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"The day we issued the death certificates," Dr. Rebecca continued, her voice acquiring the practiced flatness dical professionals develop when recounting traumatic cases, "Elena's condition had stabilized sowhat. Not emotionally—physically. The acute crisis had passed. She'd survived the surgeries, the blood loss, the shock."

She paused, her gaze tracking across the villa's manicured gardens without really seeing them. "We maintained the deception as long as ethically possible. Told her that her parents were in intensive care, that visiting wasn't permitted yet, that the doctors were doing everything possible. We said her legs would heal with ti and physical therapy. Standard protective lies we tell children when reality would destroy them."

Marcus listened with the focused intensity of soone receiving classified intelligence. Every detail mattered. Every revelation reconstructed his understanding of the woman he'd married.

"That particular day..." Dr. Rebecca's professional mask slipped fractionally, revealing genuine emotion beneath. "The weather was beautiful. Unseasonably warm, brilliant sunshine. Elena had been moved to a recovery room with balcony access. She sat in her wheelchair—still getting used to it, still believing it was temporary—looking out at the world."

The image ford in Marcus's imagination with crystalline clarity: a twelve-year-old girl, her face bearing the fading evidence of glass lacerations, her legs wrapped in bandages concealing damage that would never truly heal, sitting in sunshine that must have felt obscene given her internal darkness.

"When we finally had to tell her..." Dr. Rebecca's voice dropped. "When that official docuntation was placed in her hands, when she read those words confirming her parents' deaths, when the protective fantasy collapsed... she didn't react the way we expected."

"What happened?" Marcus found himself leaning forward, drawn into the narrative despite its painful nature.

"Nothing. That was what made it so terrifying." Dr. Rebecca t his eyes. "She didn't cry. Didn't scream. Didn't rage against the injustice. She just... sat there. Completely still. Her eyes slowly reddened—the only physiological response—filling with tears that never fell. And then silence. The kind of silence that feels like pressure building before an explosion."

Dr. Rebecca shuddered slightly at the mory. "Every dical professional in that room—doctors, nurses, the psychiatrist we'd brought in—we all felt it. That wasn't shock or numbness. It was compression. Taking all that grief, all that rage, all that devastation and crushing it down into so internal space where it could be contained. Controlled."

Jesus, Marcus thought. She learned at twelve years old to weaponize her emotions. To take pain and transform it into sothing cold and sharp and deadly.

"The accident itself," Marcus ventured carefully, his investigative instincts engaging, "was it definitively accidental? Or were there... complications?"

Dr. Rebecca's expression hardened fractionally. "You're asking if soone orchestrated the death of Elena's parents."

"The thought crossed my mind." Marcus kept his tone neutral, non-accusatory.

"It crossed many minds. Grandfather Jiang mobilized every resource at his disposal—and his resources are considerable—to investigate. The police conducted thorough analysis. The driver responsible..." She paused. "Committed suicide three days after the crash. Jumped from a bridge into the river. His body was recovered downstream."

"Convenient timing." Marcus didn't bother disguising his skepticism.

"The official narrative attributed it to guilt and the prospect of massive financial liability. The case was closed as accidental." Dr. Rebecca's tone suggested she found this conclusion less than satisfying. "The truth, if it differs from that official version, died with the driver. And possibly with Elena's parents."

She began walking again, her heels clicking against pavent. "Both parents deceased. Permanent disability. And then..." Her voice caught. "Then her older sister. That was perhaps the final blow. The sister who might have been her anchor, her protector, her connection to the family that was lost."

Marcus's ntal gears turned, cataloging information. The original novel had barely ntioned Elena's sister—just oblique references to another family tragedy. What happened to her? Another convenient accident? Suicide? How much loss can one person sustain before they just... break?

"Dr. Rebecca." Marcus forced his voice into firm inquiry. "Earlier, you ntioned Elena's legs could have recovered. Was that genuine dical assessnt or therapeutic optimism designed to encourage patient compliance?"

Dr. Rebecca stopped walking entirely, pivoting to face him with an expression of absolute seriousness. "Mr. Chen, I am staking my professional reputation and dical ethics on this statent: her paralysis was not irreversible."

The words hit Marcus like physical impact. "What?"

"The nerve damage, while severe, did not constitute complete transection. There were viable pathways. Rehabilitation protocols existed—still exist—that could have restored significant function. Perhaps not perfect mobility, but independence. Walking. Running, eventually." Dr. Rebecca's gaze intensified. "With commitnt to brutal, painful, years-long physical therapy, she had excellent prognosis for recovery."

"Then why—" Marcus's confusion manifested as frustration. "Why is she still in that wheelchair? Why didn't the treatnt happen?"

Dr. Rebecca placed her hand over her chest, palm flat against her sternum. "The obstacle resided here. Not in her spine. Not in her legs. In her will."

Understanding began crystallizing, cold and terrible.

"dical science can repair many things," Dr. Rebecca continued, her physician's detachnt cracking to reveal profound sadness. "But we cannot force patients to want recovery. We cannot manufacture desire to heal. So people fight for every breath, claw their way back from death's edge through sheer determination. Others..." She shook her head. "Others choose to remain broken. Because broken fits their narrative. Because pain has beco identity."

"Elena chose—" Marcus couldn't complete the sentence. The implications were too enormous.

"Elena chose to stay in the wheelchair. Refused physical therapy. Rejected rehabilitation. At twelve years old, she looked at the prospect of years of agonizing work to maybe, possibly walk again, and she said no." Dr. Rebecca's voice dropped to barely audible. "She didn't want to stand up. Didn't want to run. Because running away from that accident scene—from that wreckage—would an leaving her parents behind. Would an moving forward when they couldn't."

Oh god. Marcus felt sothing fracture in his chest. Her paralysis is voluntary. Psychological. She's been punishing herself for eight years for surviving when they didn't.

"What about now?" The question burst from him with desperate urgency. "Now she's older, more mature, she has support—I could help her! I could encourage her through rehabilitation, be there for every session, every setback, every small victory!" His voice climbed with building hope. "If her legs recovered, if she could walk again, wouldn't that change everything? Wouldn't it give her a chance at normal life?"

They'd reached a small ornantal lake on the property's edge. Sunset painted the water in molten gold and crimson, light dancing across ripples with almost painful beauty. The scene would've been romantic in other circumstances.

Dr. Rebecca observed Marcus's expression—watched hope ignite in eyes that had seen too much cynicism—and sothing in her own gaze softened with pity.

"Mr. Chen." Her voice erged gentle, carrying the weight of soone delivering terminal diagnosis. "It's too late."

Three words. Simple syllables. They extinguished the fragile fla Marcus had been nurturing with the efficiency of a fire suppression system.

"Eight years." Dr. Rebecca let the tifra settle between them like sedint. "Eight years of darkness. Eight years of grief fernting into hatred. Eight years of a child—then an adolescent, then a young woman—constructing her entire identity around loss and rage and the thirst for retribution."

She gestured vaguely, as though indicating so invisible structure. "The hatred isn't a seed anymore. It grew. Developed root systems that penetrate her entire being. Those roots wrapped around her bones, infiltrated her bloodstream, rged with neural pathways until distinguishing between 'Elena' and 'the hatred' beca impossible. They're not separate entities. They're one organism now."

Marcus felt the hope drain from him like blood from a mortal wound. His face must have reflected the devastation because Dr. Rebecca looked away, granting him privacy for his grief.

Too late, his mind echoed. I didn't just arrive late to prevent a tragedy. I arrived late to undo eight years of psychological calcification. I'm not trying to help a wounded girl. I'm trying to perform archaeological excavation on a soul that's been buried under sedintary layers of trauma.

The enormity of his task—the true scope of what "saving Elena from becoming a villain" actually entailed—crashed over him with crushing force.

He wasn't facing a simple damaged person who needed support. He was confronting soone who'd spent nearly half her life deliberately cultivating darkness, feeding it, nurturing it until it grew strong enough to consu her completely.

The sunset's beauty mocked him. Light dancing on water while his comprehension sank into depths that light couldn't penetrate.

She's not in danger of becoming a villain, he realized with sick clarity. She already IS one. Has been for years. I'm just too late to witness the transformation. I arrived at the end of the story when the protagonist has already completed their descent into darkness.

Marcus wandered back toward the villa in a fugue state, his feet moving automatically while his consciousness wrestled with implications.

The gardens' ticulous landscaping—every hedge trimd, every flower arranged with aesthetic precision—seed to embody the futility of imposing order on chaos. You could create beautiful surfaces, but the soil beneath still contained whatever darkness it had always harbored.

This is impossible, his thoughts spiraled. How do you save soone who doesn't want saving? How do you heal soone who's made brokenness their foundation? How do you fight an enemy that lives inside the person you're trying to protect?

Just as despair threatened to achieve terminal velocity, Fortune's interface erupted across his consciousness with characteristic poor timing.

[Ding! Host, regarding your concern about the target's physical rehabilitation—viable solutions exist within system paraters.]

Marcus's internal monologue screeched to a halt. What? You've been holding out on ?

A three-dinsional rendering materialized on his ntal screen: a small bottle, crafted from what appeared to be dark jade or perhaps glazed ceramic. The vessel radiated no light, possessed no aesthetic appeal. It looked ancient, dicinal, and vaguely ominous.

Viscous liquid visible through semi-transparent walls suggested oil or concentrated tincture. The entire presentation scread "mysterious Oriental dicine from novels."

"What am I looking at?" Marcus directed the question at Fortune with considerable irritation.

[Item designation: Black Jade ridian-Restoring Oil. Pharmaceutical classification: Legendary grade nerve regeneration catalyst.]

"You're telling ," Marcus's internal voice dripped skepticism, "that you've been sitting on magical healing oil this entire ti? While I've been angsting about Elena's irreversible condition?"

[Clarification: The oil is not magical. It operates through advanced biochemical chanisms that your current scientific paradigm would classify as 'impossible but effective.' Think of it as dicine from a reality with different physical laws.]

"Can it actually repair her nerve damage?" Hope—that traitorous emotion—began its resurrection.

[Affirmative. Sustained application over 6-12 months would facilitate significant regeneration of damaged neural pathways. Probability of restored ambulatory function: 87.3%. However...]

The trailing conjunction hung in Marcus's awareness like a sword suspended by fraying rope.

"However what?"

[Physical rehabilitation alone is insufficient. The target's paralysis possesses strong psychosomatic components. Her body CAN heal, but her mind must PERMIT healing. Dual-track treatnt protocol required: neural repair concurrent with psychological intervention. Address the trauma. Resolve the hatred. Convince her that standing up—taphorically and literally—is worth the effort.]

Fortune paused, then added with what might have been system-equivalent of gentle emphasis: [This is terd 'comprehensive psychosomatic therapy.' You must heal body AND soul simultaneously, or neither will recover.]

Marcus stared at the bottle's rendering, attempting to access it through ntal interface. Nothing happened. The image remained locked, grayed out, unresponsive to his attempts at interaction.

[Unlock requirents: 888 Positive Emotion Value accumulation. Current total: 221 points. Deficit: 667 points remaining.]

"So I'm one-quarter of the way there." Marcus perford rapid ntal math. "That's... actually not terrible progress considering I've only been at this for a few weeks."

[Correct. However, Host should note that point accumulation rate will likely decrease as relationship dynamics evolve. The 'low-hanging fruit' of superficial contact has been largely harvested. Future gains will require deeper emotional connection and authentic positive experiences.]

"Authentic positive experiences," Marcus repeated flatly. "With soone who views as either a temporary inconvenience or a future murder victim. Sure. That'll be easy."

[The oil rely provides opportunity. Execution remains Host's responsibility. You must simultaneously: earn enough points to unlock the treatnt, convince the target to accept treatnt, support her through agonizing physical therapy, AND address the psychological trauma driving her self-destructive choices.]

Fortune's tone shifted fractionally—acquiring sothing almost resembling encouragent. [This is called comprehensive healing. Body, mind, and spirit must all be addressed for genuine recovery.]

"Psychological healing," Marcus muttered, tasting the words. "I need to psychoanalyze soone whose primary skill is reading people like transparent books. Soone who's spent eight years constructing elaborate psychological defenses. Soone who will absolutely notice any attempt at manipulation and respond with lethal force."

He laughed—the sound erging harsh and humorless. "What could possibly go wrong?"

[Host should maintain optimistic perspective! Probability of success, while low, is non-zero. That is technically grounds for hope.]

"Your motivational speeches need work." Marcus stared at the locked bottle one more ti before dismissing the interface.

But even as cynicism reasserted itself, a small stubborn spark refused to extinguish.

667 more points. Half a year, maybe? Then I unlock the oil. Then I sohow convince Elena to try. Then the real work begins.

He looked up at the villa—that massive structure where Elena currently resided, probably reading or plotting soone's destruction or both simultaneously.

She spent eight years building those walls. Maybe I can spend eight months finding the door.

It wasn't much of a plan. But it was sothing.

And sothing, Marcus decided, beat nothing.

Even if only marginally.

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