Josette Duval [repack] May 2026

She left behind no children. She left behind a small, leather-bound notebook filled with the names of every child she had delivered, every person she had hidden, and every friend she had buried. On the last page, in faint pencil, she had written: “Do not look for meaning in the ditch. Look for the hand that reaches in. That is all the meaning there is.” Today, La Maison des Revenants is a small museum dedicated to civilian resistance in WWII. The herb garden still grows. And every June 6th, someone places a single white rose on the mass grave outside town—not for the dead, who have enough flowers, but for the living who crawled out.

“Courage is not the absence of fear. Courage is a wet, cold night, a dead friend on top of you, and the decision to breathe anyway.” Character Notes for Further Development: | Aspect | Details | |-----------|-------------| | Archetype | The Resilient Healer / The Wounded Survivor | | Core Wound | Survivor’s guilt (mass shooting, loss of family and lover) | | Core Strength | Pragmatic compassion; ability to act in crisis | | Flaw | Emotional guardedness; occasional bitterness toward those who “suffered less” | | Symbol | White rose (for the dead) + Comfrey leaf (for healing) | | Narrative Role | Catalyst for other characters’ healing; keeper of communal memory | josette duval

“We do not heal in silence. We heal in spite of it.” In the small, windswept village of Sainte-Mère-Église, Normandy, there is a stone house at the end of Rue des Rosiers that locals still call La Maison des Revenants —The House of the Returned. For forty years, it was the home of Josette Duval , a woman whose life was a testament to survival, secrecy, and stubborn grace. To the outside world, she was the village midwife and herbalist. To those who knew her story, she was a living scar from the Second World War, a woman who had crawled out of a mass grave and dared to build a garden on top of it. Early Life: The Flourishing Before the Fall Born in 1925 to a florist and a schoolteacher, Josette was the youngest of four children. The Duvals were secular, socialist, and fiercely proud of their Norman heritage. Young Josette was known for two things: an uncanny ability to calm crying infants and a rebellious streak that saw her climbing the village church tower to ring the bells just to watch the pigeons scatter. She left behind no children