The prosecutor’s finger stops halfway down the page and the entire building seems to hold its breath. Thirty-one names stare back in cold black ink: CEOs who sign billion-dollar deals before breakfast, managers who tucked Yu Menglong in after late-night rehearsals, stylists who wiped his tears then posted “he’s fine” on Weibo, publicists who drafted “mental health break” statements while ignoring the suicide notes in his phone. Thirty-one human beings who watched a twenty-something boy unravel thread by thread and decided the comeback schedule mattered more than the noose he was tying.

One document just detonated the myth that Yu Menglong died alone. He died in a crowded room no one admits exists, a room built from group chats labeled “crisis management,” from boardroom tables where they calculated how much scandal a dead idol costs versus a living liability, from private jets where champagne flowed while his unread messages piled up like unpaid debts. They saw the weight loss, the trembling hands, the 3 a.m. voice notes that begged “please make it stop.” And thirty-one times the answer came back: smile wider, post the dance practice, keep the brand happy.
Now the names are public and the empire shakes. Phones go dark. Assistants delete apps. Wives ask husbands why they look like ghosts. Somewhere a junior artist reads the list and realizes the person who told her “it gets better” last month is number seventeen. Another idol stares at number nine—his own manager—and understands for the first time why doors suddenly lock from the outside.
This is no longer a tragedy; it is a crime scene with thirty-one sets of fingerprints on the weapon. And the most terrifying part? Investigators keep saying the same sentence in hushed corridors: “This is only the first list.”
The circle is widening. Every signature exposed pulls another thread, and the whole glittering tapestry of fame starts to rip. Contracts that looked like lifelines now read like death warrants. Smiles that once sold perfume now look like masks hiding complicity. The question burning through every dorm, every penthouse, every anonymous burner account tonight is simple and brutal: if thirty-one people could stand by and watch a gentle boy die for profit, how many hundreds more are still choosing silence right now?
Yu Menglong’s blood is on more hands than anyone dared imagine. The reckoning has names, addresses, and receipts. And it is only getting started.
Whose name do you think is next? Say it loud—someone out there is already packing a bag.
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