Josette Duval [portable] [ 2024-2026 ]
“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 |
Some villagers called her a rescapée —a survivor. Others, cruelly, whispered that she should have died with the rest. Survivor’s guilt became her second shadow. josette duval
Josette survived because the woman next to her—a baker’s wife named Clémence—fell on top of her as the bullets flew. Clémence’s body took the final two rounds meant for Josette. Covered in blood and dirt, Josette lay motionless for six hours under a pile of the dead until nightfall. She crawled out, crawled two miles through mud and shattered hedgerows, and collapsed at the door of a farm belonging to a family she had once helped deliver a breech birth. The war ended, but Josette’s did not. She returned to a village that was half rubble and half memory. Her mother had died of a stroke after learning of her husband’s death. Henri, her sweetheart, had been killed at Monte Cassino in Italy. The Jewish infant she had hidden was reclaimed by a surviving aunt. Josette was left with a shattered eardrum, a limp from a bullet fragment that surgeons could not remove, and a reputation. “Courage is not the absence of fear