What if you could live your life again, knowing everything you know now?
Thomas wakes at eighteen with the full memory of the life he has already lived.
He remembers the compromises.
The arguments were left unresolved.
The career choices that seemed sensible, and the quiet costs they carried.
Given a second chance, Thomas is determined to do better. He challenges his father without breaking their bond. He prevents the workplace accident that once defined him. He marries Margaret again, this time with intention, determined not to lose what he once took for granted.
But knowledge is not freedom.
As the years unfold, Thomas realises that altering personal decisions is one thing. Altering history is another. Some events resist intervention. Some futures refuse correction. And the burden of remembering two lifetimes begins to fracture his sense of reality.