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When Arlo arrived, the house shimmered—a fractal of hallways, each lined with doors of varying sizes, materials, and moods. He passed a door of hammered iron, cold and stern. His hand twitched toward it. No , he thought. That’s my father’s door—discipline through force.
Next, a door of spun sugar and glass, glittering with applause. No. That’s my younger self’s dream of fame.
Finally, at the end of a nameless corridor, he found a door that was barely visible. It was made of something like morning fog and aged wood, with a handle shaped like a question mark. It had no lock, no grand inscription. Just a faint scent of rain on dry earth.
But Arlo noticed something. The door didn’t demand he be more, or less, or different. It simply waited . He realized: all the other doors were optimum for a fixed version of himself—a snapshot. But this door felt optimum for the person he could become over a lifetime. It didn’t promise a destination. It promised a beginning.