I saw a post calling the Duke an adorably handsome green flag—but as someone who’s read the raws, that couldn’t be further from the truth. That black-haired man literally locked Yarn up, chained his ankle, and even threatened to break it if he tried to escape. To make things worse, he claimed Yarn might be “possessed” and used that as an excuse to imprison him, all while pretending he was doing it to “find a cure.”
It’s tragic, really. Yarn trusted him enough to open up—to share his deepest secret—and yet the Duke betrayed that trust in the cruelest way possible. The fear and despair eventually consumed Yarn until he began to harm himself, and when the pain became unbearable, he ended his own life.
This all happened before Yarn’s regression. The one who turned back time was the monster ML—an entity with the same face as the Duke. He witnessed Yarn’s final, heartbreaking moments and heard his desperate wish: if he could turn back time, he wanted to do everything over again—to change the ending he was never meant to have.
Although Yarn initially forgot everything after his regression, his memories slowly begin to resurface in later chapters. The current tone might seem lighthearted and funny, but beneath it lies a story that’s painfully deep and emotionally heavy.
And honestly? It’s absolutely worth reading. The layers of pain, guilt, and longing woven into the story hit so hard—it gives off strong Into the Rose Garden and Beyond Memories vibes, where one of the main characters gets a second chance to rewrite their destiny.
Sorry, but I’m rooting for the monster ML. He’s been with Yarn since way back—before all the pain, before the tragedy—and that kind of devotion hits different.
I saw a post calling the Duke an adorably handsome green flag—but as someone who’s read the raws, that couldn’t be further from the truth. That black-haired man literally locked Yarn up, chained his ankle, and even threatened to break it if he tried to escape. To make things worse, he claimed Yarn might be “possessed” and used that as an excuse to imprison him, all while pretending he was doing it to “find a cure.”
It’s tragic, really. Yarn trusted him enough to open up—to share his deepest secret—and yet the Duke betrayed that trust in the cruelest way possible. The fear and despair eventually consumed Yarn until he began to harm himself, and when the pain became unbearable, he ended his own life.
This all happened before Yarn’s regression. The one who turned back time was the monster ML—an entity with the same face as the Duke. He witnessed Yarn’s final, heartbreaking moments and heard his desperate wish: if he could turn back time, he wanted to do everything over again—to change the ending he was never meant to have.
Although Yarn initially forgot everything after his regression, his memories slowly begin to resurface in later chapters. The current tone might seem lighthearted and funny, but beneath it lies a story that’s painfully deep and emotionally heavy.
And honestly? It’s absolutely worth reading. The layers of pain, guilt, and longing woven into the story hit so hard—it gives off strong Into the Rose Garden and Beyond Memories vibes, where one of the main characters gets a second chance to rewrite their destiny.
Sorry, but I’m rooting for the monster ML. He’s been with Yarn since way back—before all the pain, before the tragedy—and that kind of devotion hits different.