The walk from the basement holding cells to Courtroom 302 felt like marching to my own execution.
My cheap leather shoes scuffed against the polished marble floor of the Seoul Central District Court. The air conditioning was blasted on high, chilling the nervous sweat that clung to my back, but I couldn't stop wiping my damp palms on my trousers.
In the upper right corner of my vision, the blue translucent text remained fixed, a cruel, glowing tombstone.
[Victory Probability: 0%]
I had the truth. Lee Ji-Won was guilty. In any normal scenario, a swift guilty plea for a nineteen-year-old first-time major offender facing extreme poverty would open the door for a suspended sentence. I could throw her on the mercy of the court, cite the threatening text message from her landlord, and get her community service.
So why did the system still say zero?
I pushed through the heavy, oak double doors of Courtroom 302. The scent of lemon floor wax and old, dusty paper hit the back of my throat. It was a standard district courtroom: stark, intimidating, and devoid of any natural light. Rows of empty wooden benches filled the gallery behind the railing.
I took my seat at the defense table. The wood felt cold and hard under my fingertips. I opened my battered briefcase and pulled out my meager file. A single police report. Three blurry CCTV photos.
A sharp, rhythmic clicking echoed from the prosecutor's table across the aisle.
Prosecutor Han Seo-Young sat perfectly upright, casually flipping through a thick stack of pristine, color-coded files. Her burgundy suit looked flawless under the harsh fluorescent lights. She didn't look up when I sat down. She didn't need to. She emanated an aura of absolute control.
The heavy side door near the judge's bench clicked open. Two bailiffs walked in, leading Lee Ji-Won.
The metallic clink of her handcuffs sounded violently loud in the quiet room. She looked even smaller than she had in the interrogation room. Her shoulders were hunched, her eyes glued to the floor tiles. The oversized green detention uniform swallowed her. When she sat down next to me, I could smell the bitter tang of her unwashed hair and the sharp scent of raw fear.
She didn't look at me. Her hands shook uncontrollably in her lap.
"All rise," the court clerk droned, his voice flat and bored.
Judge Yoo Sung-Min walked in. He was a man in his late fifties with thinning grey hair, heavy jowls, and a permanent frown etched deeply into his face. He moved slowly, settling into his high-backed leather chair with a heavy sigh that amplified through his microphone.
The moment the judge sat down, my vision flared. The blue panel expanded over the bench.
[Judge Bias Analysis Complete]
[Name: Yoo Sung-Min]
[Profile: Strict constructionist. Zero tolerance for repeat offenders. Highly susceptible to prosecution framing.]
[Initial Sympathy Level: 12%]
My stomach plummeted. Twelve percent. We hadn't even started, and he already hated us.
"Case number 2026-CR-409. State versus Lee Ji-Won," Judge Yoo muttered, adjusting his thin metal-rimmed glasses. "Charge is petty theft. Are both parties ready?"
"The prosecution is ready, Your Honor," Han Seo-Young said. Her voice was smooth, confident, and projected perfectly across the room.
I swallowed the dry lump in my throat and stood up. My knees felt hollow. "The defense is ready, Your Honor."
"Proceed."
I took a deep breath. My chest ached. I had to end this quickly, before Han could start weaving her narrative.
"Your Honor," I started, trying to inject a steady resonance into my voice. "After consulting with my client, the defense wishes to enter a change of plea. We plead guilty to the charge of petty theft."
A low murmur rippled from the clerk's desk. Beside me, Ji-Won let out a shaky breath, her head dropping even lower.
Judge Yoo raised a single, bushy eyebrow. He looked at me over the rim of his glasses. "A guilty plea. Very well. Proceed to sentencing recommendations."
"Your Honor, we ask the court for extreme leniency and a suspended sentence," I said quickly, gripping the edges of the podium. "The defendant is only nineteen. She has no adult criminal record. She committed this act under severe financial duress. Two hours prior to the incident, her landlord threatened to forcibly evict her onto the street if she did not produce five hundred thousand won. The exact amount taken. She acted out of desperate survival, not malice. Jail time would only destroy a young life that can still be rehabilitated."
The blue text in my eye flickered.
[Debate Mode Activated]
[Speech Clarity +15%]
[Judge Approval +3%]
[Audience Sympathy Rising]
A tiny spark of hope ignited in my chest. Three percent wasn't much, but it was movement. The logic was sound. I was appealing to his humanity.
"Is that so, Attorney Jin?"
Han Seo-Young stood up. She didn't walk to the podium. She simply stepped out from behind her desk, moving into the open space of the floor. She looked relaxed. Too relaxed.
"The prosecution strongly objects to any form of leniency," Han stated, her voice slicing through the heavy air like a scalpel. "The defense paints a touching picture of a desperate child. But the facts paint the picture of a calculating, habitual criminal."
She picked up a single sheet of paper.
"The defendant has two juvenile convictions for shoplifting. She knows the system. She wore an oversized, unidentifiable hoodie to obscure her face. She waited until the exact moment the convenience store clerk turned his back to stock cigarettes. This wasn't a crime of panic, Your Honor. This was a premeditated strike."
[Opponent Argument Active]
[Judge Approval -8%]
Latest Chapter
CHAPTER 10: Bitter Victory
Baek Si-Hoon froze, realizing what he had just screamed into a microphone in front of a district judge. The color rapidly drained from his face. He slumped back into his chair, his chest heaving, his eyes wide with sudden terror. I took a slow step back, letting the silence stretch out, letting his own words hang the noose around his neck. [Opponent Argument Broken][Combo Multiplier x2][Judge Approval: +60%][Victory Probability: 95%]"She didn't have any money," I repeated softly, the words carrying perfectly across the room. "But you testified you chased her because she stole the cash. You testified you were trying to retrieve five hundred thousand won. But just now, you admitted she didn't have it on her in the alley. Because she dropped it when you cornered her."I turned my back on him and looked directly at Han Seo-Young. She was standing perfectly still, her face an unreadable mask of cold stone, but her hands were trembling slightly by her sides. She knew she had lost. "Y
CHAPTER 9: Fatal Flaw
The courtroom went dead silent. The only sound was the low, steady hum of the air conditioning vent above the jury box. Baek Si-Hoon blinked. He reached up with his left hand, his fingers lightly brushing the thick white foam of the cervical collar holding his neck rigid. He forced a confused, nervous smile. "I... I don't understand the question, Attorney Jin," Baek stammered, his voice trembling perfectly. "It wasn't a question," I said. My voice was calm, but underneath it, my heart was hammering a frantic rhythm against my ribs. I took a step closer to the witness stand. The polished wood floor creaked under my cheap shoes. "It's an observation. You testified that you grabbed the defendant's hoodie from behind while she was fleeing, and she turned and struck you in the head with a steel pipe.""Yes," Baek nodded weakly. "That's what happened.""Objection," Prosecutor Han Seo-Young drawled from her table, not even bothering to stand up. "Relevance, Your Honor? Is defense counsel
CHAPTER 8: The Real Victim
"Why didn't you tell me?" I asked, my voice completely hollow. I dropped to one knee, forcing myself to be at her eye level. The smell of her unwashed hair and cheap soap filled my nose. "Ji-Won, why didn't you tell me this yesterday?"She looked up at me, her dark eyes utterly broken. "Because I have two shoplifting charges on my record," she whispered, her voice cracking into a ragged sob. "Because I live in a slum. Because I have no parents. Because you're a cheap public defender who looked at me like I was garbage the second you walked into that interrogation room." Her words hit me like a physical blow to the stomach. "Who is going to believe a thief over a guy working a minimum wage night shift?" she cried, burying her face in her knees. "Even if I told you, you wouldn't have believed me. You would have told me to plead guilty anyway. So I just wanted to hide it. I thought if they didn't have the video, I could just take the theft charge and it would go away."I stared at the
CHAPTER 7: Fifteen Years
Fifteen years.The words hung in the dead air of Courtroom 302, heavy and suffocating like a thick wool blanket soaked in freezing water. I couldn't feel my fingers. I gripped the edges of the defense table so hard my knuckles turned a bruised, bloodless white, but the wood beneath my hands felt like miles away. My heart hammered against my ribs, a frantic, agonizing rhythm that sent a sickening wave of nausea up my throat. I tasted copper. I had bitten the inside of my cheek without realizing it.Beside me, Lee Ji-Won was no longer breathing. She was frozen, a statue wrapped in an oversized green detention uniform. Her eyes were fixed on the black screen of the monitor, reflecting a horror so profound it seemed to hollow out her skull."Fifteen years," Prosecutor Han Seo-Young repeated, letting the number echo. She didn't shout. She didn't need to. Her voice was a perfectly calibrated weapon, slicing through the silence. "The prosecution formally submits the amended charges, Your Ho
CHAPTER 6: The Steel Pipe
I gritted my teeth. The system was tracking his shifting bias in real-time. Han was erasing my progress with every word."Furthermore," Han continued, pacing slowly toward the center of the room. "The defense claims she acted purely out of survival. But true desperation leaves a trail of regret. The defendant showed no remorse when apprehended. She lied to the arresting officers. She attempted to construct a false alibi involving a local PC cafe. She only confessed when backed into a corner by her own counsel."Han stopped pacing. She turned her head slightly, locking eyes with me. Her gaze was cold, sharp, and utterly merciless. "A suspended sentence does not rehabilitate this kind of behavior, Your Honor. It validates it. The prosecution stands by its recommendation of two years in a federal facility."Judge Yoo leaned back in his chair, tapping a gold pen against his desk. The dull sound echoed in the quiet room. He looked at Ji-Won, his expression entirely devoid of pity. "Attor
CHAPTER 5: Guilty Plea
The walk from the basement holding cells to Courtroom 302 felt like marching to my own execution. My cheap leather shoes scuffed against the polished marble floor of the Seoul Central District Court. The air conditioning was blasted on high, chilling the nervous sweat that clung to my back, but I couldn't stop wiping my damp palms on my trousers. In the upper right corner of my vision, the blue translucent text remained fixed, a cruel, glowing tombstone. [Victory Probability: 0%]I had the truth. Lee Ji-Won was guilty. In any normal scenario, a swift guilty plea for a nineteen-year-old first-time major offender facing extreme poverty would open the door for a suspended sentence. I could throw her on the mercy of the court, cite the threatening text message from her landlord, and get her community service. So why did the system still say zero? I pushed through the heavy, oak double doors of Courtroom 302. The scent of lemon floor wax and old, dusty paper hit the back of my throat.
You may also like

Living With The System
Jajajuba34.1K views
The Super Doctor Calvin Hudson
Cindy Chen29.5K views
MASON WILLIAMS AND THE CELESTIAL SYSTEM
Bigsnowy 32.0K views
The Hidden Heir Billionaire System
Cindy Chen89.0K views
Pharmaco System: Pills of Progress A Professor's Redemption
Clare Felix 719 views
LEGACY OF A BILLIONAIRE SON-IN-LAW
Darling writes2.4K views
THE TRASH SON-IN-LAW'S ULTIMATE SYSTEM
Qwin 473 views
CHANGING THE GAME WITH THE CASHFLOW SYSTEM
Dominant pen1.6K views