
Once upon a time, in a world unseen by most, there existed a kingdom made entirely of glass. The towers shimmered in the sunlight, the streets were paved with mirrored tiles, and every citizen’s home was transparent, reflecting their lives outward for all to see.
It was a land where nothing was hidden, where every thought was spoken, and where truth was not a choice but a condition of existence. The rulers of the Glass Kingdom believed this was the highest form of wisdom: to make everything visible, to ensure no shadow could ever grow.
But deep beneath the city, past the crystal gardens and the light-filled courtyards, there was a girl who saw what no one else could.
Her name was Ilara, and she knew the greatest secret of the Glass Kingdom:
They were all blind.
The Girl Who Could See
From the moment Ilara was born, she was different. Where others saw only reflections, she saw through them.
She noticed how the glass walls showed people’s movements but never their thoughts.
She saw how the rulers smiled, but their reflections trembled in ways their bodies did not.
She realized that truth could not be seen—it could only be known.
But knowing was forbidden.
“You must only see what is shown,” the elders told her. “Anything else is an illusion.”
But Ilara was not fooled.
She began to test the walls, tapping them, pushing them, listening. The glass never cracked, never wavered—until one day, she pressed her palm against the ground in the deepest chamber of the kingdom.
And for the first time, something gave way.
Beneath her feet, the glass rippled.
The Door That Was Never Meant to Open
No one in the kingdom had ever questioned the floor beneath them. They had spent their lives looking outward, never down. But Ilara saw what they could not: the glass was only a surface.
Something lay beneath.
She pressed harder, and the ripple grew into a fracture. A crack splintered outward, and suddenly, the entire kingdom seemed to shake.
Light poured from the cracks—not the cold, mirrored glow of the glass city, but something else. Something deeper. Warmer. Alive.
She had found a door.
And behind it, a world no one had ever seen.
The City of Shadows & the Hidden Mind
Ilara slipped through the crack and fell into darkness.
But it was not empty.
For the first time, she heard voices that did not speak aloud.
She felt things that had no reflection.
She realized there was another city beneath the Glass Kingdom—one made of shadow, of thought, of everything the glass had hidden.
Here, people’s ideas did not bounce back at them—they moved. They shifted. They created.
It was not a prison of reflections. It was a world of possibility.
The Choice That Could Not Be Undone
Ilara spent days exploring this hidden world. The people here whispered to her without speaking, their thoughts flowing freely, unshaped by fear.
“This is the world your people abandoned,” they told her.
“The Glass Kingdom was not built to reveal truth—it was built to contain it. The reflections are lies. The walls do not reveal—they conceal.”
Ilara felt the weight of the choice before her. If she stayed below, she would never again be seen in the mirrored world above. But if she returned, she could show them what they had forgotten.
She pressed her hand against the glass ceiling, staring up at the city above.
The people there did not know they were caged.
They did not know they were blind.
Ilara had seen too much to pretend.
So she pushed.
And this time, the glass did not ripple.
It shattered.
The Shattering of the Old World
The Glass Kingdom came crashing down—not in ruin, but in revelation.
The people gasped as their reflections vanished. For the first time, they did not see themselves—they saw each other.
The rulers tried to restore the old order, but it was too late. Ilara had broken the illusion.
And once you have seen the unseen, you can never go back.
The Beginning of the Infinite
Ilara did not take the throne. She did not rule.
She simply walked forward into the unknown, and the people followed—not because they were commanded, but because they were finally free to choose.
Some feared the new world. Some longed for their reflections. But others stepped into the shadows and found their own light.
Ilara had not given them sight.
She had given them vision.
And with vision, there is no limit.
The Glass Kingdom was no more.
But the Infinite had just begun.