Hong Kong is known as one of the world’s leading financial hubs, home to immense wealth, towering skylines, and global influence. But beneath that image of prosperity lies a different reality. For many, survival is a daily struggle, shaped by deep income inequality and limited opportunity. Fahn Man-yee was one of those people. Abandoned as an infant and raised in an orphanage, she was forced to navigate the world on her own by the age of 15. Her life was marked by hardship: homelessness, addiction, and instability. But by 1999, she was trying to turn things around. She had a newborn son, and she was determined to build a safer, more stable life for him. She worked where she could, doing what she could to survive. But desperation can lead to difficult choices. After stealing a wallet from a client, Fahn found herself entangled with someone far more dangerous than she may have realized, a man connected to organized crime. He demanded not only the return of what was taken, but a much larger sum she simply didn’t have. Fahn returned the wallet. She tried to make things right. But she wasn’t given time. What happened next would shock Hong Kong and leave a lasting mark on the city’s history. A case so disturbing that it became known around the world as the Hello Kitty murder. This story reminds us that evil is everywhere. And sometimes, the most unsettling stories are not just about violence but about vulnerability, power, and the consequences of being forgotten.