And in the heart of Europe, where history never fully settles, even a step forward can feel like the beginning of a circle.… The trains still ran on time in Budapest. That was what Júlia noticed first—not the election results, not the speeches, not the sudden shift in tone from Brussels. Just the trains. Steel certainty, gliding past the cracked platforms of a country that had learned to distrust every promise. On the screens above the station, a headline looped: a new government, a new direction. After sixteen years, the era of Viktor Orbán had ended, replaced by Péter Magyar—a man who spoke of Europe not as an adversary, but as a home that Hungary had drifted too far from. People around her didn’t celebrate. They watched. Because they had seen this before—not this exact moment, but the pattern. At a café near the Danube, an old historian named Farkas explained it the way others might explain the weather. “Geography is des...