Seraphine stepped into the hut and closed the door behind her.
The mont the wood t wood, the nostalgia she had been holding at bay struck with terrifying force.
It was no longer only a feeling.
It was pressure.
Longing. Relief. Happiness. Grief. The strange ache of having reached sothing she had been missing for so long that she had stopped knowing how to na the absence.
Her hand remained on the door for a second longer than necessary.
Then her system reacted.
A golden notification shimred across her vision.
Before she could read more than its first line, a brilliance rose out of her.
The Will of the World.
It poured from her in soft gold and filled the interior of the hut. The plain walls glowed. The floor changed. The silence thickened.
Then the whole hut transford.
The air beca mory.
The empty room filled with moving scenes so vivid they no longer resembled projections. They unfolded in full depth and living motion around her, until Seraphine no longer felt like a visitor inside the hut.
She felt like she had stepped into a life.
A life she had never expected to see.
•••
Outside, Lucien knew none of this.
He remained where she had left him, standing in the field beneath the slow and almost tender wind of that strange little world.
Lucien kept Structural Insight active and let his senses expand carefully through the field. He followed the subtle lawful textures with growing fascination.
This world had been made deliberately.
Every distance felt chosen. Every silence felt placed. Every piece of empty space felt like it had been left empty for a reason.
What interested him most was the nostalgia.
The world itself carried it.
It made the place feel close.
Lucien found that beautiful.
A place like this... if one lived long enough, one would need it.
He thought of it then with unusual seriousness.
If nothing interrupted his path and he truly continued rising, then one day he would live an extraordinarily long life. Perhaps a life so long that even great victories would beco old stories, and old stories would eventually lose warmth through repetition.
A place that preserved the ache of rembrance... a place that could return the weight of what had once mattered... such a place was not luxury.
It was dicine against eternity.
A weapon against the erosion of long life.
Lucien smiled faintly to himself.
Yes.
He wanted to create sothing like this one day.
Sothing that could let the old look backward without becoming numb.
Sothing that could remind beings who had survived too much that survival alone had never been the point.
Then his attention shifted again, and he looked toward the hut.
He still had no idea what was happening inside.
•••
Inside, Seraphine stood very still as the first scene began.
A little girl who looked like her was in the hut.
The sa hut.
But smaller, poorer, and lonelier.
The world outside it was different too. There was a village nearby, close enough to see from the doorway if one stepped far enough out, but even at a glance Seraphine could feel the truth of the place.
The village did not want the little girl.
The realization ca without words and struck deeper than surprise.
Just then, mories surged into Seraphine’s mind. It left her utterly speechless.
She saw herself as the child.
Thin. Quiet. Sharp-eyed. Too observant too early. There was no one in the hut with her.
Only her.
The child moved with a calmness that was wrong for her age.
It was not peace.
It was self-containnt learned too soon.
As the scenes unfolded, the Will of the World returned the mories to her, laying them into place like truth finally finding its rightful ho.
Her mother had died giving birth to her.
Her father, a village doctor, had lasted until she was six.
He had loved her.
That part landed hardest.
Not because the world told her.
Because she could feel it in the small things left behind.
The patched blanket. The carefully wrapped herb bundles. The dical notes written with a tired but precise hand. The little wooden stool placed just high enough that a child could reach the worktable.
Then he died too.
And after that, the village decided what she was.
A cursed child. A thing that killed her mother at birth and her father soon after. A monster clever enough to wear the shape of a girl.
Seraphine watched the child-version of herself step through a winter morning with a woven basket too big for her fra and a face too expressionless for soone so small.
Her shoes were split. Her sleeves were nded badly. She moved around the village border, not through it, because no one wanted her near.
Still, every night she returned to the books her father had left.
That was what broke the heart of the scene.
Not that she had been abandoned.
That even after abandonnt, the child still wanted to be useful.
She read dicine by fading lamplight. She sounded out terms too advanced for her age. She copied diagrams by hand. She morized dosages, herbs, symptoms, and redies while trying not to starve.
The little girl did not read because she was forced.
She read because her father had been kind.
She read because dicine was the last warm thing he left behind.
And because she wanted, with all the desperate sincerity of a child no one wanted, to prove that she was not what the village said she was.
She wanted to save lives.
She wanted to prove that the doctor who loved her had not raised a monster.
Seraphine, standing in the hut and watching it all unfold around her, felt sothing in her chest begin to twist unbearably.
The child had no one.
And yet she still tried.
Just to be accepted. Just to be useful. Just to prove that love had not been misplaced in her.
...
The scene moved forward.
Seraphine turned twelve.
And the plague ca.
It ca the way plagues often did in old mortal villages. First as fever, then weakness, then coughing, then strange swelling, then corpses too nurous for proper mourning.
The village began to rot from within.
People died one after another.
And then another fear spread among the survivors.
Bodies were vanishing.
The dead were being taken.
At first the villagers whispered about ghosts.
Then demons. Then punishnt. Then the cursed child in the hut beyond the fields.
But the truth was much simpler.
And far more terrible.
The child Seraphine had begun stealing corpses.
She waited until dark, dragged the dead away with hands too small for the work, and took them back to the hut.
There, under candlelight and trembling shadow, she dissected them.
Seraphine watched her younger self cut into the first body with a hand that shook not from disgust, but from uncertainty at the unfamiliarity of the real thing.
The books had not prepared her for weight. For tissue texture. For the way disease changed color, swelling, sll, and internal arrangent.
But after the first incision, the child did not recoil.
She focused.
That was the frightening thing.
Her mind beca clear.
She compared what she saw against the notes her father left. She observed organ changes. She mapped progression. She counted differences between those who died early and those who survived longer. She treated each body not as desecration, but as testimony from the dead.
One corpse beca several. Several beca dozens.
And the little hut beca a secret theater of dicine no child should ever have been left alone to build.
She did not enjoy death.
But she was exhilarated by understanding.
Every new body taught her sothing. Every difference clarified a pattern. Every pattern pushed her closer to a cause.
Seraphine, the adult Seraphine, could barely breathe as she watched.
Because the child was brilliant.
And pitiful.
She was too young for this. Too alone for this. Too unloved for this.
And yet astonishingly alive in mind.
At last the child found it.
The cause of the plague.
And when she did, she shone.
For the first ti in the entire vision, the little girl smiled with full, radiant triumph.
It was only for a mont.
But it was devastating to witness.
Because that smile had no arrogance in it.
Only joy.
She had found the answer.
She could save them.
What followed was worse.
Because hope ca true first.
The child used the redy texts her father left, gathered ingredients from the forest and the mountain, tested combinations, observed reactions, corrected ratios, and built a cure with frightening speed and genius.
She walked into the village carrying it with both hands.
She was afraid. But hopeful.
The villagers recoiled when they saw her.
So accused her of bringing the plague. So spat near her feet. So told her to leave.
Still she offered the dicine.
They refused.
Until one old man, half-dead already and too tired to fear any curse more than the disease inside him, finally drank it.
And it worked.
The scene changed around Seraphine in a flood of emotion.
The old man’s fever broke. His breathing eased. His flesh stopped worsening.
Word spread.
Others ca. Others drank. Others lived.
The child Seraphine smiled and smiled and smiled, unable to contain the shaking joy inside her.
Finally.
Finally, she was useful.
Finally, they would understand.
Finally, they would see that she was not a monster.
For a brief, cruel stretch of ti, they did.
People spoke to her. Accepted dicine from her hands. Called her talented. Called her strange, yes, but useful strange. Useful enough to tolerate. Useful enough to approach.
The little girl who had been starved of love walked through the village like soone touching sunlight for the first ti.
And because the Will of the World refused rcy, it let Seraphine feel exactly how much that ant to her.
How long she had wanted it. How little it took for her to bloom toward it. How quickly a child will forgive cruelty if kindness is offered even once.
But then...
The villagers learned how she had found the cure.
That she had stolen corpses. That she had cut open the dead. That she had examined their insides like an unnatural thing in human skin.
And just like that, usefulness beca horror.
The sa mouths that had blessed her redy now called her unclean. The sa hands that reached for healing now reached for stones, fists, and outrage. The sa people who would have died without her cure decided that the real offense was not death.
It was that she had learned too much from it.
The beating ca fast.
So fast the child did not understand at first.
She was struck across the face. Knocked to the ground. Kicked while trying to speak. Spat on while trying to explain.
Seraphine watched herself cry, confused and terrified and still trying to reason with people who had already chosen fear over truth.
"I helped you," the child said.
No one listened.
"If I didn’t look, how would I know?"
No one cared.
"They were already dead."
That made it worse.
The villagers shouted about desecration. About monsters. About unnatural children and cursed blood and the dead being denied rest.
And the the truly unbearable part was that the child still could not see what she had done wrong.
The bodies were already dead.
The living needed an answer.
If dissection found the answer, then how could it be evil?
If saving the village required cutting the dead, then why did salvation beco a cri the mont they understood the thod?
The child’s mind hit the wall of human contradiction and broke against it.
That was the true tragedy.
Not simply that she was beaten.
That she was intelligent enough to save them, but not yet old enough to understand the cruelty of people who would rather preserve the dignity of the dead than face the ugliness of how the living were rescued.
The beating stopped only when the village leader intervened.
Not out of pity.
Out of order.
They did not kill her.
They banished her from setting foot in the village again.
That was all.
As if exile was rcy. As if forgetting her service was justice. As if the cure had not passed through her bloodied hands only hours earlier.
The child dragged herself back to the hut.
One eye swollen. Lip split. Arms trembling. Book clutched to her chest.
Her father’s redy book.
The only thing that still felt like love.
Inside the hut, she finally collapsed.
And cried.
The helpless, body-shaking cries of a child whose heart had not only been wounded, but rewritten.
She still did not understand what she had done wrong.
She had done what a doctor should do. She had studied. She had observed. She had found the cause. She had made the cure. She had saved them.
And still they had called her monster.
Sothing in her shifted there.
Clarity.
The child who had wanted to be accepted began dying inside that hut.
In her place, sothing else began forming.
A mind that would still heal. Still study. Still solve.
But would never again be foolish enough to believe usefulness guaranteed love.
Seraphine, standing in the golden-lit hut, pressed a hand over her mouth.
Too late.
The tears had already co.
And outside, under the strange sky of the created world, Lucien waited without knowing that inside the hut, a lonely child was still crying herself into the woman he had co to know.
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