Read light novels, web novels, Chinese novels, Korean novels, Japanese novels and books online for FREE.
Font Size
18px
Now reading: Chapter 812: [THE SHADOW WITHIN] (XXI) from The Number One Star in the Interstellar Era [BL], a Romance novel by Tyramisu.

LEWIS looked at Julian rcer and finally accepted the truth. Yesterday, rcer had been lying in a hospital bed, looking weak and tired. Now he was standing in a secret basent with four jars on a shelf, each one holding a human heart. There was no question left in Lewis’ mind.

He thought back to when Stevens first told him he knew who the killer was.

=====

They had left the lab quickly, the conversation cut short the mont Stevens made that claim. Lewis had not questioned him there. He could not do that in front of outsiders.

The mont they reached his car, he turned to him. "What do you an you know who the killer is?"

Stevens settled into his seat, calm as ever. "The killer is Julian rcer."

Lewis stared at him. "What?"

"Julian rcer," Stevens repeated.

"That’s not possible," Lewis said, his voice rising. "He’s a victim. I found him half-dead. How did you even arrive at that conclusion?"

Stevens did not react to his tone. "It’s the na he used to rent the device. Georg Giese."

Lewis frowned. "What about it?"

"It’s not random," Stevens said. "Georg Giese was a rchant from ancient Earth. There’s a famous painting based on him called ’The Younger.’ It stood out to because it felt deliberate, not sothing soone would pick without aning."

Lewis stared at him, clearly not following. "And that leads you to rcer how?"

"Just look at it from an etymological angle," Stevens said. "Nas carry anings. ’Julian’ cos from a word associated with youth or being youthful. ’rcer’ is a term for a rchant. When you break it down, ’Julian rcer’ translates closely to ’young rchant.’"

Lewis frowned deeper, trying to process it.

"The alias and his real na point to the sa idea," Stevens continued. "That kind of parallel is not a coincidence. It suggests the person chose an alias that reflects himself, which is sothing organized offenders tend to do when they think no one is looking closely enough."

Lewis let out a slow breath. "You’re telling we’re basing this on na anings?"

"No," Stevens said. "I’m telling you it’s a pattern. Soone who plans this carefully does not leave things like that without reason."

Lewis leaned back slightly, still not convinced. "Even if that’s true, rcer is still a victim. He almost died."

"Almost," Stevens said. "The wound could be self-inflicted."

Lewis looked at him sharply. "You’re serious."

"Think about it," Stevens continued. "The body found at the old water treatnt plant did not die on the day it was discovered. It was preserved, then thawed using that remote. We already know the culprit used Hale to thaw the body. Creating a believable ’attack’ is not out of reach."

Lewis stayed quiet for a mont. Then he rembered what Vargas had said before, about how sothing in rcer’s wound did not look right.

He pulled out his Terminal and started a video call. Vargas appeared on screen, looking slightly confused at the sudden contact.

Lewis turned his attention to Vargas. "I need you to check sothing for . Look at rcer’s wound again. Is there any possibility that he could have done it to himself?"

She frowned at first, clearly surprised by the question. Then her expression shifted as she thought about it.

"...Wait," she said slowly.

Lewis watched as realization settled on her face.

"Yes," she said. "Actually, that would explain it. The angle and depth were slightly inconsistent with the others. I couldn’t place it before, but if he did it himself, that would make sense."

Lewis felt sothing tighten in his chest.

"Alright," he said, then ended the call.

He looked at Stevens.

"The chief won’t approve this," Lewis said. "Not with what we have. In his mind, Hale is already the killer."

"Then we don’t tell him," Stevens replied. "Not yet."

Lewis frowned. "What do you an?"

"We confirm it first," Stevens said. "We draw him out."

Lewis crossed his arms. "And how do we do that?"

Stevens smiled slightly. "We make him believe we’re close. Close enough to threaten what matters to him."

Lewis watched him, waiting for further explanation.

"He won’t believe it imdiately," Stevens continued. "He’s careful. But his condition will not let him ignore the possibility. He will need to check."

Lewis nodded, slowly understanding where Stevens was leading up to. "So we push him."

Stevens nodded. "We give him just enough information. Vague, but specific in the right way. You can even visit him in the hospital to show that we really know sothing. Then we wait."

Lewis thought about it, then asked, "And while we wait?"

"We prepare," Stevens said. "We study the structure around his residence. Not inside. If he has any way of monitoring it, we cannot risk alerting him. We look for alternate exits, hidden access points, anything that allows him to move without being seen."

Lewis exhaled slowly. "And when he moves..."

"We follow," Stevens finished.

=====

Lewis’ mind returned to the present.

Everything had unfolded just as Stevens said it would.

Checking the building layout around rcer’s residence had paid off. They found the hidden exit, the path that led to the underground space. When rcer left the hospital, they were already waiting.

They had followed the car that ca out of that exit. It had led them straight here.

Lewis looked at the glass containers, then turned back to Julian rcer. The anger he had been holding back finally surfaced.

"Julian rcer," he said, his voice firm. "You’re under arrest for the murders of Miranda Kessler, Adrian Calder, Naomi Rivas, and Marcus Doyle."

***

Lewis stood in front of the one-way glass, his gaze fixed on the man seated inside the interrogation room.

Julian rcer sat with his hands resting on the table, his posture relaxed and his face showing no strong emotion. He did not look scared or angry. There was no tension in his shoulders, no tightness in his jaw. If anything, he looked like a person waiting for a scheduled eting, not soone who had just been accused of killing several people.

The chief stood beside Lewis, arms crossed, his expression dark.

"What the hell were you thinking?" the chief said in a sharp voice. "You go off on your own, build a whole plan behind my back, and only tell after you already caught the guy? Do you have any idea what kind of trouble that could have caused?"

Lewis kept his eyes on rcer and stayed silent.

"You bypass protocol, you risk the entire case, and for what?" the chief continued. "If that plan of yours failed, we would have nothing. No suspect, no case, and I’d have to answer to people who don’t care about your instincts or your ’gut feeling.’ They’d just see a detective who screwed up a high-profile investigation."

He let out a breath, clearly holding back more things he wanted to complain about.

"And don’t even get started on the part where you tailed a suspect without proper backup and set up a trap without authorization. That’s not how we do things, Lewis. You don’t get to make those calls on your own."

Lewis nodded slightly. "I know that, sir."

The chief stared at him for a mont longer, then exhaled, the tone of his voice shifting a bit. "...But you got the right man."

Lewis did not visibly react, but his shoulders eased slightly. Because he knew the scolding was ending.

"You pulled it off," the chief continued, though there was still a trace of reluctance in his voice. "So I will not tear you apart for it. At least not today."

He pointed toward the interrogation room.

"Now go in there and get a confession that no lawyer can poke holes in. I want this case locked down."

Lewis nodded. "I will."

Beside him, Stevens spoke. "If you don’t mind, I’d like to sit in."

Lewis glanced at him, surprised. This was the first ti Stevens had asked to be part of an interrogation. Then he suddenly understood. Stevens wanted to observe rcer up close.

Lewis gave a quick nod. "Alright."

The two of them entered the room.

rcer looked up as they stepped in. His gaze lingered on Lewis for a mont, then shifted to Stevens, before settling back into that sa indifferent expression.

Lewis took the seat across from him. "Julian rcer. Why did you do it?"

rcer did not hesitate to answer. "I wanted to see if I could get away with it."

The answer ca out flat, almost casual. Sothing in Lewis snapped hearing that.

"You killed four people," he said, his voice rising despite himself. "You took their lives just because you wanted to see if you could get away with it?"

rcer shrugged slightly. "It’s not like they would be missed. They were all alone. No family, no real connections. If anything, they should feel flattered that I chose them for my little experint."

Lewis felt his jaw tighten.

There was a pressure building in his chest, sothing close to anger and sothing heavier beneath it. He thought of the victims, their files, the quiet lives they had been trying to hold together. They were not important to rcer, but they had been real people.

And this man reduced them to nothing.

"You don’t get to decide that," Lewis said, his voice tight. "You don’t get to decide who matters and who doesn’t."

rcer did not respond.

Stevens spoke then. "Interesting. So aside from Schizo-Obsessive Disorder, you also show clear signs of psychopathy. A lack of empathy, shallow affect, and a tendency to treat people as objects. I’m surprised that never made it into your records."

rcer glanced at him. "I’m an excellent actor. You must be the reason they caught so quickly. I heard you were good at your field. I just didn’t expect you to be good at this as well."

Stevens ignored the remark. "Why the hearts?" he asked. "Why keep them?"

rcer tilted his head slightly, as if considering the question. "They’re the most important part. Everything else is just... structure. The heart is what keeps a person alive. Taking it is like taking the core of them. Keeping it ans I still have that control, even after they’re gone."

Lewis frowned, unsettled by how easily he said it. Then he asked, "Why aren’t you denying any of this?"

rcer looked at him, almost amused. "You caught in the middle of admiring my work. There’s no point pretending otherwise." He leaned back slightly. "Besides, I’m not exactly normal. Anyone can see that. At worst, they will lock up in so high security place away from everyone else. That is not much different from how I have always lived."

Lewis could hear what rcer was leaving out. That a doctor might say he was not ntally fit to stand trial. That even if he went to court, he would still be sent to a facility instead of a real prison. That the punishnt might not fit what he had done.

The thought sat heavy in his chest. Four people were dead. And this might be how it ended.

It felt wrong. It felt like nothing close to justice.

Stevens leaned slightly toward rcer. "You might think what happens next doesn’t matter," he said quietly. "But you should understand one thing. This was your ga, and you lost."

For the first ti, rcer’s expression changed. His eyes widened slightly. "You..." he started, then stopped. Realization seed to settle on his face. Then he laughed. "Of course," he said. "So it was you."

Lewis exhaled slowly and pushed his chair back, the tension in the room settling into sothing quieter but no less heavy.

He gave rcer one last look before turning away.

There was nothing more he could get from him for now.

Without another word, he stepped out of the interrogation room, Stevens following behind him.

Once the door closed behind them, Lewis turned to Stevens. "What was that about?"

Stevens adjusted his sleeve slightly. "He saw this as a ga. I simply clarified that he didn’t win."

Lewis frowned, still not entirely satisfied with the answer, but still let the topic go.

Stevens turned to him and extended his hand. "It was a pleasure working with you on this case, Detective."

Lewis took it and shook it firmly. "Likewise. Thank you for your help."

Stevens gave a faint smile. "If anything, I should be the one expressing appreciation. This has been... quite engaging."

Lewis narrowed his eyes slightly. Before he could ask what he ant, Stevens had already stepped back.

"Goodbye, Detective," he said.

Then he turned and walked away. Lewis watched him go, a strange feeling settling in his chest. He couldn’t explain it. But it felt like that was the last ti he would see him.

***

A Terminal screen lit up in the dim light, the chat log already open.

heartstealer: Do you think soone can keep killing and never get caught?

drshadow: Most people get caught because they’re sloppy or emotional. If you’re neither, then yes.

heartstealer: What do you an by emotional?

drshadow: Guilt. Panic. The need to rush. Those are weaknesses. If you feel any of that, you’ve already lost.

heartstealer: And if I don’t?

drshadow: Then you’re already ahead of everyone else who tried.

heartstealer: Careful how?

drshadow: You plan everything before you act. You don’t improvise unless you have to.

heartstealer: That sounds easy enough.

drshadow: It isn’t. You also need patience. You wait for the right mont, even if it takes days. Weeks. Most fail because they can’t wait.

heartstealer: So it’s like a ga?

drshadow: If that’s how you want to see it.

heartstealer: Then I’ll win.

The date of that last ssage was months back. Then a new ssage suddenly appeared in the chat log.

drshadow: You lost.

The screen stayed still for a mont before the view shifted back.

Stevens sat in front of the Terminal, his face calm and unreadable. There was no sign of emotion in his eyes as he looked at the ssage he had just sent.

He closed the Terminal and stood up.

Without looking back, he walked forward, blending into the crowd moving through the spaceport. People passed by him without a second glance, their voices mixing into a dull noise.

The cara pulled back, widening the view until he was just another figure among many.

Then the screen went black.

You are reading The Number One Star in the Interstellar Era [BL] Chapter 812: [THE SHADOW WITHIN] (XXI) on WuxiaFull. Use Previous, Chapter List, or Next to continue.
Share this chapter
Bookmark saves this novel to your account. Reading History keeps recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You May Also Like

Falling for the Omega Idol cover
Same author

Falling for the Omega Idol

Tyramisu ·Yaoi

KangHaneul’sonce-happylifewasshatteredbytragedywhenhisfamilywasstruckbyadevastatingtrafficaccident.Hisparentsdiedandhissisterfellintoacoma.Heworked...

Timeless Assassin cover
Trending now

Timeless Assassin

RajShah7152 ·Action

Leoawakensinaworldhedoesn’trecognize,withnomemoryofwhoheisorwhyhe’sthere.Allheknowsisthatsurvivalisn’tjustanecessity—it’shisonlychancetouncoverthet...

I Have a Golden Crow cover
Trending now

I Have a Golden Crow

Great Yu ·Eastern

DuYuhasnoclueabouthowhehastransmigratedtoaworldofdemontaming.HeisalsoinastateofconfusionwhenhecontractstheGoldenCrowthatwasliterallyasun.“Areyoufro...

The Lucky Farmgirl cover
Trending now

The Lucky Farmgirl

Bamboo Rain ·Romance

TheFourthBrotherhadsquanderedhiswealththroughgambling,leavingtheirmotherinacriticalstate.Tomakemattersworse,thecreditorsevenaskedthemtosellManbaoto...

User Comments

0 comments from readers

Post Comment
By posting a comment, you agree to all relevant terms.
There are currently no comments. Join the community and start the discussion.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.