Beneath a skybridge in a city ruled by algorithms, a secret classroom teaches more than reading: it teaches how to be seen without being catalogued. Edda Voss is a reluctant teacher with a patch of stolen memory and a stack of quiet tricks. When a municipal inspection shifts toward their pod, she must turn kite-making into strategy, lessons into misdirection, and kindness into armor. Her students—Tamsin with ghost-maps, Marla with an analog lens, and Juno with low‑tech cleverness—learn to braid maps and memories into a living resistance that jams the city’s ledger long enough to breathe. As the Directorate tightens its gaze and a familiar cadence arrives on the wind, Edda wrestles with the cost of remembering: expose the truth that could free her class, or hide the shard of her past to keep them safe. Lively, tender, and quietly insurgent, Bridge of Kites explores memory, consent, and the small, stubborn lessons that can unmake a surveillance state and remake a community.