Aruncat

Cișmigiu Gardens, where an elderly woman sits. When Luca shows her the locket, she weeps. It was a gift from her late husband, lost during a move and long since given up for dead. The "thrown away" object was her most precious treasure.

Lipscani district. The needle isn't broken; it’s pulling him toward things others have also . He finds a discarded locket, a single silver key, and a weathered map stuck in a storm drain. Each "trash" item seems to hum with a strange energy when brought near the compass.

Word spreads of the "Boy with the Seeker." People begin bringing their "broken" items to Luca, not to fix them, but to see if they still have a story to tell. Luca realizes that being aruncat is often just a temporary state before being rediscovered. Aruncat

The needle points Luca toward a lonely bench in

Luca follows the spinning needle through the winding streets of the Cișmigiu Gardens, where an elderly woman sits

Luca realizes the compass isn't a navigator for geography, but a "Seeker of the Lost." He stops reacting to where it pulls him and starts intentionally looking for the owners of these discarded memories. He decides his mission is to reunite the "thrown away" with those who miss them.

Luca places the brass compass back on his shelf. It still doesn’t point North, but it sits proudly next to his bed, no longer "junk." He has learned that nothing is truly worthless as long as someone is willing to look for its story. The "thrown away" object was her most precious treasure

Bucharest, a tarnished brass compass lay forgotten in a box labeled "Vechituri" (Junk). It had been —thrown away—years ago after its needle stopped pointing North, deemed useless by a family who only valued things that worked perfectly.