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Chapter 1 - Chapter1 - The Day Everything Died

Rain fell in relentless sheets, washing the streets of Seoul in gray, like the world itself had lost color. Twelve-year-old Park Ji-hoon pressed his small hands against the cold window glass, watching the car disappear in a distant flash of fire and smoke.

It shouldn't have happened.

And yet, he had known it would.

The explosion tore through the night, a bloom of fire that swallowed the familiar driveway. The world around him screamed. Neighbors shouting, sirens wailing, footsteps rushing, but he felt nothing. Not shock , not fear , not grief, only the icy calm of realization.

He had seen the signs.

The stranger who lingered too long at the gate that morning. The hushed conversation in his father's office about a deal refused. The way his mother's hand trembled while folding the laundry. Pieces that only now, in the violent silence, formed a terrifying whole.

His parents were dead. Not by accident, not by chance, by men who could bend the world to their will.

And him? He had two choices.

Cry, rage, beg and be destroyed.

Or, survive silently until the day he could strike back.

He chose silence.

At the funeral, he smiled when relatives approached. Polite nods, measured words. He listened carefully to the whispers, "What a tragedy… such potential… how could this happen?" Each phrase was a lesson. Every trembling hand, every faltering step, every tear revealed more than grief, it revealed the weakness of people who think the powerful can be stopped.

The neighbors thought of him to be stoic. His teachers called him brave. His grandmother, hands shaking as she handed him the funeral money, thought he was lost inside his sorrow.

He smiled anyway.

No one knew that behind the calm facade, he was already calculating. Every look, every word, every gesture was stored in his mind like a blueprint. Years of strategy would be built on this day. Years of planning would be forged in the shadow of his parents' deaths.

That night, he returned to the empty house. The walls smelled of old wood and smoke, of memories that no longer belonged to him. He entered his father's study. Papers scattered, letters half-burnt in the corner, financial statements that hinted at a world he had never fully understood.

He didn't touch anything yet. He didn't need to. The information would wait. What mattered was seeing the pattern, remembering the details, learning from it.

Even at twelve, Ji-hoon understood the first law of survival, patience, is a weapon sharper than any blade.

He pressed his forehead to the cool glass of the study window, looking at the rain-soaked street below. No one could see the storm that had already begun inside him.

He made a vow, silent but absolute.

I will not be weak, I will not cry, I will not beg, I will survive and when the day comes, I will return . Not as a boy who lost everything, but as someone they cannot ignore.

The night was quiet, but in the darkness, a seed had been planted. A plan that would take years, patience, and intellect. A storm was forming. And the world would learn, in time, that the quietest boy often carries the sharpest edge.

Silence had begun its work.

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