After the crowds of the census thinned, the innkeeper’s wife, Leah, finds herself drawn to the young family still staying in her cave. Despite her initial skepticism regarding the shepherds’ miraculous claims, she is moved by a sense of wonder whenever she looks at the child. When Mary and Joseph prepare to travel to Jerusalem for the baby's dedication and circumcision, Leah insists on accompanying them, driven by a deep personal need to understand if the events she witnessed were truly divine or merely "hill-country wine" and madness.
At the Temple, the group is intercepted by two elderly prophets, Simeon and Anna, who have spent decades waiting for the Messiah. Simeon takes the child into his arms, declaring that his life’s mission is complete now that he has seen "the Lord’s Anointed," though he offers a chilling prophecy to Mary about a sword piercing her soul. Anna follows, loudly proclaiming to the surrounding crowd that the redemption of Israel has finally arrived. The atmosphere shifts from sacred to tense when Leah spots Flavius, a Roman official, observing the scene with a cold, calculating interest that suggests the child has already caught the eye of the empire.
On the road back to Bethlehem, the weight of the day’s events settles over the group as they realize the danger inherent in words like "King" and "Saviour." Joseph resolves to keep their heads down and wait for further divine guidance, while Leah returns to her ordinary life at the inn feeling forever changed. She concludes that the testimonies of the two strangers have made the truth impossible to ignore: something monumental has begun, and while the long wait for the Messiah is over, a new era of both great wonder and looming peril has just been set in motion.
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