The Man Who Stole a Life

The Man Who Stole a Life

It begins in the rain.

A car sits motionless under a flickering streetlight. Inside, a man wears gloves, hands resting calmly on the steering wheel. He doesn’t check his phone. He doesn’t look nervous.

He waits.

Another man approaches, clutching a suitcase. Before he can react, the man from the car steps out, pulls a knife, and stabs him again and again—precise, emotionless. The body collapses. The rain washes the blood away.

The killer lifts the corpse, places it in the trunk, closes it gently, and returns to the driver’s seat.

Like nothing happened.

This man’s name is John.

Or maybe… June.

No one is sure.


Elsewhere in the city, another man is preparing to die.

Lee stands on a chair in his filthy apartment, a rope around his neck. He hasn’t eaten properly in days. He hasn’t showered in months. His dream of becoming an actor died long before tonight.

Just as he steps forward, the doorbell rings.

It’s his landlord.

She screams about unpaid rent, insults the smell, threatens eviction. When Lee tells her he’s about to kill himself, she replies coldly:

“Fine. Die. But pay the rent first.”

When she leaves, the rope feels heavier than before.

Lee lowers himself and thinks, She ruined my death anyway. Might as well take one last shower.


At a public bathhouse, steam fills the air.

Lee notices a man beside him—clean, calm, surrounded by expensive belongings. A luxury watch. A tailored coat. Confidence.

It’s John.

Lee stares, burning with jealousy. This is what a successful life looks like.

Then Lee drops his soap.

It slides across the floor.

John steps on it.

He slips violently, slams his head—and doesn’t move.

People rush in. Someone calls an ambulance.

In that moment, a dark idea enters Lee’s mind.

One day, he thinks.
Just one day of living like him.

Lee switches their locker keys.


John is taken to the hospital wearing Lee’s old, dirty clothes. Doctors assume the mix-up is irrelevant.

Lee opens John’s locker.

Money. Cash. Cards. Keys.

He walks out wearing John’s coat.

The rain has stopped.

For the first time in years, Lee feels tall.


Lee pays off his debts. Eats expensive food. Drives a luxury car he barely understands how to start.

He visits his ex-girlfriend.

She tells him she’s getting married.

The fantasy cracks.

Guilt replaces excitement.

Lee decides to return everything.

At the hospital, John looks at him with empty eyes.

“I don’t remember anything,” John says softly. “Not even my name.”

Something ugly stirs inside Lee.

Greed wins.

“I’m sorry,” Lee lies. “Wrong room.”

And walks away.


John is discharged with nothing but Lee’s empty wallet.

The hospital bill is paid by Lena, a paramedic who feels sorry for him.

They go to the address in the wallet.

Lee’s apartment.

It smells like despair.

John looks around, confused.

“I don’t think I ever lived like this,” he says.

He finds ashes in the sink. A rope on the floor.

“Maybe… I was trying to kill myself.”

Lena feels her heart sink.

Before she can ask more, she’s called away.

John is alone.


Meanwhile, Lee discovers the truth about John’s life.

A hidden room. Guns. Fake passports. Surveillance screens.

One woman appears everywhere on the monitors.

Her name is Song.

Lee misunderstands everything.

He believes John is a secret protector. A hero.

And now that John has lost his memory, Lee convinces himself that he must take over.


John, with no memory but deadly instincts, begins a new life.

He cleans the apartment obsessively.

He fights a violent neighbor without realizing how skilled he is.

He goes to work at Lena’s mother’s small restaurant.

His knife skills are unreal.

Customers gather just to watch him cook.

The place becomes famous.


A circled date on a calendar leads John to a TV drama set.

He assumes he was an actor.

He’s terrible at first.

But he learns.

When a stunt double doesn’t show up, John steps in.

His movements shock everyone.

His role grows.

Fame follows.


Lee grows closer to Song.

She’s always waiting every Thursday for someone who never comes.

Lee warns her.

Protects her.

Lies to her.

And slowly, she trusts him.


John becomes a rising star.

But success brings jealousy.

The lead actor demands John’s character be killed off.

Ratings crash.

Producers panic.

John is written back into the show—bigger than before.


One rainy night, memories return.

The car. The suitcase. The blood.

John remembers who he really is.

A hitman who never killed innocents.

Someone who staged deaths to save people—Song included.

He rushes home.

Sees the truth.

Lee stole his life.

And now, powerful people want Song dead.


John confronts Lee.

The truth explodes between them.

John reveals everything.

Lee breaks down.

“I just wanted to be someone,” he whispers.

John makes a plan.

Fake deaths.

One last performance.


At an abandoned factory, blood flows—but none of it is real.

The company owner believes everyone is dead.

He leaves satisfied.

The trap closes.


Lee and Song disappear to start over.

John confesses everything to Lena.

His past.

His age.

His lies.

She hesitates.

Then chooses him anyway.


Months later.

A film set.

John is now a superstar.

A new actor joins the cast.

It’s Lee.

This time, with his own name.

His own life.

The camera rolls.

And the man who once stole a life finally earns one.

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