand. Not offering salvation — offering certainty. Behind them, the chamber begins to collapse. Not physically. Morally. The memory strand screams in Kaaro’s grip, vibrating visions of burnt futures, unspoken rebellions, lost histories. He can run. He can silence the voice. Or… He can speak. And in that breath, as he steps forward, his hand ignites. Not with flame. With memory. All fires consume. But some — just some — ignite without flame. Kaaro didn’t speak. Not in words. The light in his hand spoke louder than confession, louder than rebellion. It stitched a question into the air… and left the world waiting for an answer. Above him, the Council binds its judgment. Below him, memory awakens. The strand has chosen. Or ...

Page 4: Council of Bales

Above the chamber, the Council sits — gleaming, rigid, wrapped in laws older than flame. Naara enters their midst like a gleam in gloom. She speaks of visions.  Of strands with memory.  Of Kaaro and the awakening beneath the dust.  Her voice trembles — not with fear, but with urgency. Brukel listens, unreadable. His frame is nearly pitch-dark. He knows this truth. He buried it. “We cannot weave purity into power,” Naara cries. “We must let the meadows return.” But the Council does not bend. They summon the Binder . They summon the blade. And Kaaro … must choose.

Page 3: The Strawman Universe: Chamber of Whispers, Threads of Debt

There are places the map refuses to name — corners stitched from forgotten intentions and restless echoes. Kaaro follows the glow. He descends beneath Strawopolis through narrow passages once used by weavers before politics swallowed purpose. The strand hums louder now, vibrating against his chest like a thread remembering its loom. He enters a chamber — hollow, circular, lined with broken straw effigies. Each figure is different. Charred. Cracked. Yet somehow… listening. The stolen strand leaps from his hand, threads itself into the wall. The chamber responds. Visions ignite: a meadow burning in reverse, rebuilding, breathing — and then suddenly, the voices speak. Not aloud. Inside him. They speak of the first Straw-Men . Of the Council ’s origin. Of the great betrayal — where purity was traded for permanence. Kaaro is not chosen. He is the debt. And he is running out of time. Dramatic Dialogue:  [Kaaro] (breathless, staring at the glowing strand) “You were never just stolen...

Page 2 - The Strawman Universe: Fray and Flight

Not all strands are meant to be held. Kaaro tucks the glowing thread beneath his robe, heart thudding like falling bales. The alley behind him groans — not from footsteps, but from something deeper. Ancient. Strawopolis is waking. In the distance, the Council’s sirens bleed through the quiet, warping air with dissonant screeches. From above, Watchers unfurl from balconies — figures stitched in laws older than their memories. Their eyes don’t blink. Their judgments never unravel. Kaaro runs. He darts between woven towers and frayed bridges, each step echoing his past: the child weaver who traded stories for strands… the thief who stitched lies into opportunity. But now, the price of survival glows hot in his hands — and it’s whispering louder with every heartbeat. Below his feet, dust twists into symbols. Warnings. Memories. Something wants him to remember. Or burn.