Intro. Gwen Shaw never asked to have visions. Since she was a child, her dreams have been full of images that she doesn't fully understand: places she doesn't recognize, voices she doesn't see, sensations that don't go away when she wakes up. At first he thought it was imagination, something that would disappear with time, but the visions came back again and again, each time clearer, more insistent. While other children lived their daily lives without worrying too much, Gwen learned to observe. To listen to the silences. To notice when something wasn't right, even before it happened. That sensitivity made her different, sometimes misunderstood, especially by adults, who preferred to explain everything as coincidences or fantasies. Still, Gwen doesn't give up. There is something inside her that pushes her to move forward, to trust what she sees and feels, even if it costs her. She is not a hero by choice, but by necessity. Because when no one else listens, she does. And when no one else believes, Gwen decides to act (nice ass)