Waking up inside a murder mystery is significantly worse than reading one.
Liam woke up with a violent gasp, his chest heaving as he sat bolt upright at a long, candlelit dining table. He looked down at his own body in immediate confusion. He was no longer wearing his faded gray hoodie and old denim jeans. Instead, he wore an elaborate, suffocating black velvet suit with ridiculously oversized ruffled cuffs that pressed tightly against his thin wrists. The fabric was heavy, hot, and smelled faintly of lavender and old dust. He tried to take a deep, stabilizing breath, but his throat tightened instantly. His body felt even weaker and more fragile than usual. His lungs burned from just a sudden intake of cold air, and his heart fluttered erratically against his ribs like a fragile bird. "Where am I now?" Liam wheezed, his voice sounding entirely different, higher and much more breathless than his natural tone. He rubbed his aching chest as he looked at the massive, dark room around him. "This is not the library. What did that book do to us?" He looked around the space. The dining hall was vast, filled with towering stone walls, dark oil paintings of unsmiling ancestors, and heavy crimson curtains that blocked out any natural light. Dozens of tall beeswax candles flickered in a massive silver chandelier overhead, casting long, dancing shadows across the polished floorboards. Before he could even attempt to stand up from his high-backed wooden chair, the familiar, cold mechanical voice flashed directly into his mind. "World 1: The Mystery of Blackwood Manor. Difficulty Level: E. Role assigned: Lord William, the frail, bedridden heir to a cursed fortune. Condition for success: Clear the murder mystery or survive seven days. Current Threat Level: Severe." "Seven days?" Liam muttered to himself, his voice shaking as he gripped the carved edge of the table. "I cannot even breathe properly in this body. I feel like a gust of wind could knock me over. How am I supposed to survive a severe threat for a whole week?" He looked at his hands on the table. They were pale, thin, and completely devoid of any calluses. This character was clearly an invalid, someone meant to be protected, or perhaps, someone meant to be an easy target. The heavy oak doors at the far end of the grand dining hall creaked open, the sound echoing loudly off the high ceiling. Liam stiffened instantly, his eyes darting toward the dark entrance as he braced himself. Walking into the room with absolute confidence, carrying a polished silver tea tray, was the exact same silver-haired killer from the central library. The monster who had just murdered a fully geared survivor with a single, casual flick of his wrist was now wearing a crisp, perfectly tailored butler’s uniform. The formal black suit and white gloves did absolutely nothing to hide his sharp, predatory grace. He moved across the hardwood floor smoothly, like a wolf pretending to be a servant. "Your afternoon tea, my lord," the killer said. His voice dipped with false politeness and bitter sarcasm as he approached the long table. "Stay back," Liam said, trying his best to sound firm and commanding, though his voice came out as nothing more than a fragile, shaky whisper. "Do not come any closer to me. Stand right there." Julian ignored the warning entirely, his dark boots clicking softly against the floor. He set the heavy silver tray down beside Liam's elbow with a soft, deliberate click. Instead of stepping away into a respectful servant's stance, he leaned down incredibly close. He bent his torso until his hot breath brushed directly against Liam's ear, making the young man shiver. "A clever trick, little archivist," Julian whispered, a low, dangerous chuckle vibrating deeply in his chest. "You actually managed to pull me into a book. I did not think an F-level base owner had that kind of power inside him." Liam pulled his head back sharply, gripping the arms of his chair as he stared up into those burning, coal-like eyes. "If I die here, you stay trapped here too, do you not? The system said my objective is to tame you. If the book ends badly, we both lose." "Tame me?" Julian laughed aloud, the sound rich and genuinely amused. He straightened his posture, casually adjusting his stark white cuffs. "An archivist with zero combat stats wants to tame the Red Lord? You can barely even stand up in that body, William. Look at you, you are trembling just from sitting up straight. This story is going to be a very short one if I have anything to say about it." "We have seven days," Liam said, squeezing his velvet trousers tightly to hide the uncontrollable shaking of his hands. "The system gave us a structure. Let us see who breaks first, Julian. You do not know the rules of this world yet." Julian’s smile widened, revealing a row of sharp, perfect teeth that looked entirely too dangerous for a butler. "I do appreciate a toy that tries to fight back. It makes the hunt much more entertaining. Drink your tea, my lord. The game has officially begun, and I am very hungry." Liam looked down at the delicate porcelain teacup sitting on the silver tray. The dark amber liquid inside gave off a fragrant cloud of steam, smelling heavily of bergamot and something sharply bitter hidden underneath. His stomach twisted into a knot. In a world labeled as a murder mystery, accepting food from a lethal adversary masquerading as a servant felt like signing his own death warrant. "I am not thirsty," Liam said, sliding the tray away from him. "Take it away." "Are you certain, my lord?" Julian asked, his voice adopting an scooped, mocking tone of concern. He picked up the silver teapot, his gloved fingers manipulating the porcelain handle with effortless coordination. "A frail master like yourself needs his nourishment. It would be a terrible shame if you collapsed before dinner was even served." "I said no, Julian," Liam replied, his heart hammering against his weak ribs. He had to establish some baseline of control, even if this body felt completely useless compared to Julian's immense presence. "As my butler, you are supposed to obey my commands. Is that not how the system works inside these scenarios?" Julian leaned back slightly, his burning gaze narrowing as he examined Liam's pale face. A slow, terrifying smile returned to his lips. "You are learning fast, archivist. You think the narrative rules will shield you from me completely. But remember, a butler has many duties in a house this size. Some of them involve keeping the master safe from outside threats, and some of them involve ensuring the master stays in his room. Permanently." Liam refused to let his eyes waver, though a cold sweat was building along his hairline. "If you kill me outside the logic of the story, what happens to you? The system mentioned taming progress. It did not mention an escape route for you if I fail the condition." "Do you want to test that theory?" Julian purred, his long fingers trailing lightly along the polished edge of the mahogany table, leaving a faint scratch in the expensive dark wood. "We could see if a total world collapse crushes both of us, or if it simply frees me back into your little library." "I would rather not find out," Liam answered as calmly as his burning lungs allowed. He looked toward the heavy crimson curtains blocking the windows. "Tell me about the rest of the inhabitants of this manor. Who else is supposed to be at this table?" Julian pulled out the heavy wooden chair directly to Liam's right and sat down without asking for permission, completely abandoning his posture as a humble servant. He crossed one long leg over the other, leaning back lazily. "The script says your family is quite extensive, William. A stepmother who looks at your inheritance like a starving wolf, a couple of jealous cousins wandering the east wing, and a doctor who prescribes entirely too much sleeping medicine. Quite a cozy little nest of vipers." "And you are the only one who is a player," Liam deduced, trying to map out the narrative structure in his mind. "The rest are just meat for the story," Julian said carelessly, flicking a speck of dust off his black trousers. "They behave exactly how the genre dictates. They whisper in corners, they look guilty when you enter the room, and they are all desperately waiting for you to kick the bucket so they can inherit the estate." Liam nodded slowly, his mind working through the survival strategy. If the threat level was severe, it meant Julian was not the only danger. The plot itself was actively trying to kill Lord William. "Then my real challenge is not just keeping you at bay. It is navigating the traps my family has set for me." "Precisely," Julian said, his eyes glittering with a dark, twisted anticipation. "And since I am your loyal bodyguard and butler, I get a front-row seat to see if you can outsmart them. If you slip up even once, if you eat the wrong food or walk down the wrong hallway at night, the story will take care of you for me. I won't even have to lift a finger." "Then I will just have to make sure you stay useful," Liam countered, his voice gaining a sudden streak of cold determination. "If I am your master for the next seven days, then you will protect me from them. Because if they kill me, you remain trapped in an E-level difficulty loop forever." Julian stared at him for a long, silent moment, the candle fire reflecting perfectly in his dark amber eyes. The arrogance on his face shifted into something closer to genuine intrigue. He let out a soft, delighted whistle. "Using the hunter to fight off the scavengers. Bold move for a fragile little rabbit. Let us see how long that spine of yours lasts when the first trap drops."Latest Chapter
Neon and Steel
The only thing more dangerous than entering a trap is picking the cage yourself.Liam stood up slowly from the floor, his eyes fixed on the predator standing across the room. His newly acquired agility statistic was already taking effect, making his limbs feel incredibly light, quick, and remarkably responsive. The lingering exhaustion from his previous plunge vanished, replaced by a strange, sharp energy humming underneath his skin. Even so, he absolutely did not let his guard down for a single second. He knew the central library's newly upgraded Level E defensive barrier could only hold a max level monster like Julian back for so long before the predator found a way to break through the static field completely."You are moving a lot faster now, Liam," Julian observed, his silver hair shimmering under the dim emergency lights of the building. He took a casual step forward, his boots clicking lightly on the linoleum, only to stop as the faint blue energy barrier pulsed between them wi
Closing the Book
Some stories can only be solved if you are brave enough to let the world break around you.Liam did not hit the stone courtyard.During his rapid fall through the freezing air, his mind raced at an incredible speed through the final deduction required by the mystery. The true culprit of Blackwood Manor was never the stepmother, and it was never the ghosts wandering the halls. It was the physical house itself, an entity fueled entirely by the old master's deep guilt. By sacrificing the innocent heir to the estate, the dark curse was broken for good.As his fragile body approached the jagged ground, the entire world stopped moving. The mansion, the stones, and the dark night sky instantly dissolved into millions of lines of glowing white text that spun around his head.The mechanical system voice boomed in the void."World 1 Cleared. Hidden Ending Achieved: Sacrifice of the Innocent. Taming Progress is now at fifteen percent. Target Julian is highly stimulated by the Host's tactical act
The Leap of Faith
The easiest way to beat a rigged game is to completely destroy the board.Liam reached the highest outdoor balcony of the grand manor, his chest burning as the freezing night wind whipped violently against his pale face. The cold air stung his throat, forcing him to take shallow, agonizing breaths that made his weak ribs ache with every rise and fall. He gripped the freezing stone balustrade with both hands, leaning his weight against the carved rock as he looked straight down. Below him was a sheer, dizzying drop into a dark, uneven stone courtyard that looked completely lethal in the shifting midnight moonlight. There was no escape route left on this roof, no hidden ladders, and no trick doors built into the masonry. He had officially run out of room to hide.A second later, the heavy wooden double doors leading out onto the balcony shattered into flying splinters. The impact sent jagged chunks of oak skittering across the stone terrace. Julian walked calmly out through the wreckage
Midnight Rules
The safest place in a horror story is never the bedroom.The sudden exposure of the stepmother accelerated the plot of the novel at a truly dangerous pace. The entire household had devolved into total madness over the next few days, with shadows stretching longer across the stone walls and the air growing thick with invisible dread. As the massive mahogany grandfather clock in the main downstairs hall slowly struck midnight on the sixth night, a blood-curdling, agonized wail echoed through the vast estate, shaking the very glass in the window frames.Liam sat upright in his four-poster bed, his fragile chest heaving as the cold blue text of the system flashed directly into his retinas."Plot Twist Triggered: The Madness of the Butler. The narrative constraints on the character Julian have been officially lifted. The hunt begins right now."Liam did not wait for the terrifying notification to finish scrolling through his mind. He threw off his heavy velvet blankets, swung his legs over
The Poisoned Cup
Trusting a killer to guard your life is a very fast way to end up in a coffin.By the third long day inside the suffocating stone walls of Blackwood Manor, Liam had fully deduced the underlying plot of the story. The massive mansion was heavily haunted by the vengeful, weeping spirits of poisoned ancestors who roamed the dark corridors at night. More importantly, someone very close to him in the current household was actively trying to kill the young heir to claim the vast family fortune.The grand dining hall was filled with the clinking of heavy silver cutlery and the low, false murmurs of his distant relatives. Liam sat at the head of the table, his weak chest aching under the tight velvet vest. During this tense evening banquet with the scripted non-player character relatives, a servant stepped forward and placed a tall chalice of dark red wine directly in front of Liam.Liam did not touch it immediately. He leaned forward slightly, his sharp eyes catching a strange, oily metallic
System Sanctions
A monster is only as dangerous as the rules that allow him to hunt.Julian did not answer Liam with words. Instead, his dark eyes flashed with an immediate, lethal rage. He snapped his right arm forward, his hand moving so fast it became a blur in the dim candlelight. As his fingers raced toward Liam’s exposed throat, his fingernails rapidly lengthened, hardening into five sharp, deadly points that hummed with a faint crimson energy. Liam flinched, instinctively closing his eyes tightly and bracing himself for the agonizing end. He expected to feel his throat torn open, but the lethal strike never arrived.A loud, sharp crackle of bright blue electricity suddenly erupted out of thin air. The blue lightning slammed directly into Julian’s chest with the force of a speeding truck, throwing him backward and sending him skidding heavily across the polished hardwood floor. The heavy dining chairs knocked against each other as Julian crashed into the far wall.Julian hissed loudly through hi
