In every story, there was a villain. A character to despise, the one who stirred up the entire plot. In The Angel's Revenge, the main villain was named Ryker.
From the outside, he appeared harmless: handsome, successful, smart, and easily trusted. But behind that sinfully beautiful exterior lay a madman—a man to be feared for his ruthless ambition to get what he wanted.
Ryker hurt people, innocent or not. He had trampled over everyone in his way without mercy, which was why his own demise was just as horrific. Even so, many who read the story loved him. It wasn't because the audience had some missing screws in their preference for fiction; it was because Ryker was a villain with all the reasons to be one. He was a villain the audience understood from the bottom of their hearts, but someone they couldn't condone. Hence, he was one of the most important pieces in the story, because his end hurt the audience just as much as it made them heave a sigh of relief.