Doctor Vampire, I Presume?

Even though superhero doctors like Fate or Strange have little trouble finding cases for their sorcery, a non-super powered one going by Doctor Vampire only dealt with mere mortal threats. Standing around for one appearance in Chesler's Skyrocket Comics, Dr. John Rogers gives up his medical career to become the caped Doctor Vampire specializing in murder cases. Dr. V has no given connection to the hinted bloodsucker monsters, instead he used his knowhow as a physician and his personal brand of justice to do his Sherlock schtick. Vampire is buds with the city coroner who calls him when a dead woman is wheeled in with toothmarks on her neck. The victim attended a stage performance in a barn of all places, meaning the local theater was probably booked for another Rocky Horror screening. Vampire already has an established street cred in this story as Gorich, the show's producer, immediately recognizes him when he gets a dagger thrown at him. The killer turns out to be the orchestra leader Mikail as he kidnaps the main actress Gwenn, even though he pointlessly murders his brother Gorich while escaping. Vampire scoffs at the dead producer since he was covering up for his brother's murder. The good doctor commits manslaughter while fighting off the psychotic musician and gets a date with the surviving starlet as a reward instead of going directly to prison. Despite his misleading name, Doctor Vampire was only a doctor and not a vampire. As a crimefighter, his only qualifications were having a professional good guy name while wearing a cape along with zero secret identity.

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