Arun realizes the killer isn't a random brute. He is someone clean, patient, and invisible. A man who works in plain sight. 🏥 The Confrontation
While the senior police officers chase known local criminals, Arun studies the origami rabbits. He notices a pattern in the folds: Ratsasan
Silas is a soft-spoken man, loved by the students because he communicates using magic tricks and paper art. Arun walks into Silas's basement clinic unannounced and finds a half-finished origami rabbit on the desk. 🪤 The Twist Arun realizes the killer isn't a random brute
A quiet hill station is paralyzed by fear. Three teenage girls have vanished in three weeks. No ransom calls. No forensic evidence. Just a single signature left at each scene: a small, handmade origami rabbit soaked in red ink. The local media dubs the killer 🔍 The Protagonist 🏥 The Confrontation While the senior police officers
In a high-stakes game of cat and mouse in the dark, surrounded by the eerie echoes of broken piano strings, Arun must use his knowledge of movie sound design and human psychology to outwit a physical monster and rescue the fourth victim before the clock runs out.
The red ink isn't ink at all—it is a rare chemical used to preserve biological specimens.
Just as Arun moves to arrest him, his walkie-talkie buzzes. Another body has been found across town, killed just an hour ago. Dr. Silas has a perfect alibi—he was conducting hearing tests on fifty students all afternoon.