
The smell of antiseptic always calmed Dr. Elias Voss. It was the perfume of control. The bright lights of his private surgical suite buzzed softly above him as he adjusted the tubing, watching with obsessive delight as the ruby stream filled the reservoir.
âBeautiful,â he whispered.
Patient #51 stared blankly into nothingness. Drained. Hollow. Like the fifty before her.
He logged the procedure in his encrypted tablet under the alias Case Study: Type-O Symphony. Then he lit a candle in the corner of the room and sat beside the body, admiring his work with ritualistic reverence. Blood was purity. Blood was truth. He wasnât just killingâhe was cleansing the world.
Three months earlierâŚ
Detective Lila Harrow ran her hand through her copper hair as she stared at the whiteboard. Photos. Names. Time of death. All linked by a grim threadâevery victim exsanguinated, with no defensive wounds. No signs of struggle.
Fifty bodies. No leads.
And one common detail that clawed at her gut: theyâd all been patients at Arlindale Medical Center. Her hospital. The same one where Elias worked. The same hospital where theyâd first met. Danced. Fell in love. Spent nights tangled in each other, trading secrets and lies between kisses.
She shook her head.
âThis has to be someone with access, skill⌠and no conscience.â
Her partner, Detective Reno, scoffed. âSo, a surgeon.â
She didnât laugh.
Back in his clinic, Elias watched news coverage of the task force. Lilaâs face filled the screenâdetermined, exhausted, gorgeous. He smiled softly.
âShe always was the clever one,â he said to the corpse on his table. âBut not clever enough.â
He believed sheâd never suspect him. He played the part too wellâthe calm, charitable doctor. Volunteering at the orphanage. Hosting charity galas. Even Lilaâs own mother had said, âHeâs the kind of man you marry, not suspect.â
But something had shifted in the past week. Lila had started asking tighter questions. Her texts were colder. She dropped by his office without warning. A cracked window in his perfect performance.
So he prepared for the end.
Lilaâs suspicion hardened the day she traced the supply records. One name appeared too oftenâdiscreet orders for blood storage equipment. Odd disposal requests. All routed through E. Voss, M.D.
Her stomach twisted. Could love be this blind?
She used her clearance to request security footage. Dozens of nights where Elias worked lateâtoo late. She visited his surgical suite, alone, under the pretense of returning a book.
The metallic scent of iron lingered beneath the disinfectant.
Then she found itâa small, locked refrigerator. Inside: blood bags. Patient ID tags. Numbered, labeled. A personal collection.
A scream built in her throat but never escaped.
That night, she didnât go home. She stayed at the station. Compiling, building a case she never imagined she'd need. Elias Vossâthe man who once traced poems into her backâwas the one turning people into ghosts.
Three nights later, she returned to his clinic with a warrant.
He was waiting, perfectly composed, as if he knew this moment would come.
âYou figured it out,â he said gently, hands behind his back.
âI did.â
âI was always careful.â
âYou got greedy,â she replied. âFifty was too many.â
He stepped toward her, slowly. âYou of all people should understand. You chase monsters. I remove them. I see what they are insideâonce the blood is gone.â
âDonât,â she warned, gun trembling in her hand.
âBut they were filth,â he said, voice rising. âChild abusers. Rapists. Wife-beaters. I chose them. I purified them!â
Lilaâs breath caught. She had read the files. Some of the victims⌠had records. But some were just sick. Dying. Ordinary people.
âYou didnât kill for justice,â she said. âYou killed because it felt good.â
Elias laughedâa hollow, chilling sound. âAnd yet, you loved me. Makes you wonder what that says about you.â
âI wonder every day,â she said, then snapped the cuffs around his wrists. âBut not tonight.â
As she led him out, media lights flashed, bathing the cold night in white fire. Elias smiled for the cameras.
âI gave them peace,â he whispered as they passed body #51, zipped in black.
Lila didnât look back.
---
Epilogue
Elias Voss was sentenced to 316 years without parole. In interviews, he remained eerily serene, often speaking of âthe beauty in emptying the body of pain.â
Detective Lila Harrow received commendations but turned down a promotion. Instead, she transferred to Missing Persons, far from hospitals, blood, and candles.
But sometimes, in the silence of night, she still heard him whisper:
âYou of all people should understand.â
And she wondered if, just maybe⌠she did.
About the Creator
Dr. D
I'm Dr.D a factional story writer
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Comments (2)
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