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The abbess, Sister Helena, asked few questions. She saw the uneven hair, the swollen eyes—and opened the gate.
Life at the temple was quiet and repetitive, yet healing in ways Lena never expected. No one measured her worth by obedience or silence. For the first time since her marriage, she slept without fear of criticism.
Out of necessity, Lena learned to sew—repairing old robes, then crafting simple garments. When visitors began asking where they could buy them, an idea took root, growing stitch by stitch, confidence returning alongside it.
Within months, Lena earned her own income—modest but steady—and opened a small workshop near the temple gate. Young women from nearby villages came not only to learn a trade, but to find a place where their voices were not dismissed.
“I won’t come back until your mother understands,” she told him gently. When he lowered his head without protest, she knew he wasn’t ready.
Two years after Lena left, the Hartwell shop closed quietly. Debt mounted. Customers vanished. Margaret, once so certain of her authority, found herself alone—Evan gone, relatives distant. One rainy afternoon, she appeared at the temple gate, smaller somehow, as if life had finally humbled her posture.
Lena listened quietly, hearing not only remorse, but fear—of irrelevance, of isolation. When Margaret begged her to return, promising change, Lena’s answer was steady.
“I forgive you,” she said. “But I won’t go back.”
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