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.
Elora was a woman defined by the miles she had traveled, though she had never once looked at a map. In the seaside village of Oakhaven, they called her the "Mother of No Destination."
Elora looked at the horizon, where the sky and sea were indistinguishable. "Arrival is an ending," she said. "But love is a continuous road. I stayed a mother to the restless, and in doing so, I was never alone." A Mother of No Destination
That night, Elora passed away quietly. When the villagers found her, the trunk was gone. In its place was a single, new stone resting on her lap. It had no name on it yet, but it was glowing faintly in the moonlight—a final passenger ready for the next long walk.
The village children, curious and bold, once cornered her near the Whispering Pines. "Where are you going, Elora?" they chirped. "The road to the north leads to the city, and the road to the south leads to the salt mines. You’re just walking into the woods." She opened her trunk
For forty years, Elora walked. She became a living ghost of the coastline, a rhythmic presence that the villagers eventually used to time their own lives. When she finally grew too old to pull the cart, she sat on a bench overlooking the sea.
"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." Elora was a woman defined by the miles
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.