This book is shaped by the <b>episodic dreams</b> I’ve been having since 2010.
At first, they were scattered and incoherent, yet unmistakably vivid, like living through an alternate life. I’d wake up either freezing or drenched in sweat, wondering where I am before realising that this is my true reality. But replaying them in my mind felt like stepping into my favorite movie—except I’d never wish for any of it to be real.
For years, I dismissed them as just dreams. But then I started noticing patterns. They weren’t random. They were the same story, told from different angles, through different lives. The more pieces I fit together, the more I questioned everything I thought I knew. It became too much.
I needed an outlet. So I wrote them down.
Some parts of this book might feel like an anthology. That’s because this isn’t just one story—it’s many, all spiraling toward the same fate. An epic stretched across time, across lives.This story is posted elsewhere by the author. Help them out by reading the authentic version.
And the dreams haven’t stopped. Different faces, different moments, but always with the same undercurrent. For now, I''m following it to its end.
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Catch-up Notes
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<i>Chief Nelius Tuscan and his 28 men have left Tuscanvalle and nothing spectacular happens for the next 218 years. So we skip forward and see Calla still alive and as a story teller and guide for her tribe two centuries later, when things start heating up once again.</i>
<i>Chief Nelius Tuscan never came back as he promised. So we shift focus from him to the crisis at hand <b>for now.</b> But his character isn''t lost. Keep reading to know: </i>
<i>1. what happened to the Tuscanians, </i>
<i>2. Did Chief Nelius Tuscan find a way to undo the curse? </i>
<i>3. Why does Calla live unnaturally longer?</i>
<i>And more...</i>
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