“Hooda said it would be here,” Eli muttered, checking the crumpled map in his pocket. The map was a puzzle of angles and dotted lines, drawn in crayon on the back of a fast-food placemat. Hooda was the ghost of the playground, a kid who’d supposedly solved every impossible game, every slide with no ladder, every see-saw that stuck in the air. Hooda’s final challenge was this: Thorn and Balloon.
He didn’t snatch it. He just stood up, and it rose with him, the string curling loosely around his finger. No popping. No cutting. Just balance. hooda math thorn and ballon
Eli took a breath. This wasn’t a physical place—not really. It was the kind of place you dreamed after staring at a screen too long, a landscape of pure geometry and anxiety. He was twelve, or a hundred and twelve, or just a pair of eyes trying not to blink. “Hooda said it would be here,” Eli muttered,