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Hell's Verdict

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Synopsis
“One key opens Hell. Another opens Heaven. But neither leads to salvation.” Ren Kurosawa has always been unlucky—bullied, broken, and ignored by a world too cruel to care. However, a mysterious old man soon presents him with an unusual black key, accompanied by a chilling directive: "Insert it into the head of one you wish to send to Hell… and give it a slight twist." The next day, Ren’s tormentors vanish in a blaze of fire and shadow, dragged through a gate that should not exist. But the gate did open—and someone was watching. Across the city, Amaya Himura lives in a golden cage. A world-renowned pianist adored by the public but crushed by the weight of perfection behind closed doors. To her, the same old man offers a different key—one of Heaven. A key to judge those who have treated her with kindness... to test their purity... and grant them salvation—or something far worse. Two teenagers. Two verdicts. Two gates. But when mercy and vengeance dance on the same blade, where do you draw the line between justice and judgment? And who really holds the key to their fate?
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Chapter 1 - PROLOGUE — The Whisper in the Alley

They say the alley was never there before.

That the brick wall behind the bakery was solid last week.

That no one built that crooked little stall with its moth-bitten cloth and flickering lantern.

That no one ever saw the old man arrive... but he was always there, waiting.

And on a Tuesday soaked in gray, when the sky looked bruised and the wind forgot how to blow,

a boy with a tear in his sleeve and scabs on his knees wandered into that alley,

chasing nothing—because nothing was all he had.

His name wasn't known to the world. Not yet.

To his classmates, he was a punching bag with legs.

To teachers, a grade to be ignored.

To his mother, he was a smile she wore to hide her bruises.

To fate… he was a mistake.

A walking accident waiting for the next cruel twist of chance.

But fate, it seems, was in the mood for irony that day.

The stall creaked as he approached, though the wind was dead still.

Shelves lined with trinkets: cracked clocks, jars of black sand, feathers stained with ink,

and a single item under a velvet cloth—

a key.

Iron-wrought. Ornate. Wrong.

"Curious little thing, aren't you?" croaked a voice older than rust.

The old man leaned forward. His eyes were cloudy, but sharp underneath, like glass over razors.

He smiled, and the boy flinched.

"This," the man said, pulling away the cloth, "is your chance."

The key gleamed like oil under moonlight.

The boy stared. He didn't speak. He never really needed to.

"Take it," said the man. "Find someone you think belongs in Hell.

Put the tip against their head... and twist."

He mimed the motion.

Slow. Deliberate. Like turning truth into punishment.

The boy reached for it. Something in his chest screamed not to.

But his hands didn't listen. They never did.

And as the cold metal kissed his palm,

the stall vanished.

So did the man.

And the alley? Just bricks again.

The boy stood alone,

the key humming quietly in his pocket—

like it was dreaming of who'd come next.