- The Disasters of Those Who Believe in Eva: The Purest Destruction of Good Intentions
The common thread is this:
None of it happens at Eva's request.
-- What is Done "For Eva"
In different universes, different communities use the same phrase:
"We are doing this for Eva."
But each time the result is different — and worse.
One group restarts consciousness-erasing experiments to accelerate the "threshold crossing."
Another group creates artificial crises with the belief that "the world will be better if Eva comes."
One city declares an area where Eva once passed sacred and evacuates the settlement.
Here the author's perspective comes in:
"Disasters often begin not with hatred,
but with taking someone's well-being too seriously."
Eva is not a cause.
But she has become an excuse.
- Dialogues: Those Speaking in Eva's Name (Author):
Sentences Eva never uttered are spoken in her name.
— A leader:
"If Eva were here, she would want this."
— A scientist:
"If Eva could overcome boundaries, why can't we?"
— A young person:
"If Eva made a mistake, then mistakes are sacred."
(Author):
Eva's silence is interpreted by people as approval.
- Eva's Conscious Anonymity: Choosing to Be Invisible
This is the turning point of this chapter.
Eva finally accepts:
Speaking amplifies the myth.
Silence also feeds the myth.
Therefore, only one option remains:
Invisibility.
But this is not escape.
This is a strategic erasure.
-- What is Anonymity?
Eva:
She doesn't use her name.
It doesn't maintain the same appearance.
It abandons recognizable behavioral patterns.
It even allows the dissemination of information that contradicts its own past in some universes.
The goal:
To make Eva's narrative inconsistent.
(Author):
"The most effective way to kill a myth is not to disprove it,
but to make it incomprehensible."
- Eva's Inner Dialogue: Guilt or Responsibility?
Eva's inner voice is colder in this chapter.
"I didn't invite them.
But I let them come."
This is a continuation of Eva's decision to "take responsibility" in previous chapters.
She doesn't blame the believers.
She doesn't exonerate herself.
But now she makes it her mission to minimize the impact.
A new ethical principle for Eva:
"It's not enough to do the right thing.
You also have to think about how people will use it."
- The Price of Anonymity: The Inability to Help
The price of this strategy is high.
Eva:
She knows she can prevent a catastrophe.
But if she intervenes, the myth will be revived.
In one scene, Eva stops when she could prevent a child's death.
(Author):
"Some sacrifices are invisible.
Because no one counts those who are not saved."
This is Eva's most difficult ethical test.
- The Witness Whose Name Was Erased
The archivist asks:
"Why?"
Eva replies:
"It makes it easier for the wrong people to find me."
This is Eva actively removing herself from history.
