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The Gate Traveler-Chapter 67B5 - : Life’s Purpose
I sat on the keep’s roof, watching the movement below. From up here, the people scurrying through the streets looked like ants, each carrying out a task, each moving with purpose. Houses rose at a dizzying pace, beams locking into place, walls climbing higher with every passing day. In the fields beyond the city, workers moved in steady rhythm, tending, harvesting, building a future with their hands.
A slow warmth settled in my chest. We created this. We helped make this happen. The thought rolled through my mind, simple but unshakable. And then one word stood out—helped.
Help.
I turned the word over in my head, rolling it between thoughts, tracing its edges, its weight. What did it truly mean? What was its purpose? My gaze swept across the landscape, seeing it in a way I hadn’t before. Everything—everything—existed because it helped something else.
A bee drifted lazily through the air, oblivious to its own importance, yet its tiny body carried life between flowers, ensuring the next bloom, the next harvest. The flowers, in turn, provided nectar, feeding the bee, sustaining the hive, which produced honey—a source of food, medicine, even trade. A single act of help rippled outward, touching countless lives in ways unseen.
The sun cast golden rays, warming the soil, coaxing crops to grow, fueling life at every level. Those crops fed the workers in the fields, who, with full bellies and strong hands, built homes, raised families, shaped villages that would become cities. From the smallest blade of grass to the towering trees that gave shelter, shade, and wood for building, everything played a role in helping something else.
A river carved its way through the land, carrying water to thirsty roots, filling wells for drinking, turning the wheels of a mill that ground grain into flour. That flour became bread, a simple meal filling a hungry child’s stomach, giving them the strength to run, play, learn. That child might one day grow into a builder, a healer, a storyteller—someone who would, in their own way, help others.
A well-told story could lift a weary heart, just as a song could stir dreams in someone who had forgotten how to chase them. A kind word at the right time could change the course of a life, just as a single moment of generosity could inspire someone else to do the same. A merchant who shared his wares helped a craftsman who needed tools, who in turn built a home for a family, who then raised children that would one day shape the world.
Even the castle beneath me, this fortress of stone, stood because someone had once needed protection, security, a safe place to rest. Its builders had laid each stone with purpose, not just for themselves, but for the generations that would come after. A single brick, carried by a single hand, helped build something greater than itself.
One act of help led to another, and another, an endless chain stretching across time and existence. Every piece, every moment, every life—connected by the simple, undeniable truth that nothing stood alone.
Help isn’t just an action. It’s the force that shapes everything.
I felt this realization deeper than expected. I’d always known that helping people mattered, but this was different—I felt it in a way I never had before.
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Back on Earth, help had always felt... transactional. I patched wounds, gave diagnoses, and handed over prescriptions. It was important, but it had borders—strict lines of responsibility. Here, there were no limits. I wasn’t just stitching wounds. I helped rebuild lives, reshaping entire futures just by reaching out a hand. We helped them build a new city, a good one.
There were the people from Almadris and Almatai—more refugees, more empty-eyed survivors, people who had spent a lifetime under someone else’s rule. They had seen leaders rise and fall, and each time, their lives had been the ones tossed aside like scraps. They weren’t used to stability, to anything that lasted. But they were here now. Alive. Safe, even if they didn’t quite believe it yet.
And then there were the slaves of Zarad.
I thought of Zarad—the people I had pulled from its streets, hollow-eyed with exhaustion, some barely able to stand. The ones too afraid to believe I was real. The ones who hesitated at the threshold of my house, torn between fear and hope. Some had turned away. Others had stepped forward, desperate enough to take the risk.
I remembered their faces when they arrived at New Sanctuary—the way they touched the walls of their new homes, as if expecting them to vanish. The way they stared at the food set before them, hesitant to take too much, afraid it would be taken back.
That first night, I had walked the slums alone, offering something no one had ever offered them before—a way out. Some had laughed in my face. Others had wanted to believe, but couldn’t. A few had stepped through, willing to take the risk because, really, what other choice did they have?
Seventeen hundred people had made it out.
That number sat heavy in my chest.
Seventeen hundred people who would have still been trapped if I hadn’t shown up. Seventeen hundred people who now had food, shelter, a future they never thought possible. Seventeen hundred lives changed because I had reached out my hand and said, Come with me.
I used to think help was about fixing what was broken. That was what I had done as a doctor—patching up wounds, fighting against time, working within the limits of what medicine allowed. But here, help wasn’t about fixing. It was about building. Creating something new, something stronger than what had come before.
Maybe that was what truly mattered.
Not just the individual acts—the rescues, the healing, the food, the shelter—but the foundation they created. Every person we saved, every life we changed, added another brick to something bigger than any one of us. A future built on more than just survival.
Even the magic I carried followed the same rule. It protected, it healed, it built. Wasn’t that help, too? Maybe all magic, all power, was just an extension of something older, deeper—something that whispered through the roots of trees and the rivers cutting through stone. The world itself moved forward through help. Maybe the greatest mistake was thinking we had never done anything alone.
The wind carried the scent of wood and fresh soil, the sounds of laughter mixing with hammer strikes and rustling crops. Below me, people worked, lived, built—not for themselves, but for each other.
For the first time, I felt the weight of what we had created. Not just walls or houses, but something deeper. A place where help wasn’t charity. It wasn’t a burden. It was just... life. The way it was always meant to be.
I had found my purpose. Simple as that.
To help.
My whole being clenched and unclenched, as a wave of energy rippled through me, reaching down to the tips of my fingers and toes. I recognized that feeling and pulled up my profile.
Mana: 13,100/13,400
A raise of 300 units.
I checked my orbs. My spirit orb looked a bit denser. I exhaled. Yeah, it made sense—finding your life's purpose was definitely connected to your spirit.
I snickered. Better not mention this to Mahya—she’d kill me for getting even more mana.
Either way, life was good. Very good.