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Chapter 4

Author: Seventeen
The two officers who brought me here rushed over to restrain the middle-aged officer.

"Captain Beckett, what's going on? Calm down, sir..."

Why was this middle-aged officer furious with me? What did he mean by that outburst?

I didn't stop to think. "My boyfriend's life is in danger. Please, you have to—"

"Danger?" His glare sharpened, his voice like a whip. "The police station is swamped right now. Don't waste police resources with your petty relationship drama!"

What? Relationship drama?

He turned on his heel and stormed away.

A few minutes later, another officer approached me with an explanation. "This afternoon, you said your boyfriend had been missing for a month, correct?"

I nodded. "Yes."

"Edmund Rhodes. Twenty-four." He rattled off my boyfriend's information.

"Yes!" I nodded again.

"He's not missing," the officer replied flatly. "Last month, he went back to his hometown. Every Saturday, he calls his parents there. In fact, we just got off the phone with him."

"That's impossible!" I snapped. "He hasn't contacted me for a month!"

"We asked him. He told us he's broken up with you."

My legs gave out. I collapsed into the chair, numb.

Deep down, I'd already accepted that possibility—that he had simply chosen not to reach out. But hearing it confirmed, so bluntly, shattered me all over again.

And now, I understood Captain Beckett's anger. He thought I was clinging to Edmund, unwilling to let go, and had fabricated this story about danger to trick the police into helping me track him down.

But no, wait—just moments ago, Edmund himself had called me, begging for help!

"That's not true!" I insisted. "He really did call me for help!"

The officer's patience frayed. His tone sharpened. "Do you realize false reports can get you detained? I'm giving you only a verbal warning this time."

He didn't believe me.

"But I really—"

He raised a hand, cutting me off, then pulled out his phone. After a few taps, he thrust it toward me. "This is Edmund's number, isn't it?"

"Yes!" I recognized it instantly.

He dialed, put it on speaker.

"Hello?" Edmund's voice answered.

"Tell your girlfriend clearly. Stop filing false reports," the officer barked.

"Edmund? You're okay?" I burst out.

"We've broken up," he said coldly.

"Then what about the call just now? You begged me to save you. What was that all about?"

"I never called you," he replied, baffled.

I froze. My mind blanked.

The officer hung up and tucked away his phone. Then he arranged for a police car to drive me home.

I refused. I explained again and again that I had heard Edmund's desperate cries.

That was when the officer looked at me strangely, as if weighing his words. "Have you been to a hospital recently?"

I understood immediately. He thought I was mentally unstable.

First, I had claimed to find human skin with my boyfriend's tattoo in a bowl of soup. Then I'd insisted he was in mortal danger. Their investigations had turned up nothing but contradictions. To them, I was delusional.

If I were in their place, I might suspect the same.

Shaken, I left the police station.

Had Edmund's departure broken me so badly that I'd actually lost my grip on reality? Was I truly sick?

I resolved to get checked tomorrow.

But the moment I stepped back into my apartment, my phone rang again.

It was Edmund.

"Just now, that wasn't me! Amanda, help me! Help—"

The line cut out mid-scream.

Just now… that person wasn't him?
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  • Soup Shop Mystery   Chapter 12

    Of course, it had been a crime of impulse, and afterward Brendan was consumed with regret.In the end, he chose to grind Edmund's corpse into meat and offal, mixing only small amounts into each batch he supplied to buyers. Fearful of exposure, he kept the portions minimal and sent his men out daily to keep their ears open for any sign of trouble.When I reported to the police, and Roger's shop was investigated, Brendan's men rushed to inform him.Brendan weighed his options and decided the simplest solution was to frame Roger. They had done business often; he knew Roger was timid and soft-spoken, the kind of man easiest to pin the blame on. Before Roger returned home, Brendan had Edmund's phone and a few pieces of his remains planted in Roger's house, then ordered his men to keep me and Roger under constant surveillance.At first, Roger had no intention of killing me or taking the blame himself. His plan was to frame me. That was why he tried to forge medical records at the hospita

  • Soup Shop Mystery   Chapter 11

    Afraid the truth would come out?Now I finally understood. She thought I was the one who killed Edmund, and that was why she was so certain I wouldn't dare call the police.But she guessed wrong.If it wasn't Roger, and it wasn't his wife, then who killed Edmund?The police brought us both back for questioning. They grilled me in detail, but in the end, they let go of their suspicions.The truth slowly emerged. After Roger noticed something odd about me on the shop's surveillance footage, he went home and discovered Edmund's phone, along with pieces of a corpse. He assumed his wife had killed Edmund.Silent and awkward with words, Roger decided to take the blame for her. That was why everything unfolded the way it did.But here was the problem: ever since Roger found Edmund's phone, there had been no SIM card inside. Which meant none of the calls I'd received ever came from him.And his wife… she hadn't known anything. She hadn't even realized there were body parts hidden in he

  • Soup Shop Mystery   Chapter 10

    The realization struck me like lightning—the lines in the script were meant only for performance effect; they were not necessarily true.Maybe I really had been overthinking things. Otherwise, none of it made sense.Back home, I forced myself not to dwell on it. But when night fell, the unanswered questions resurfaced one by one.If that final call truly had come from Roger, then he must have intended to kill me after all.Yet he was always so cautious—meticulous enough to use my identity information to get into a psychiatric hospital. How could someone like him make such a sloppy attempt on my life? A dull knife? Giving me the chance to escape?It didn't add up. No matter how I turned it over in my mind, I couldn't make sense of it.I spent the entire night sleepless.Near dawn, I rose and headed to the bathroom. That was when I heard footsteps outside in the corridor.At first, I thought it was a neighbor returning from a night shift, or perhaps someone leaving early for work

  • Soup Shop Mystery   Chapter 9

    "Maybe… maybe they just hadn't planned it out properly?" I ventured.But the officer shook his head. "We've had the same suspicion before. We even summoned Roger's wife for questioning, but she seemed completely unaware. Based on our experience, she wasn't lying. That means she most likely didn't kill anyone and had no idea what Roger was up to.""But…" I tried to argue."Court is tomorrow. The case is already closed. Roger has seen his wife since his arrest. If your guess is right, he'd change his testimony in court," the officer said.I could only sigh. "I hope my doubts are unnecessary.""No," the officer countered. "They're not unnecessary. I also believe there are many unresolved questions. But the evidence was solid enough for us to close the case and proceed to trial. I can't change tomorrow's hearing date, but I promise you, we'll keep investigating afterward."On the day of the trial, I went as a witness.But things didn't unfold as I'd imagined. Roger confessed to ever

  • Soup Shop Mystery   Chapter 8

    Edmund had always been timid. Under Roger's threats, it wasn't impossible that he would have followed him willingly.Everything seemed to line up.But there was one flaw I couldn't reconcile: if Roger was so cautious, why would he suddenly leave me alone while trying to kill me, giving me time to escape?Roger explained that he had a sudden change of heart—he regretted it and decided not to kill me.The police accepted that explanation, especially since he hadn't resisted at all when they arrested him.Half a year passed. The police tightened the chain of evidence, and the case was officially closed. The trial was about to begin.But I still hadn't escaped the shadow of Edmund's death.I kept wondering if I hadn't been so harsh that night, if I hadn't driven him away, would any of this have happened?The question haunted me. I turned it over in my mind day after day, until at last, I uncovered something that didn't fit.Maybe Roger wasn't the one who killed Edmund at all.…

  • Soup Shop Mystery   Chapter 7

    "You'd better come back. We'll be waiting," the officer said, still sounding unconvinced."Don't waste time! This is a matter of life and death. What are you doing? Roger can mimic other people's voices! You said Edmund wasn't missing, but no one has seen him for nearly a month! And I have recordings. I'll head over right now, but you can't delay!"After a long pause, the officer reluctantly agreed.With the police involved, my fear eased. I rushed back.When I reached the building, two officers were already escorting Roger downstairs in handcuffs."Sorry," one of them said, "we misjudged you. The problem is, his setup was too clever. He even used your identity to visit a psychiatric hospital, pretending to be a patient. We found the medical record under your name…""Where's Edmund?" I cut him off.The officer hesitated before finally replying, "I'm sorry. We found some body parts. They're most likely Edmund's. He was killed long ago."Killed long ago?"That's impossible! He's

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