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The Manuscript Of The Dead

0l24x
7
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 7 chs / week.
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Synopsis
Li Wei was once a writer with dreams, now he’s a divorced father, forgotten by the literary world, drowning in debt, and one rope away from ending it all. His final act? A manuscript—a haunting, unfinished confession titled Death is a Story That Ends Mid-Sentence. But when he takes that final step, time doesn't stop. It twists. Enter Erinys, an Agent of Death and the cold daughter of Thanatos himself. She’s tasked with guiding the souls of the suicidal, and Li Wei is just another case file until he invites her in, shares a meal, and reads her a chapter that makes her question everything that humans don't deserve second chance. Now trapped in a dimension between life and death, Li Wei is given a glimpse of what could have been: success, redemption, a second chance. And Erinys is torn between her duty and a growing doubt about the system she's sworn to uphold. As the final seconds of Li Wei’s real-world body tick away, Erinys must choose: Will she let him go...or rewrite fate itself? N.B This book is 100% Fictional
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Chapter 1 - Empty Mailbox

Li Wei refreshed his inbox again, even though he already knew what was waiting.

One unread email. His pulse quickened maybe, just maybe

No.

"We regret to inform you…"

He didn't bother finishing it. Same script, different signature. He clicked "delete" and watched another sliver of hope disappear into digital ash.

Scrolling down, the rest of his inbox bled quiet disappointment. Payment reminders. Late fees. A red-labeled threat from the bank.

And there—near the bottom—was one from Xiaoyu. His daughter.

He hovered over it. His finger trembled slightly. But he didn't click. What would he say? That he was sorry? That he hadn't called because the silence between them felt safer than the truth?

He pressed delete.

He told himself it was mercy.

The blinking cursor on his manuscript pulsed like a heartbeat—still, stubborn, alive. The title glared at him:

Death is a Story That Ends Mid-Sentence

He'd typed that line months ago. Maybe a year. He couldn't remember anymore.

He stood up and stared out the window. Rain smeared the glass, turning the city into a blurry mess of lights and moving shadows.

People were out there. Living. Laughing. Failing. Trying.

He exhaled through his nose and sat back down, fingers hovering over the keys. But nothing came. No words. No fire. Just silence.

And silence, he thought, was how most stories ended. Not with a bang. Not with beauty.

But with a cursor, waiting.