Santina Vicente known as “Detective Santi” was once the embodiment of justice: disciplined, fearless, and unwavering in her beliefs.
But behind that name lies a secret.
A twin sister.
A mirror of her face… but not her soul.
They live in separate worlds, bound only by blood and silent understanding. While Santina upholds the law, her twin walks freely without it—lawless, dangerous, and unafraid of consequences.
They were never close.
But they knew each other better than anyone else.
Until one night changed everything.
In the middle of investigating a high-profile case involving corruption and illegal drugs, Santina is suddenly abducted—dragged into the darkness and burned alive inside an abandoned factory.
Unseen.
Unheard.
Except by one person.
Her twin sister.
She survives.
But survival comes with a price.
Days later, Detective Santi returns to duty.
Same name. Same face.
But something is wrong.
She is no longer the woman they once knew.
She forgets things she shouldn’t. She acts without fear. She breaks rules without hesitation.
The woman who once believed in justice… is now willing to destroy it to get the truth.
And people are starting to notice.
Enter Zoren Balthazar—a brilliant, principled lawyer who despises deception more than anything. Assigned to the very case that nearly killed her, he finds himself forced to work alongside the new “Santi.”
From the beginning, something doesn’t add up.
Her methods are too reckless.
Her eyes too bright and cold at the same time.
Her truth… too dangerous.
They clash.
They argue.
They push each other to the edge.
But as the case unfolds, so does something far more complicated— Trust. Doubt. And a truth that could ruin everything.
Because the biggest mystery isn’t just the case.
It’s her.
Who is the woman behind Detective Santi?
What really happened the night of the fire?
Is she still the same Santina? broken, changed and imitating her lawless twin?
Did she truly survive the fire?
or is it the other way around?
And when the truth finally comes out…
Will Zoren Balthazar choose justice— or her?
Because sometimes…
The person who survives the fire
is no longer the same person who went in.