Chapter 22 Could it be pt. 2
Aleksander POV
The house is quiet, but my mind isn’t.
Dimitri is gone. The air feels stripped down to essentials: calculations, patterns, and what could have gone wrong.
Maria leans against the marble island, watching me like she’s bracing for whatever conclusion I’m about to reach — though she doesn’t yet know the depth of what I’ve deduced.
“I need to go back over that evening,” I say.
Her brows pull together. “The diner?”
“Yes.”
She nods slowly. “Okay.”
I reconstruct everything. Timing. Presence. Gaps.
“What time did you get there?”
“About eight thirty-five,” she says. “I walked in a few minutes after Mark.”
Mark.
I file that in. He arrived 8:30 PM, just before her.
“He’s always there on time?” I ask.
“Yes. I’ve worked there twelve years. If he’s late, it’s because of something unusual. Otherwise, he’s there at the same time every night.”
Twelve years. That is pattern. Habit. Predictability. And predictability can be exploited.
“Did he react when you came in?”
Maria blinks. “No… not in any unusual way. He was out back smoking, came inside after me, and started cooking.”
That matches my observation window.
“Did he know I was coming?”
She shakes her head. “No. None of us did.”
Good.
“Did he notice anything unusual when the man came in?”
Maria hesitates. “I… I didn’t see much. He didn’t yell. He didn’t panic. He just… kept doing what he was doing. Cooking.”
Exactly what I would expect.
“Did anyone else notice anything?”
“The regulars froze. They barely moved. I had to stay focused on keeping calm.”
Fear scrambles consistency. Observing subtle shifts can reveal more than interrogation ever could.
“Mark’s movements before the man entered?” I continue.
Maria thinks carefully. “He stepped out for a smoke like usual, but that night… maybe a few minutes longer than normal.”
That is a fracture. Timing. Small window. Five minutes could change everything.
“Did anyone ask questions or comment before the man arrived?”
“No. They were just finishing their meals.”
Perfect. Quiet. Predictable. But it only takes one deliberate observer to create a leak.
“Mark,” I say slowly, “did he behave differently, even slightly?”
Maria hesitates. “He… paused for a split second when the man came in. Then went right back to what he was doing.”
Split second. Enough to catch a trained eye. Enough to suggest recognition, fear, or disrupted expectation.
I step back, breathe, and map the possibilities.
“One detail,” I say finally. “I will return.”
Her eyes widen. “To the diner?”
“Yes.”
“That’s insane.”
“No. It’s controlled.”
Her lips press together, but she doesn’t argue further. She knows that I operate precisely, with no room for panic.
“If someone tried to kill you—” she begins.
“They will not expect me to return casually,” I interrupt.
Her eyes narrow. “And you’re going to sit there like nothing happened?”
“Exactly.”
She exhales, and I notice the tension in her shoulders — the very tension twelve years of habit could never fully hide.
“You will act normal,” I continue. “You will speak to Mark as you always have. No sudden moves. No forced questions.”
She nods slowly. “And if I signal you to leave?”
“You leave.”
Her jaw tightens. The set of it reminds me that she’s capable. Reliable. That twelve years of memory is more powerful than any observation I could deploy alone.
I study her for a long moment.
One spontaneous stop in a small-town diner, and she — her instincts, her presence — is now a key variable.
And if someone inside that diner thought I would not notice a split-second hesitation…
They miscalculated.
Because I respond precisely.
Quietly.
Calculated.
And tomorrow, observation begins