In 1929, in the heart of the American South, there lived a young girl named Ada. Ada's world was one of magnolias and moonlit porches, a place where the future seemed as distant as the stars in the night. Yet, Ada's mind was a universe of its own, teeming with questions far beyond the constraints of her time and place. Ada was fascinated by the burgeoning fields of science and technology. She devoured books on physics, chemistry, and engineering, and her imagination was captivated by the idea of Singularity – a concept she conceived as a convergence of human intelligence and technological advancement, transcending time and space.