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Garden of Ashes

wintaa
7
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Synopsis
Having glimpsed the darkness of human nature early in life, Baek Ji-Hyeon learned that survival meant hiding her true self behind a flawless mask, manipulating those around her to get what she wanted. When a cryptic letter, seemingly from her missing twin, draws her to Chae Hwa High, she sees a chance to rewrite her cruel fate. Posing as her sister, Ji-Hyeon infiltrates the prestigious school, where hidden shadows and whispered secrets turn every step into a dangerous game. Amid the chaos, three enigmatic young men emerge—each with their own motives, each drawn to Ji-Hyeon in ways she cannot untangle. In a world where trust can be deadly and ambition is survival, Ji-Hyeon will learn that some paths have no return—and some games are far darker than they appear.
Table of contents
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Chapter 1 - Prologue

In the first tale ever whispered into human hands, the Garden of Eden did not begin with perfection.

It began with a question—quiet, unspoken, but restless enough to change everything.

The fruit was only the surface of it—bright, smooth, and glimmering with a sweetness meant to draw the eye.

The serpent was only the voice of it—steady, patient, offering possibilities instead of threats.

Paradise itself held the real temptation.

For Eden was beautiful, yes.

But beauty has always been the softest disguise.

People remember its rivers, its gold-lit horizon, its untouched peace.

But peace is not innocence. And innocence is not truth.

At the heart of the garden stood the Tree of Knowledge—its branches heavy with understanding that was never meant to be easy, never meant to be safe.

To eat its fruit was not rebellion. It was awakening.

A single bite, and the world tilted.

The air shifted.

Silence broke.

Eyes opened to the weight of knowing—and once knowledge blooms, it cannot be undone.

Eden did not fall.

Humanity simply stepped beyond it.

Exile was not punishment.

It was consequence of seeing too much, too clearly, and too soon.

And this was the first truth the world ever learned:

It was never about a serpent or a fruit.

It was about a choice—one that exposed what lay hidden and set the world in motion.

Some doors, once opened, cannot be closed.

Those who reached for the apple were not ruined.

They were changed—some for better, some for worst.

And from that moment on, nothing looked the same again.