Status: Active – Black Lotus Syndicate – Rival
In the world of crime, brute force can break bones, but true power breaks minds. A master of psychological warfare, deception, and manipulation, Ultraviolet is one of the most feared and enigmatic members of the Black Lotus Syndicate. Unlike assassins who strike with steel, she wields doubt, fear, and suggestion, making her victims question what is real, who to trust, and whether they were ever in control at all. To those who cross the Black Lotus, she is an invisible force—they may never see her, but she leaves them spiraling in their own mind, haunted by whispers, ruined by their own choices. Like ultraviolet light, her presence is unseen—until the damage has already been done.
Born into Shadows, Raised in the Mind
She was born Natalia “Nia” Vondrák-Halvorsen in Oslo, Norway, to a Czech mother and a Norwegian father, both of whom lived in the shadows of power. Her mother, Dr. Petra Vondrák, was a renowned behavioral psychologist in Prague, known for her work in cognitive manipulation, interrogation resistance, and the psychology of control. Her father, Erik Halvorsen, was a former Norwegian intelligence officer, operating in diplomatic espionage and counterintelligence. From a young age, Nia understood the world was not shaped by those who shouted the loudest, but by those who controlled the whispers. Her mother taught her that the human mind is both fragile and powerful, that a well-placed thought can break a man faster than any knife. Her father taught her that words could shape the course of history—that the right whisper at the right time could topple governments, destroy careers, or turn allies into enemies. By fifteen, she could read people with terrifying accuracy, understanding their fears, desires, and weaknesses. By eighteen, she was studying clinical psychology, specializing in behavioral manipulation, hypnosis, and cognitive warfare. By twenty-one, she was recruited into Norway’s intelligence community, where she was trained in interrogation, deception, and psychological dismantling. She didn’t need to torture people. She made them confess, betray, or break on their own.
The Death of Nia, The Birth of Ultraviolet
Her work in psychological intelligence made her an invaluable asset, but it also made her dangerous. She knew too much, saw too much, understood too much. When an operation to turn a Russian oligarch into an informant went wrong, Nia was betrayed by her own handlers. They framed her as a rogue agent, left her to take the fall, and erased her from official records. She should have been imprisoned, silenced, or killed. Instead, she vanished. That was the day Nia Vondrák-Halvorsen ceased to exist. Months later, Dark Angel found her in Hong Kong, where she had already reinvented herself in the world of high-stakes psychological manipulation. Under the Black Lotus, she became Ultraviolet—a woman who could plant thoughts like seeds, destroy men with whispers, and leave behind nothing but questions and regrets.
The Art of Illusion
Ultraviolet is not a fighter, she doesn’t need to be. She makes enemies turn on themselves—with rumors, planted evidence, and carefully crafted paranoia. She doesn’t just lie—she makes people believe what they fear most. She can erase a person without touching them—make them disappear from their own life through social engineering, mind games, and psychological dismantling. She operates in the high society of Hong Kong, blending into elite circles of politicians, bankers, and power brokers. They never suspect that the calm, poised woman sipping wine at their table is already rewriting their fate. Like the light beyond human sight, her influence is invisible but undeniable—by the time they realize they were played, it’s already too late.
The Ultraviolet Code
Ultraviolet believes in subtlety, patience, and inevitability. She follows three unbreakable rules: Reality is only what people believe. If she controls perception, she controls everything. A man who believes he is guilty will act guilty, run, or confess—even if he did nothing wrong. Minds break faster than bodies. Fear, doubt, and suggestion are deadlier than any bullet. Given the right nudge, people destroy themselves. The most powerful weapon is the one they don’t see. Ultraviolet never strikes directly. She creates the conditions for someone to fall on their own. When she’s done, her victims don’t even know she was ever there.
A Dangerous Attraction
In a world of deception and power struggles, some battles aren’t fought with bullets—they’re fought with glances, whispered words, and the tension of knowing that one wrong move could destroy everything. Ultraviolet and Viking Thunder should be enemies. He is brash, direct, a force of nature, while she thrives in control, misdirection, and quiet destruction. His world is one of violence and loyalty, hers is one of secrets and betrayal. And yet, they can’t stay away from each other. Their relationship is clandestine, dangerous, and built on a foundation of knowing that one day, they might be forced to take each other down. In the eyes of the underworld, they represent rival factions—the brutal force of the 332 Gang against the calculated influence of the Black Lotus Syndicate. It started as a test of wills, each trying to outmaneuver the other, to see who would break first. But over time, it became something neither of them expected—something real. Ultraviolet is the only person who can get inside Viking Thunder’s head, who sees the strategy beneath the chaos, the vulnerability beneath the strength. Viking Thunder is the only man who makes Ultraviolet feel something beyond the cold precision of her work, the only one who can shake her carefully constructed reality. They meet in secret, always aware that the moment they are discovered, everything they’ve built could come crashing down. They never talk about the future. They don’t ask for promises, don’t expect safety, don’t allow themselves to believe that this can last. But in the rare moments when they’re alone, when the rest of the world fades, when there are no lies, no power plays, just them—Ultraviolet lets herself believe in something dangerous. And Viking Thunder? He lets himself fall for the one woman he knows he can never truly have.
The Woman You Never See Coming
By day, Ultraviolet is a high-end psychological consultant, advising billionaires, corporate leaders, and politicianson how to protect themselves from deception, only to use those very same techniques against them. By night, she is the silent architect of Black Lotus’ most sophisticated mind games, ensuring their enemies never know what’s real and what’s a carefully designed illusion. By the time they realize they were played, it’s already too late. And if Viking Thunder ever becomes a threat? She will do what she does best—make him believe it was always his idea to let her go.