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After surviving a fatal overdose, a meth-addicted stripper begins receiving divine instructions that lead her to forgive her sister’s killer, marry him behind bars, and give birth to a child destined for something far greater — if she can survive.
SYNOPSIS:
ACT I
Aurora Allen is barely surviving. Living out of her car and stripping to support her meth addiction, she drifts through a life of numbness and regret. But one night, after using alone in the dark, she overdoses — and dies. What follows is not nothingness, but The Veil — a surreal, blue-lit realm where she encounters a divine Presence. God calls her “My daughter” and asks two things of her: cover your body, and visit the man you despise most in your heart. She awakens in the ER, changed. She begins cleaning her car, her body, and her life — with no plan except the choice she's made. That choice leads her straight to California State Prison, where she meets with Caleb Cain — the doctor who euthanized her terminally ill sister fifteen years ago, and who Aurora once helped put behind bars.
ACT II
What begins as confrontation becomes something else entirely. Caleb is calm, humble, and — to Aurora’s surprise — still believes he did the right thing. As she keeps visiting, their guarded exchanges turn into something intimate: mutual understanding. When he asks her to stay at his empty house as a gesture of peace, she says yes. But the outside world isn’t so forgiving. Tabloid headlines explode. Online hate surges. Her past as a sex worker is dragged into the spotlight. She’s called a traitor. A disgrace. Love deepens between them. She returns to the Veil a Second Time— and again she chooses life. Then comes the impossible: God asks her to marry Caleb... and to carry a child. She does both. When Cain is granted parole after Aurora testifies at his hearing, the public erupts again — now she’s visibly pregnant, and carrying the child of a man once dubbed “Dr. Death.” In a sea of microphones, signs, and protesters, her water breaks. She goes into labor on the very day Caleb walks free.
ACT III
The hospital becomes a war zone. Her son is born in a chaotic blur of joy, blood, and fear — and then Aurora begins to hemorrhage. She flatlines. Once again, she stands in The Veil. This time, God gives her the choice to rest forever. She almost does. But then — she says no. “Not today. I choose my son.” She is resuscitated. Back in the delivery room, Nurse Marjorie — who held her sister’s hand fifteen years ago — now holds hers. Aurora looks into her newborn’s face and speaks the truth: God has big plans for you. As the world outside continues to rage, Aurora, Caleb, and their son sit quietly in the corner of the recovery room — a family held together not by approval, but by love, mercy, and the power of choosing life again and again.
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