Villagers taunt a silent, ostracized girl while she forages; she finds a four-leaf clover and makes a quiet wish for food and shelter. Later, a traveling party—including fragile Mrs. Evans and a lieutenant—gets stuck on a looping mountain road and notices a strange moving metal box. They approach the quiet child for directions. The lieutenant tries to be gentle, but the meeting pivots when someone unexpectedly lifts another person, shocking the group and overturning assumptions about fragility. The travelers are left stunned as the road loop remains unresolved.
A group lost in tall, maze-like grass finally finds a hidden fork and path thanks to a small girl, Lana. Mrs. Evans, weak and off her medicine, begins to recover after Lana appears—dizziness, aches and blurred vision fade—so the neighbors shower the child with food and gifts. They note Lana’s malnourished state and invite her to show them where she lives. The pivot: Lana’s presence seems to cure Mrs. Evans, prompting an offer to visit the girl’s cowshed and village. Lana agrees but warns them to be careful, and no one yet knows why.
Villagers converge on a little girl, Lana, shouting that she’s a “jinx” after blaming her words for a flood and other accidents. They shove her, demand she be driven out and even threaten violence while recounting how she was sold to the village. Lana protests that she isn’t a curse, but the mob keeps pressing her to leave. At the scene, one person breaks through the anger, comforts her and asks, "Will you come home with me? Can you be my daughter?" The offer halts the crowd — Lana faces an immediate choice about leaving or staying.
Lana begs to be taken in and Ms. Evans immediately adopts her, promising to treat her like a daughter. Lana, relieved after escaping the cowshed—crediting a four-leaf clover—arrives at the Evans home where household members bathe and dress her and a sickly companion perks up. Mrs. Evans introduces Lana to Ian, the military governor, and sons Allen, Brody, and Carson, whose disability and fragile health are explained. Servants welcome Lana, but Carson lashes out, declaring, "I'm not accepting her as my sister." Carson's refusal leaves Lana's place in the household uncertain.
At Mr. Carson's home, young Lana brings a homemade medicine hoping to help his leg condition. Others and Mrs. Evans loudly object, saying he has taken medicine for years with no effect and demanding the girl leave. Lana's mother pushes back—"She's my daughter now"—and allows the visit. Carson sips the brew but declares it won't help, escalating the argument. Others insist Lana stop visiting; she's told she can only play with Carson if his legs improve. The episode ends with Lana calling for her mother, the cure and whether she can keep visiting remain unresolved.
The episode opens with a family celebrating Carson standing and walking for the first time, credited to Lana's medicine. Mom and the children praise Lana; Lana shyly wishes, "I wish for you to like me," and Carson replies he likes her. Mom tucks Lana into a new bed, gives her a doll, and says Dad will come home later. While Carson rests, he suddenly collapses and the household erupts in panic. Voices cry, "Carson, don't die!" The episode ends with the family scrambling and Carson's condition left unresolved as they call for Dad.
Lana wakes sweating from a nightmare in which everyone in her household is doomed. Her mother and father — newly installed General Evans — and brother Carson try to calm her, promising protection, while Lana vows to prevent the tragedy she saw. The calm breaks when Melanie bursts in, shouting that General Evans has returned and asking urgently about Ian; someone mutters “guns.” The news turns Lana’s fear into immediate alarm: her dream may be warning of a real armed threat, and the family must act fast as the episode cuts to the unresolved crisis.
After a man boasts he seized rifles from bandits and scolds a boy for wanting to try them, Carson reunites with his family, his legs miraculously healed thanks to a little girl, Lana, whom his parents call their 'lucky star.' General Evans receives an invitation from Eastgate's Chamber of Commerce to a welcome party that others suspect is a trap. Lana insists on coming; Ian agrees and the general gives her something, saying 'Scare them off with this!' The episode ends with the family heading into a suspicious celebration that may conceal danger.
General Evans arrives at his manor with his daughter Lana and is confronted by the Green Fang Crew insisting the new military governor pass their test. Their leader lays out the stakes: six identical statues, one invaluable jade Saint—guess right and the gang obey, guess wrong and Evans must leave Eastgate. The crew has already surrounded the manor and threatens to attack if he fails. With the statues indistinguishable and pressure mounting, Lana suddenly points and says, "Dad, this one's the real jade Saint." The episode ends on that risky, decisive pick.
Lana is shunned in her village as a 'jinx' because she seems to foresee events, yet she is actually gifted with rare, uncanny good fortune. Scraping by in tattered clothes while gathering wild vegetables, she crosses paths with Yelena Jenkins, the military governor's wife. Yelena takes Lana into the governor's residence. There Lana's luck overturns neglect: with a touch or mere presence, flowers explode into color and an old yellow dog finds new life. Joy and astonishment spread through the household. But wonder breeds tension—villagers whisper, servants watch, and power and superstition begin to collide. As gratitude mixes with fear, Lana's continuing gifts promise change that will force everyone to confront the unknown.