
by FDawney
Over forty years of a life, forcibly compressed into a ten-year-old girl in 1991. Maya Brown is an anomaly that should not exist. A financial analyst from the modern era awakens in the childhood bedroom remembered from their youth: the same family, the same house, yet in the wrong body. Maya must relive an adolescence that never occurred in what amounts to a new life, slowly unfolding in real time. To preserve her sanity, Maya begins writing in a innocuous notebook she dubs the Butterfly Manifesto. The unassuming notebook is part journal, part long-term strategy, and part chronicle of a once-definitive future. She records the market crashes, family losses, national tragedies, and political injustices she remembers from her old timeline as an attempt to avert misfortunes she knows are impending. Maya quickly learns that survival depends on appearing ordinary. The knowledge inside her is too mature and too unwieldy for a child to possess, so she is forced to reinvent her life as an regular girl. As her biology and her inherited memories conflict with each other, Maya's identity begins to evolve in parallel with the new timeline as it subtly shifts from eerily familiar to a new normal brimming with dissonance. Despite her foreknowledge, her ability to intervene is limited. Over the decade, Maya uses the knowledge carried from the old timeline to position herself carefully, building wealth and credibility before the events she remembers can occur. Yet every step she takes proves that the new timeline is already diverging in subtle ways. Some changes are deliberate, while others happen simply because Maya exists when she should not. As her influence grows by the end of the century, her goal is not merely to improve her own station, but to intervene at a national level and bend history towards what she feels is a greater good.
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