
Overview
Catalog
Chapter 1
1
“Cut!”
Inside the cold studio, Director David’s exhausted, hoarse shout shattered the suffocating silence.
Michael slowly lifted his head like a puppet whose strings had just been cut. The bloodthirsty madness in his eyes, mixed with a heavy silence, faded little by little, replaced by clarity.
He released the prop scalpel in his hand. The “blood” smeared on it was warm and sticky, almost convincing enough to make him believe he had really “dismembered” someone in front of the camera.
Everyone around him, from the lighting tech to the camera assistant, instinctively stepped back half a pace. Only when the scene ended did they finally breathe again, as if waking from a living nightmare.
They looked at Michael with awe… but more than that, with a bone-deep fear.
“Michael… you’re amazing…” the assistant director stammered, trying to step forward to offer him water, but his legs seemed glued to the floor.
Michael ignored the uneasy whispers around him. He was just a struggling, bottom-tier actor who survived the industry through a strange Villain Actor System, one that only allowed him to take villain roles.
Moments ago, he played “The Doctor,” a serial killer in Silent Crimes, a deranged man who treated murder as art.
Too realistic?
Michael let out a faint, self-mocking smile.
It wasn’t just acting. Every time he fully immersed himself in a role, the system granted him one of the villain’s core abilities as his own.
Now, the skills imprinted in his mind, crime scene reconstruction and psychological profiling, were the rewards for becoming “The Doctor.”
But the price… was subtle, corrosive.
Each villain he portrayed chipped away at pieces of his humanity. He could see every dark corner of the human mind with terrifying clarity, but the warmth of sunlight felt more and more distant.
At that moment, someone cut through the crowd, walking straight toward him, a figure completely out of place in a film studio.
A woman, around thirty, wearing a sharply pressed dark-blue police uniform that highlighted her tall, commanding presence. Her short hair was neat, her gaze sharp like a hawk’s, her expression unreadable.
The badge on her chest bore her name: Ashley.
“Mr. Hernandez?” she said, her voice cool as ice water.
Michael raised an eyebrow.
‘A police officer? Visiting the set?’ he thought.
There was no excitement in her eyes, only scrutiny, calculated and calm, the way someone examines a dangerous specimen.
“I am,” he replied, wiping the fake blood from his hands.
Director David hurried over, chuckling nervously. “Ay, Captain Spark! What brings you here? We’re all good here, just filming. Everything’s legal, of course…” He laughed.
But Ashley didn’t look at him, not even once. She pulled a document envelope from her briefcase with swift, precise movements.
“Director David, I need to borrow your actor for ten minutes.”
It wasn’t a request. It was an order.
David blinked, stunned, then stepped aside helplessly.
‘What has Michael done? The kid’s always been quiet. How did he end up on the Major Crimes Unit’s radar?’ he thought.
Ashley led Michael to a dim corner near the monitors, away from curious eyes.
“Mr. Hernandez, I’ve watched all your work,” she said without preamble. “From the calculating mastermind in Black Alley, to the con artist who juggled eight identities in A Thousand Faces, to today’s ‘Doctor.’ Your performances… are different.”
“Flattered,” Michael said lightly. “It’s just work.”
“No,” she said, shaking her head. Her gaze cut through him, sharp and dissecting. “You don’t act like those characters. You are them. You’re not imitating criminals, you’re…” Her eyes narrowed. “…enjoying the crime.”
The air froze instantly.
Michael’s expression hardened, predatory, dangerous, an echo of the role he’d just left behind.
“Captain Spark,” he said coldly, “There are things you can say, and there are things you can’t. I’m an actor. That’s my job.”
“Then let’s talk about your ‘job.’”
Ignoring his warning, Ashley opened the envelope and slid a photograph onto the table.
Even through the transparent evidence bag, the image inside was unmistakable.
It was a messy room, a woman lay in a pool of blood, her throat cut with precise skill, yet an eerie calm rested on her face. The entire place looked like a twisted altar, arranged with unsettling ritualistic detail.
Even through the photograph, the vivid color of the blood was jarring. It was as if the metallic scent seeped out of the picture itself.
“The Rainy Night Butcher,” Ashley said quietly. “Three months. Four victims. All young, single women. He always strikes on rainy nights, leaves no fingerprints, no footprints. Clean, efficient, and impossible to track. The kind of offender with extraordinary counter-surveillance skills.” Her voice was low but heavy, every word weighing down the air. “Our Major Crimes Unit has nothing. He’s like a ghost.”
Michael stared at the photo, and the moment his gaze landed on it, the “Doctor’s” profiling ability awakened in his mind.
The victim’s neck… Smooth incision. Consistent depth. One clean strike. The weapon was extremely sharp, and the killer didn’t hesitate.
The room’s layout… It looked chaotic at first glance, but the placement followed a warped kind of symmetry, an obsessive aesthetic. Signs of a compulsive, narcissistic personality.
The victim’s expression… Peaceful? No. That was the after-effect of extreme fear, muscles relaxed by some form of sedative or gas. The killer liked to savor his victim’s terror before the end.
Within seconds, a mental portrait took shape.
Male, 30 to 45.
Medical or anatomical background.
Disciplined. Reclusive. High self-esteem bordering on delusion. And… a severe mother complex.
The information surged too quickly, making Michael’s breathing tighten.
He forced the deductions back and looked up at Ashley, eyes narrowing. “Why are you showing this to me? Want me to play a consultant for your next police movie?”
Ashley held his gaze, unblinking. For a moment, she seemed to wrestle with something, hesitation, or maybe fear.
“We’ve tried everyone,” she said finally. “Behavioral analysts, criminal psychologists… They can quote textbooks and build theories, but none of them can tell me what the killer is thinking right now or where he’ll strike next.” She leaned in slightly, her voice hard and precise. “I don’t need theory, Mr. Hernandez. I need someone who can crawl into the Rainy Night Butcher’s mind. Someone who can tell me his next move.”
Michael’s heartbeat faltered. He understood now.
She wasn’t here to arrest him. She was here… to recruit him.
To recruit an actor to think like a real serial killer. This was madness.
“Captain Spark, you’re insane,” Michael said hoarsely. “I’m an actor, not a cop. I’m not a monster.”
“But you understand monsters, don’t you?” Ashley shot back. She pointed to the playback monitor showing his recent scene. “That look in your eyes, the way you enjoyed the kill… You’re more convincing than half the criminals in our files.”
Michael had no response. Because she wasn’t wrong.
The system made it easy, too easy, to empathize with darkness.
Seeing him waver, Ashley slid the entire document folder toward him. Her voice softened, barely, but there was something desperate beneath it.
“I don’t care how you do it. Whether you call it acting or intuition or something else. I just need results.”
She took a breath. “According to the forecast, there will be heavy rain the night after tomorrow. If we don’t get ahead of him by then… there will be a fifth victim.”
Her words echoed in the dim corner of the studio.
“We don’t need an actor, Mr. Hernandez.” Her eyes locked onto his, fierce and pleading all at once. “We need a demon to fight another demon. Can you be that demon?”
Michael looked back down at the photo.
In the corner of the image, half-hidden in blood, was a teddy bear. Its button eyes had been removed and crudely sewn shut with black thread.
A detail the detectives had missed.
Michael’s pupils tightened. The cold stillness of the “Doctor” slowly crept across his face again.
He could almost hear a whisper in the dark, a murderer proudly showing off his creation.He lifted his head, and a slow, sinister smile curled at his lips. It was not Michael’s smile. It belonged to a villain.
“He’s not a butcher,” Michael murmured, voice deep and disturbingly calm. “A butcher is messy. Brutal.” His eyes gleamed. “He’s an artist.”
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