Jallaluddine
Enola Holmes herself took the photos of the newlyweds on the bridal altar. It was also Enola who heard the scream on the newlyweds' wedding night. When everyone frantically broke down the door to the bridal suite, they found the bed drenched in blood. The bride was lying on the floor, unconscious! Yet, her body was completely intact, without a single scratch. Then, whose blood was flooding the bed?
Thorne, the groom, had vanished. Was he dead, or had he been kidnapped? No one knew. But how exactly did Thorne escape from that bridal suite?
A few days later, Ninger, the bride, disappeared as well. All that remained was a pool of blood on the floor. Nancy, Ninger's cousin, was found unconscious in the room.
Enola racked her brain, consumed by curiosity over this chain of mysterious deaths. Later, she discovered the existence of a highly malignant disease-far more aggressive than brain cancer and more dangerous than the AIDS virus. The disease did not merely destroy blood cells; it left its victims dead, without a trace of their bodies!