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Chapter 1 - The Last Days of Carla River Clayton

Carla River Clayton had always been an anomaly in the lives of those who

knew her. Until the age of eight, she was the quintessential tomboy: racing

through autumn leaves with wild abandon, kicking soccer balls with all the

reckless precision of someone who refused to be ordinary, and climbing trees

just to see the world from above. She had energy, grit, and a stubborn streak

that made even her most indulgent teachers sigh. But all of that came to an

abrupt, cruel halt shortly after her eighth birthday.

It started with a simple injury—a twisted ankle during a soccer game. At

first, she laughed it off, insisting she could still play. But the laughter

quickly turned into anxiety when doctors found more than a broken leg. The

subsequent tests were a whirlwind of sterile rooms, hushed conversations, and

the terrifying word that had never touched her before: cancer.

The diagnosis was devastating not just for her parents, who held her hand

with trembling fingers, but for Carla herself. She had always been fearless in

her adventures, but fear took a different form now. It wasn't about scraped

knees or losing a game; it was about a relentless, unseen enemy within her own

body. She had no choice but to submit to the invasive routines of chemotherapy,

surgeries, and constant hospital visits. A year of grueling treatments left her

confined to a hospital room, her childhood stolen not by circumstance, but by

illness.

Doctors had given little hope. They whispered numbers, survival rates, and

odds that seemed impossibly stacked against her. She would need to stay

permanently hospitalized, they said. Any lapse in care could be fatal. But

Carla, even in the shadow of mortality, refused to be broken. Where some saw

despair, she saw an opportunity. If life would not allow her the freedom of a

playground or a soccer field, she would carve another path: she would explore

the world in ways her physical body could not limit her.

Books became her sanctuary. From the moment she was wheeled into her private

room, Carla immersed herself in the pages of every volume she could reach.

Literature, science, mathematics, history, crafting, etiquette—nothing was

off-limits. Her mind became a library of knowledge, and she devoured it with

the hunger of someone determined to experience life in every conceivable way.

On days when chemotherapy left her weak but not broken, she danced in her room,

turning her limited space into a stage for performances that only she could

see. Her laughter, quiet but determined, echoed in the sterile halls, defiant

and unbroken.

Her parents, both gone too soon in a tragic plane accident when she was

thirteen, had left more than memories; they had left a legacy. They had built a

business empire that thrived even after their passing, ensuring that Carla

would never lack the care she needed. The family's adopted successor, a young

man she considered a little brother, was tasked with managing their wealth and

attending to her needs. He did so dutifully, though distance grew between them

as he struggled to witness her pain. Carla understood—he was grieving too—but

the solitude of her hospital room became her true home.

In these walls, she became more than a patient; she became a creator. Carla

co-founded an educational app for hospitalized children, a platform where

illness would no longer block learning or curiosity. For this, she was

recognized and awarded by a teaching community, a validation of her relentless

spirit. Even in the face of death, she had found ways to leave her mark, to

teach, and to inspire.

Yet the awareness of mortality remained constant. Carla knew her days were

numbered. Still, she met this reality with grace. Letters were prepared,

messages left for her collaborators and her adopted brother. She wrote of love,

of pride, and of hope. She wanted them to remember the carefree girl she had

been before the cancer, the one who had leapt into puddles, chased friends

through leaves, and spun wildly through the wind.

"I can feel my time is growing shorter," she wrote in one note, her hand

steady despite weakness. "But I am happy. I am loved. That is enough."

As the final days drew near, she felt a curious serenity. The hospital room,

once a cage, had become a cocoon of preparation for a transformation she did

not yet understand. She closed her eyes, feeling the familiar weight of

exhaustion and pain, and surrendered to the inevitable.

And then, something remarkable happened. Carla felt her spirit lift, not as

a fleeting moment, but with a sense of boundless continuity, as though she were

being drawn toward something vast and luminous. Her last thought lingered on

the curiosity that had always defined her. "Here I go," she whispered, half in

awe, half in wonder. "I wonder who I'll be next in the never-ending circle of

life."

She did not see darkness. She saw light, the kind that seemed stitched

together from every story she had ever read. Shapes shimmered before her eyes,

ethereal and impossibly beautiful. The sensation was unlike anything she could

have imagined—an in-between space, both comforting and exhilarating.

It was in this liminal realm that she sensed the first stirrings of

something extraordinary. Carla's mind, honed by years of study and curiosity,

began to absorb the rules and rhythms of this new reality. Her thoughts were

sharp, unbound by physical weakness, and she felt the first whisper of an

ability she would one day command fully: the capacity to shape the world around

her with thought, skill, and intention.

Yet even here, her essence clung to fragments of her human life—the faces of

her parents, the laughter of children, the quiet strength of the young man she

had called her brother. She carried these memories like lanterns, illuminating

her path forward into whatever awaited beyond the veil of mortality.

And then, just as the light began to feel like a home rather than a

destination, she sensed the presence of other entities. Figures surrounded her,

immense and radiant, yet not threatening. Their voices resonated in her mind,

each tone distinct, each carrying the weight of authority and creation.

"I am Lester," one of them intoned, "God of Creation. You are called here

for a purpose beyond your past life."

Carla blinked in astonishment. She wanted to speak, to ask the impossible

questions tumbling through her mind, but no words formed—yet her comprehension

was immediate, total. Around Lester, four others stood: Giovani, Sage, Lostov,

and Layla. Each represented a different domain—craft, medicine, beasts, and

entertainment—and each regarded her with an intensity that was simultaneously

awe-inspiring and unsettling.

"The world you knew," Lester continued, "is not the end of your story. Your

journey will continue in ways that will test and reward you beyond human

understanding."

In that moment, Carla realized something fundamental: death had been only

the beginning. She had passed from one reality to another, carrying with her

every lesson, every emotion, every fragment of her former life. And yet, in

this new space, she felt potential stretching infinitely before her.

A quiet thrill ran through her—an anticipation she had never felt even in

the best days of her childhood. Perhaps she would be stronger, faster, smarter.

Perhaps she could live in ways she had never imagined. The questions were

endless, but for the first time, mortality did not limit them.

"Then let us begin," Lester said, and a brilliance of light enveloped her.

Carla felt herself being drawn into it, her consciousness expanding, her senses

sharpening. She was not frightened. She was alive in a new way—ready to learn,

ready to create, ready to live once more.

And so, with a mixture of wonder and determination, Carla River Clayton's

chapter on Earth came to its final page. Her body, fragile and broken, had

succumbed to illness. But her spirit, sharpened by knowledge, courage, and an

insatiable curiosity, was about to be reborn in a universe of infinite

possibility.

For the first time, she would not merely read the stories of heroes—she

would become one.

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