To each his own serial bad guy. VIDEO

viernes, marzo 13, 2026

 To each his own serial bad guy. VIDEO

 To each his own serial bad guy. VIDEO 2

It was a phrase Kym had once overheard in a diner near the state line, spoken by a trucker nursing black coffee and a cigarette, laughing with his buddy about some true-crime podcast. “heck,” the man had said, “ain’t we all got one? The one who got away, the one who haunts your dreams, the one you swear you’d unalive yourself if you ever found him?” His friend had chuckled, nodded, lit another smoke. They hadn’t meant it literally. But Kym, sitting two booths over with a cold plate of eggs, had felt the words like a key turning in a lock he didn’t know existed.


Because it was true.


Not everyone’s serial bad guy wore a mask or left bodies in ditches. Some wore wedding rings. Some wore uniforms. Some wore the faces of fathers, teachers, priests, uncles—men who never raised a hand in violence but whose silence carved canyons in the souls of those they were meant to protect. Their crimes weren’t counted in coroner’s reports but in the hollows under eyes, in the way a woman flinches at a raised voice, in the child who stops speaking altogether.


Kym had unalived five men. But he knew, with chilling clarity, that each of them had been someone else’s monster long before he arrived.


The mortician’s victim had SA'd three girls in his parish and walked free because “boys will be boys.” 

The librarian’s target had falsified records to keep a predator employed at the youth center for twelve years. 

The soldier’s stepfather had beaten his mother until her ribs cracked like dry twigs, then smiled at neighbors while she limped to the mailbox. 

The boy’s uncle had sold his sister to men who left her in an alley with her throat slit and no one asked why. 

And Kym’s own first unalive—the man in the raincoat—had taken dozens, maybe hundreds, of girls like his sister. No one had looked. No one had listened. Until Kym made them.


So yes. To each his own serial bad guy.


Not the kind the news sensationalized with grainy footage and dramatic music. But the kind who lived next door. The kind who said grace before dinner. The kind whose evil wasn’t loud, but patient—woven into the fabric of ordinary life until it became invisible.


That was the real horror. Not the sharp object in the dark, but the hand that patted your head while stealing your voice.


Now, the woman sat across from him, her fingers resting on the open notebook where they had written the name of the girl found by the river. She looked up, her eyes tired but clear.


“I had one too,” she said.


Kym didn’t ask who. He didn’t need to.


“He never touched me,” she continued. “Not like that. But he watched. Always watched. From the porch across the street. From the car that idled too long at the bus stop. He never spoke. Never approached. But I knew. And no one believed me when I said I felt hunted.”


Kym nodded. “Because he left no evidence.”


“Only fear,” she said. “And fear doesn’t count in court.”


“He’s still out there,” Kym said. It wasn’t a question.


She shook her head. “He passed away last year. Heart attack. They gave him a full obituary. ‘Beloved community member.’” She laughed, bitter and sharp. “No one mentioned the girls.”


Silence settled between them, thick with the ghosts of the unseen.


Kym stood and walked to the shelf where the wooden box sat—the one holding the five relics. He opened it and placed inside a single river stone, smooth and gray, that he’d picked up weeks ago during one of his walks along the shore.


“For her,” he said. “The girl by the river.”


The woman watched him, then reached into her pocket and pulled out a small hair ribbon—faded blue, frayed at the edges. She placed it beside the stone.


“For me,” she said.


They didn’t speak of vengeance. They didn’t speak of justice in the legal sense. They spoke in offerings. In remembrance. In the quiet defiance of naming what the world had tried to erase.


Outside, the wind carried the scent of salt and pine. Somewhere in the distance, a siren wailed—brief, mournful, human.


Kym looked at her. “You don’t need a bad guy anymore.”


She met his gaze. “No,” she said. “I just needed someone who knew mine existed.”


And in that moment, the myth of the crimson predator dissolved like mist in morning light.


What remained was not a monster.


But a man who had once unalived so others wouldn’t have to live with theirs.


And a woman who finally knew she wasn’t alone.


But not tonight.


Tonight, there was only this room. This silence. This shared breath.


And the slow, sacred work of remembering those the world forgot.

You Might Also Like

0 comments

Compartir en Instagram

Popular Posts

Like us on Facebook