Elliot Peterson was a quiet, lonely man who once believed love could be measured, quantified, and contained. A theoretical physicist by training, he had spent years studying symbolic representations of emotion in quantum entanglement abstract, poetic interpretations that earned him bemusement from his peers but a niche following in interdisciplinary academic circles. His lectures on “The Mathematics of Longing” and “Structural Resonance in Emotional Fields” were more metaphor than science, but they reflected a deep, personal yearning he could never quite articulate.
Elliot had always felt love as a kind of gravitational pull—inescapable, invisible, yet capable of warping time and space. But he'd never experienced it firsthand. Orphaned at sixteen, raised in a series of foster homes where affection was rationed like rations in wartime, he came to see love not as something given freely, but as something imprisoned hidden, fragile, and easily broken.
A story written and designed by one of the students at Wonder.
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