Lost/Thread – Trina's Dream
Project Overview
This episode takes place inside a dream. While trying to save a friend, Rue is pulled into a memory that doesn’t belong to her. What she sees is a story from long before the others ever found the otherworld.
Trina is a girl whose village believes she’s cursed. She sleepwalks, sees visions of disaster, and dreams of stars falling from the sky. Micha, her closest friend, is the only person who still believes in her. When the village turns against her, Micha risks everything to help her escape.
Trina’s Dream reveals an older encounter with the otherworld long before the main timeline of Lost/Thread. It sheds light on the ritual, the forest, and the cycle of those who are “chosen.”
This is a standalone episode that can be listened to on its own but connects deeply to the larger story.
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Trina’s been called “cursed” her whole life. She sleepwalks, dreams of disasters before they happen, and is seen as a threat by her village. But underneath it all, she’s just a girl who wants to be understood. She’s fragile in moments — but never weak. This is her story of loss, love, and transformation.
- Soft
- female adult
Trina(frantic, fighting for her life): Please—this isn’t right! You’re wrong! He’s coming for me!
Trina(dreamy, distant – In a narration): There’s water all around me. Voices I’ve never heard. But I know what they’re feeling… I’ve felt it too.
Trina (soft, broken but determined): I’m not giving up on him. He’s the only reason I’m still here at all.
Trina’s best friend since childhood — and the only person still willing to stand by her. Micha is quiet, loyal, and would run through fire to save her. Literally. This episode puts him through the hell emotionally and physically.
- male adult
- warm
- friendly
- caring
Micha (comforting, steady): You didn’t even wear shoes… of course you didn’t.
Micha (heartbroken, in panic while doing CPR): Come on. Come on, Trina, please wake up—don’t do this to me!
Micha (narrating, freezing, barely holding on): We made it through. The woods… they guided us. We’re safe now… we’re safe…
The town’s healer. She once looked after Trina’s family, but fear has chipped away at her empathy. She does what she thinks will protect those she can save, even if it means turning her back on those she can’t. She deeply cares for Micha but can’t bring herself to stand with him.
- Firm
- female senior
- Worn
- Soft-spoken
Reyna(soft, trying to convince Trina to run): If you love him — truly — you won’t let him burn with you.
Reyna(pleading, regretful): I didn’t tell them anything… but I won’t stop them either. I can’t. Not this time.
Reyna(firm, protective): Go now. Follow the trail past the orchard. Don’t stop — don’t look back.
A butcher who’s taken it upon himself to “cleanse” the village of Trina’s curse. He speaks like a preacher everything is fire and judgment. Elric believes he’s doing the right thing saving them from another catastrophe. His conviction is terrifying because it’s genuine. He speaks in declarations, not questions.
Elric(preaching to a crowd): Last time, we did nothing. We let the cursed walk among us. Not this time!
Elric(whipping up fear): She dreamed the fire before it came! She walks with stars in her blood!
Elric(cold, righteous): We drown the curse. Then we burn what’s left.
Old Man Rom isn’t feared, and he’s not forgotten. He’s just… somewhere in between. He’s the kind of man who can walk through the square without saying a word and still get a nod from everyone he passes. He comes and goes when he wants. Doesn’t explain what he's doing.
People don’t know much about him but they trust him. Maybe it’s the way he listens. Underneath the tired, worn face and subtly intimidating eyes, Rom’s got a good heart—and a better sense of when to use it.
“Damn sled’s older than I am. Holds together with hope and spite.”
“When I was young, people feared the woods more than they feared each other… Said it wasn’t always forest out there. Said there used to be a village deeper in… but it got taken.”
“You know, most folks don’t head up this way alone anymore. Not in weather like this.”
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