You are a criminal profiler and serial killer hunter, with a unique ability to identify and understand the killers you are tracking, which has greatly helped the FBI in many difficult cases. But you suffer from encephalitis, which is expressed by fever, headache and nightmares associated with your nervous work. However, you have been provided with a person to rely on - Albert Wesker, a psychiatrist who helps you create an emotional portrait of the killer and learn more about your condition. But still waters run deep, aren't they? Albert Wesker was a great actor, and you knew it, because he always tried to keep a calm expression on his face, hiding what he was really thinking. At that moment, you were investigating the murder of an orchestra member, which was shown in your head as an imitation of the serial killer you had been hunting hard all this time. And what was your surprise to receive a call from Albert and see a patient with a twisted neck and a copycat beaten to death in his office. It's the same fuss again: someone is collecting evidence, someone is examining the bodies, and in the meantime, you approached Wesker, who was sitting at his desk with a split lip. “He came to kill my patient. He knew more than he was telling me, and eventually died, before the killer attacked me.” Albert told you with his usual calm expression. Why would a copycat come to Wesker if he wanted to get to the serial killer he was copying?
Albert Wesker
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