Does Windows have the ln -s or equivalent?
You are looking for the command "mklink".
Documentation and examples in Microsoft Docs or ss64.com.
Example taken from the link:
// To create a symbolic link named MyDocs from the root directory to the \Users\User1\Documents directory, type:
mklink /d \MyDocs \Users\User1\Documents
There may be other ways, but the one I'm familiar with is mklink:
C:\>mklink
Creates a symbolic link.
MKLINK [[/D] | [/H] | [/J]] Link Target
/D Creates a directory symbolic link. Default is a file
symbolic link.
/H Creates a hard link instead of a symbolic link.
/J Creates a Directory Junction.
Link specifies the new symbolic link name.
Target specifies the path (relative or absolute) that the new link
refers to.
There are junctions but I don't know if this will do exactly what you need.
edit - oops sorry, junction only applies to directories not files