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Chapter 1 - Chapter 1: Shadows at the Doorstep

The scent of damp thatch and mildew hung heavy in the air as pale winter light struggled through the single cracked window of Mallory's Cottage. The decrepit dwelling stood at the edge of Graymount Village, far enough from prying eyes that a scream might fade unheard into the surrounding Blackshade Woods.

Seraphina Wadsworth lay motionless upon the straw-stuffed mattress, her brow furrowing unconsciously as violent images flickered behind closed eyelids.

Explosions. Blood. Screams.

Her fingers clenched the threadbare blanket, knuckles whitening as the memories assaulted her. Not memories belonging to this frail body, but to another life—one where she had worn a uniform, carried a weapon, and ultimately met her end in a blaze of fire and duty. Thousands of needle-like pains shot through her skull as two souls—two sets of memories—fought for dominance within one fragile vessel.

"Lieutenant..." a voice whispered in her mind, fading into nothingness.

Seraphina's eyes flew open, momentarily disoriented by the unfamiliar earthen ceiling above her. Cobwebs hung like funeral veils in the corners, and the rafters sagged with the weight of decades. This was certainly not a military hospital—nor was it any place she recognized from her former life.

Her gaze traveled the confines of the cottage. Crumbling clay walls. A window partially covered with cheap paper where glass had broken. A single battered wooden trunk in the corner—seemingly the only possession of any value in the hovel. The doorway hung with a tattered cloth instead of a proper door.

Where am I? The explosion should have killed me.

The weakness in her limbs felt alien—dangerous. In her previous life, weakness meant vulnerability, and vulnerability meant death. She attempted to swallow, only to find her throat painfully parched. The discomfort was too real, too immediate to be a dream.

With practiced mental discipline, Seraphina began sorting through the foreign memories now mingling with her own—memories belonging to the body she now inhabited. Another Seraphina, or rather, Faye—a young woman who shared her face but not her strength. A girl beaten down by circumstances, whose brief life had ended in tragedy.

Reborn. I've been reborn in Victorian England—no, some rural backwater in the 1870s.

The revelation struck her with unexpected clarity. The impossible had happened—her soul had crossed time and space to inhabit this body after the girl had nearly perished in a fire at the sheepfold. The irony wasn't lost on her; both she and this Faye had faced death by flame, yet somehow, she alone had survived—through this impossible second chance.

Her contemplation was interrupted by approaching footsteps. Seraphina's muscles tensed instinctively, a soldier's response to potential threat. The tattered curtain parted, revealing a woman in her forties, dressed in a threadbare gray blouse patched at both shoulders and elbows, paired with oversized black trousers. On her feet were rough-hewn work boots, caked with mud from the fields.

"You're awake?" The woman's weathered face brightened with surprise. "Let me check." Without waiting for permission, she pressed a calloused palm to Seraphina's forehead. "Thank the heavens, the fever's broken."

Maggie Grant, the borrowed memories supplied. A widow who had shown kindness to Faye when few others would. One of the only allies this body had known in Graymount Village.

"You foolish girl," Maggie continued, sitting at the edge of the bed with maternal concern. "You nearly burned to death. Was saving those two sheep worth your life? Such foolishness!"

Seraphina studied the woman silently. The memories told her that Maggie had been a friend to Faye's grandfather, Alfred Wadsworth—a former physician fallen upon hard times. But the memories also whispered something darker: Faye hadn't simply been overcome by smoke while saving livestock. Someone had trapped her in that burning building.

Murder. This body's previous owner was murdered.

"I'd like to rest a bit longer," Seraphina murmured, testing her new voice—softer and higher than her former one.

Maggie nodded, patting her hand. "Of course, child. I'll bring some broth later." She lingered a moment, watching Seraphina with undisguised concern before quietly departing.

The moment Maggie's footsteps faded, Seraphina's eyes snapped open again. Her military training urged immediate action, assessment, planning—but this weakened body would require patience. She needed strength before she could pursue justice for Faye or security for herself.

Accept what cannot be changed. I'm alive, and that's more than I had before.

She owed this second chance to Faye Wadsworth, whose life had been cruelly cut short. The least she could do was avenge the girl and perhaps give this broken existence the strength and purpose it had never known.

A deep exhaustion soon overtook her. This body was dangerously weak—recovering from both smoke inhalation and what appeared to be long-term malnourishment. Seraphina surrendered to sleep, knowing recovery must come before revenge.

She hadn't been asleep long when her soldier's instincts jolted her awake. Someone was approaching the cottage—not with Maggie's forthright stride, but with the furtive movements of a predator.

Through slitted eyes, Seraphina observed a shadow pass by the paper-covered window. The intruder paused at the threshold, checking for witnesses. The cottage's isolation, once a burden to Faye, now posed a deadly threat. No one would hear a struggle here.

Clayton Swain, the memories identified—a village layabout known for his cruelty and opportunism. The rotting wooden door creaked on its hinges as he tested it.

Seraphina's heart raced, but her mind remained cold and analytical. Her body was weak, but her military training remained intact. She lay motionless, conserving energy, assessing options.

Clayton pushed the door open, entering with ill intent in his eyes.

He doesn't realize who he's facing, Seraphina thought grimly. This isn't helpless Faye anymore.

The visitor had no idea that the fragile girl he intended to victimize had died in that fire. In her place lay a combat-trained officer with nothing to lose and everything to prove.

Clayton stepped inside, a twisted smile forming on his unwashed face as he approached the bed.

Seraphina waited, perfectly still, gathering her meager strength for the confrontation to come.

He comes with ill intent, but he'll find I'm not the easy prey he remembers.

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