Folded correctly. Paired properly. Returned to the drawer where he belongs.
In Eli's world, routines are sacred, doctrine is lived rather than spoken, and stability is maintained through repetition and care.
That order breaks in a laundromat.
During what should be a routine cycle, Eli is separated from his mate and lost-pulled out of the drawer, out of the home, and into the dangerous, unmapped spaces beneath human notice. The laundromat does not return what it takes. And once outside the system that defined him, Eli must navigate houses that still function-but imperfectly-places strained by neglect, distraction, and belief stretched just past its breaking point.
Along the way, he meets Ash, a restless sock who understands movement, shortcuts, and the quiet violence hidden inside certainty. Together, they attempt to restore balance in places that feel almost right.
But correction is not the same as care. And rituals meant to preserve order can become instruments of destruction when followed without question.
Blending absurdist world-building with philosophical tension, Socks is a darkly imaginative literary fable about belief systems, responsibility, and the cost of mistaking order for goodness-set entirely beneath human notice, where even ordinary appliances can become altars, and mistakes do not stay small.