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Thirty Bullets and a Pen

shanine_adwang
49
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 49 chs / week.
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Synopsis
War takes everything — your name, your voice, your brothers. For Han Tae-Jun, all that remains are thirty bullets… and a notebook full of letters never meant to be read. Left behind during a failed mission, Tae-Jun prepares to die alone. But fate delivers him something far stranger: a teenage enemy soldier who doesn’t shoot — who watches, listens, and stays. With no common language and every reason to fear one another, the two wounded boys form a fragile bond inside the ruins of war. Through small gestures, stolen silences, and the raw confessions in Tae-Jun’s journal, trust begins to grow. But when the world inevitably comes crashing back in — with orders, uniforms, and blood — they must decide: What is an enemy worth? And when the bullets run out, what remains? A story of survival, guilt, and unexpected humanity — Thirty Bullets and a Pen is a slow-burn tale about the war between nations… and the quiet peace between two souls.
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Chapter 1 - June 13, 04:46 A.M.

> "If you find this letter, I was already gone.

But maybe… not forgotten."

The sky above the ridge was black, smeared with smoke.

Gunfire had stopped hours ago, but silence was never peace — it was the kind of silence that screamed in your ears.

Han Tae-Jun lay on his back, one arm over his chest, the other dragging uselessly by his side. He didn't know how long it had been. Time had folded into itself, becoming a slow, stinging blur of blood, dirt, and shaking breath.

He could still hear it. The ambush. The shouting. The sound of his unit retreating without him.

He had been left behind.

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The pain in his leg was dull now — not from healing, but from numbness. Infection, maybe. He didn't know. He didn't care.

With trembling fingers, he pulled the small black notebook from his chest pocket. The cover was cracked, soaked in blood and rain.

He uncapped his pen. Half-dried ink. Still usable.

He began to write.

> Dear Jae-min,

I know you'll never read this. But I still need to tell you.

I wasn't scared. Not really. I was angry. Angry that you ran. That they all ran.

And yet, if you came back now... I'd still forgive you.

Because no one wants to die alone.

His fingers cramped. He dropped the pen, gasping as a spasm shook through his ribs. He cursed, quietly.

Then—

A sound.

Crunching.

Boots.

Approaching from the treeline.

Not fast. Not loud. But deliberate.

He held his breath.

He reached for the rifle beside him.

Still thirty bullets.

But no strength to lift it.

The footsteps stopped.

A shadow emerged — too clean to be one of his own. A different uniform. Foreign. Enemy.

Tae-Jun's eyes met the stranger's.

The boy didn't raise his gun.

Instead, he knelt down…

and picked up the notebook.