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Ongoing, First published May 23, 2026

Novel ini mengikuti Jungkook saat ia mengejar impiannya belajar musik di Universitas Big Hit, sebuah jalan yang dirayakan oleh keluarganya. kesenangan ini dibayangi oleh proposal mengejutkan: pernikahan yang diatur untuk Taehyung, anak kenalan keluarga Mr. Kim. bab-bab ini melacak Jungkook dan Taehyung pertama interaksi, mengungkapkan daya tarik bersama saat mereka menavigasi sekitar betrothal mereka. sebagai Taehyung bersemangat menyambut Jungkook ke dunia, Jungkook bergulat dengan kekhawatiran tentang penerimaan dan masa lalu, sementara mengantisipasi pernikahan mereka..
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20 Part
A creeping dread clings to the salt-laced air of Blackwood Isle, where the crumbling manor of the Virgins stands sentinel against a bruised, perpetual twilight. Old Man Hemlock, the last of the island’s keepers, speaks in whispers of eleven daughters swallowed by the sea, each vanishing on her wedding night. They say the manor demands a bride—a virgin, untouched—to feed the ravenous hunger of its stone foundations. The latest ward, Elara, arrives not as a willing sacrifice, but a desperate castaway fleeing a mainland shame. But Blackwood Isle offers no true refuge, only a slow, suffocating unraveling. Shadows twist into the shapes of drowned girls in the manor’s echoing halls. The scent of brine and decay clings to every breath, and the rhythmic crash of waves against the cliffs feels less like a natural rhythm than a heartbeat counting down to Elara’s own watery demise. Each night, the manor’s hunger swells, manifesting as phantom touches, icy currents, and the haunting scent of lilies. The portraits of the lost Virgins seem to watch Elara with vacant, accusatory eyes, their painted smiles promising not salvation, but an endless descent into the cold embrace of the sea. Is Elara fleeing a sin, or walking willingly into the jaws of Blackwood’s ancient, monstrous appetite? The truth, like the Isle itself, is shrouded in a fog of salt and sorrow, promising a chilling revelation born of salt-stained lace and the ghosts of forgotten vows.
51 Part
A suffocating heat clings to the pages, thick with the dust of forgotten gods and the scent of brine. Kuprin’s *Yama* doesn’t offer a narrative of simple prisons, but of a slow, deliberate drowning in the stagnant pools of human desperation. The barracks, a festering wound in the heart of a decaying empire, breathe with a life of their own—a malignant sentience born of brutality and boredom. Each man within, a fractured shard of a broken world, is bound not by iron and stone, but by the weight of their own failures, each transgression a silent, festering rot. The prose itself is a mire, pulling you down into the rankness of the guardhouse’s perpetual twilight. There’s no escape, not even in the fevered dreams of the condemned. The air vibrates with the low hum of simmering violence, the casual cruelty a constant, gnawing ache. It isn’t a story of *what* happens, but *how* it feels—the slick, metallic taste of fear on the tongue, the way the shadows stretch and contort into mocking faces. The faces themselves are ghosts, hollowed by regret and the gnawing certainty of oblivion. This isn't a tale of justice, or even injustice, but of a surrender to the inevitable, the slow dissolution of self within the suffocating geometry of the barracks. The walls weep with the stories of men swallowed whole by their own despair, and the stench of their decay lingers long after the last page is turned. The novel doesn't merely show you the darkness; it forces you to breathe it.