A Mother Of No Destination May 2026

"A mother looks after her own," she whispered. "But who looks after those who belong nowhere? I carry them with me. As long as I am moving, they are still traveling. As long as I have no destination, they are never 'lost'—they are simply on their way."

She opened her trunk. It wasn't filled with gold or heirlooms, but with thousands of small, smooth river stones. On each stone, a name was painted in delicate indigo ink—names of people who had been forgotten, travelers who never made it home, and souls who died with nowhere to go. A Mother of No Destination

She didn’t carry a child in her arms, but rather a heavy, cedar-lined trunk strapped to a small wooden cart. Every morning, as the fog rolled off the Atlantic, Elora would begin her walk. She didn’t head toward the market or the docks; she simply walked until the sun dipped below the horizon, often ending up in a different thicket or cliffside than the day before. "A mother looks after her own," she whispered