Wheels of Fate: The Desert Compass Arc
Synopsis
Natsuya Fujiwara just wants to see mountain snow, not dry heat. When her travels by hero’s caravan take her across the Sunsera Sands, she can’t stop thinking about colder places. “Can a heart from winter survive this light?” she whispers, brushing dust from her hair.
Her company thinks she always complains. They’re not wrong. Accompanying Natsuya are Domhnall, the taciturn ax-bearer from the coastal north, glasses fogging in the heat; Yuzu Onami, bright as ever rain, laughing even as the sand stains her yellow dress; and the eccentric clockmaker, Rook Tatch.
Each has their reasons to travel: Natsuya’s searching for a lost sibling, Yuzu wants rare herbs, Domhnall follows storms. Rook? He’s mapped every desert star, but won’t say why.
The arc picks up after a harrowing skirmish with sand thieves left their wagon’s direction wheel shattered. The desert world spins, but without that compass they’re lost, not in space, but in choice. Rook speaks the words like a riddle. “Sometimes, a way appears where none was right before.” Are you the type who digs for a literal solution, or one who listens for meaning where you hadn’t looked?
Distrust creeps in when Natsuya privately blames Domhnall for leading them off-map. A bristling tension rises over nightwatch. Bandits circle like jackals. Yuzu tries to lighten each mood: “So this is progress, isn’t it — you can only go forward!” Nobody laughs.
They decide to camp in the shelter of a sandstone wall. Rook ambles off to check stars, clinging lantern swinging, then rushes back, wild-eyed: he’s found boot prints that vanish into stone itself. There’s only one option — follow. Domhnall holds back, wary. Yuzu clutches a pouch of bitter herb, her hand trembles. Natsuya feels each heartbeat dig furrowed tracks in the ground behind her.
At dawn, they encounter Teiran, the traveler in white, who claims to see winds on the rock. Every answer his lips offer comes back a question. Was their stopped journey fate’s game or their own folly?
The stranger leads them deeper into carved tunnels. Sand falls like hourglass salt in the laser-thin beams of light. Natsuya slips and remembers the first snowball she threw as a child — cold, uncertain, full of hope.
By torchlight, Rook finally explains the truth about why he joined: his sister vanished right here six years ago, chasing a song on the wind. Each member, raw with their old hurts, realizes the desert’s mystery has tangled all their goals together.
Yuzu makes a bargain with the wind — she offers up her best herb in a tiny pot hoping for a clue. Next minute, a faded festival coin clinks by her toes. Domhnall dusts it off, the symbol matches one etched in the ruins Domhnall once mapped, far from here. Hidden tunnels, a lost city, a forgotten compass and wandering songs? Has each path always curved just beneath their feet?
The creep of tension hovers — there is more under the stone than secret writing or bones. Rook finds a carved phrase none of their books can match; Natsuya reads it aloud, unsure. The desert answers with distant melody, thin and sweet. Yuzu wants to run somewhere safe. Natsuya pulls the group to listen. “Did you hear that lyric, Domhnall? Doesn’t that make your arm hair tingle?” He won’t admit it, but you see it. Does even the stoic crack in the strange air?
There’s argument over which path to follow. Natsuya pushes to chase the echo. Rook follows her. Yuzu clings to a shallow hope, but Domhnall digs in stubborn, worried about traps ahead. Should they split? Should that ever even be an option, really? Have you ever split up when together felt safer, even for worse?
It’s night in the tunnels. Natsuya’s light goes out. She gropes the dark, hoping not to step off ledge. She thinks of every time she left a friend behind for the sake of the journey. 
The cliffhanger: Rook yells Natsuya’s name, his lantern split by some sliding shadow. Yuzu shriks — does she see a spirit, or her own gaze in the glimmering wall? Domhnall raises his ax as the passage narrows and shrinks around them. Natsuya’s voice? Echos thin, swallowed by old, dry stone. Something — or someone — draws nearer, deep below. Is it Rook’s lost sister calling out, at last?