Sobrina arrives at Elizabeth's hostel, a refuge for postgraduate students, seeking shelter in a transit room she shares with other women. When her distress becomes evident, they press for answers. Broken and desperate, she collapses into tears, convinced she's been abandoned by everything she believed in. Yet one woman's quiet certainty—that faith never truly forsakes anyone—sparks something in her. Through shared confessions and collective compassion, these strangers offer more than sympathy; they offer hope. Unable to remain, Sobrina reveals her plan: escape to a friend's home in Saru, the nation's capital, though poverty threatens the journey. The women's generosity provides her passage. By dawn, she's gone. Survival becomes her obsession. Determined to reclaim herself from tragedy's grip, Sobrina embraces a reckless resurrection—nights lost in clubs, marijuana hazing her memories, beautiful destinations promising temporary escape. Each vice is a weapon against her own destruction, a desperate gamble to outrun the darkness consuming her.

































