"I am not what happened to me, I am what I choose to become." - Carl Gustav Jung In the mind of a writer, everything must be balanced. There should be moments of happiness, there should be painful scenes as well. To write a masterpiece is to make the writer cry, to make her laugh, to make her fall in love. But for Dia, it's just so different. She is different. They say that a writer's book represents her story. Her characters represent every fragment of herself. Maybe that's why her stories are tragic. Because her life only brought her pain and misery. You can ask her, though. When do the little happy memories in her stories linger? Who made her happy? Maybe it was her one and only. Kaizer Montano came as her salvation, and she became his cure. They had a love that was so pure and innocent, so constant and unchanging. Yet beautiful things tend to always be ruined. Just like how happy memories can be replaced by a sorrowful ending. Maybe a writer's tragic story reflects her life. Maybe it's her way to share her burden with others. Yet her readers still love her lessons. How can someone save a person from downfall? To be her salvation, to be her rescue. Will Kaizer finally give her a happy ending? Can a tragic writer finally create a masterpiece where the ending is different? Can endings be beautiful as well? ------ Date Started: 10/17/23 Date Ended: 01/31/24 [COMPLETED]