MasukMarcus didn't return to the station immediately after leaving the café. Instead, he drove aimlessly through the evening traffic, one hand resting on the steering wheel while the other tapped absently against the evidence envelope on the passenger seat.
The anonymous photograph sat inside it, protected from fingerprints, but not from questions. Whoever had mailed it hadn't asked for money, demanded attention, or issued a threat. They had simply nudged the investigation forward. That bothered him more than an outright warning would have. People who wanted revenge usually made themselves known, and people who wanted justice eventually came forward. Whoever was behind this seemed interested in something else entirely. His phone buzzed through the car's speakers. "Lena." "We got a hit," Officer Brooks said, her voice tight. Marcus straightened in his seat. "On what?" "The woman in the hat." His grip tightened on the wheel. "You identified her?" "No, but traffic cameras did." Marcus pulled into a quiet lay-by beneath a concrete overpass, killing the wipers. "Talk to me." Lena shuffled through what sounded like several printed pages. "We reviewed footage within a five-block radius of the cathedral. She appears three times before the ceremony and once afterward." "And then?" "She disappears." Marcus frowned. "People don't just disappear, Lena." "That's the strange part. At 10:52 a.m., she walks into an alley beside Hawthorne Street. There are only two exits from that alley." "I know it. Cameras cover both ends." "We checked both," Lena said, a tremor of disbelief in her voice. "She never comes out." Silence settled heavy between them. "Lena—" "I've watched the footage six times, Marcus. There are no side doors, no fire escapes she could reach, and no open windows. She enters the alley, and she never exits." Marcus thanked her and ended the call. He started the engine again, but his thoughts remained trapped in that narrow brick passage. People didn’t simply vanish into thin air. Not unless someone had prepared the place long before they arrived. Amelia unlocked her apartment just after seven. For the first time since the wedding, she felt something other than raw grief: curiosity. It frightened her. She tossed her keys into the ceramic bowl by the door and instantly froze. An envelope was lying on the hardwood hallway floor. Her heartbeat quickened. This one hadn't arrived through the mail; someone had slipped it directly beneath her door. She leaned forward and looked through the peephole, but the carpeted corridor was entirely empty. Only then did she pick it up. There was no stamp and no address. Only her name, written in careful, elegant handwriting. She carried it into the kitchen before tearing it open. Inside was a single folded sheet of paper. It wasn't a letter, but rather a page torn clean from an old appointment diary. A single date had been circled in heavy blue ink: September 14. Nothing else. Amelia searched her memory, but the date itself meant nothing out of context. She turned the page over, finding only a blank white backing. Whoever had left it wanted her to recognize the significance on her own. She walked into the spare room that still held unopened wedding gifts stacked against the wall. A cardboard box marked Keepsakes sat beneath the window. After a moment's hesitation, she lifted the dusty lid, digging past old photographs, birthday cards, and travel tickets until she unearthed a leather-bound planner from four years earlier. She flipped to September, her fingers stopping on the fourteenth. A short, handwritten note filled the square: Coffee with Ethan at 3:00 p.m. Amelia stared at the ink. Their very first date. She remembered it perfectly. Or, at least, she thought she did. Before she could process the thought, her phone rang. It was Marcus. "I was just about to call you," she said breathless. "I need to ask you something, Miss Hart," Marcus said without preamble. "When exactly did you first meet Ethan?" She looked down at the planner. "September fourteenth. Four years ago." Marcus was quiet on the other end line. "Why?" she asked. "Why are you asking me this now?" "Because someone wants us looking at that exact date." Amelia felt a chill creep through her chest as he continued. "I just found an envelope slipped under my apartment door. No stamp. Just a diary page." She blinked, gripping the counter. "What? I just found one too." "The same date?" "Yes. The same blue circle." Neither of them spoke for several seconds, the weight of the realization crashing down on them. Finally, Amelia broke the silence. "That's impossible." "No," Marcus's voice was flat, entirely devoid of emotion. "It means whoever is pulling the strings knows exactly where we both live." Outside Amelia's window, rain began tapping softly against the glass. She hadn't even noticed the dark clouds gathering over the city. "What do we do now?" Marcus looked through the windshield of his parked car, watching pedestrians hurry along the pavement with umbrellas raised against the sudden weather. "For now... we find out what really happened on your first date." Amelia almost laughed, the sheer absurdity of it washing over her. "I could tell you every detail right now, Detective. I was there." "I don't want what you remember," his answer caught her completely off guard. "I want what actually happened." The call ended a few minutes later, but neither of them moved. Miles apart, they found themselves thinking about the exact same autumn afternoon from four years ago. An ordinary coffee shop. An ordinary conversation. A beginning that no longer felt ordinary at all. And somewhere across the rain-slicked city, a pair of unseen hands carefully crossed another date off an old paper calendar. Only one remained.Marcus barely slept that night. The photograph left on his windshield sat on his desk at the precinct, sealed inside a plastic evidence sleeve. He had looked at it well enough to know every detail by heart, the angle, the shadows, even the faint reflection of Amelia in the car window. Whoever had taken it had not been careless. They had been close enough to observe them without attracting notice, then bold enough to leave proof of their presence.The next morning, he returned to Hawthorne Street with a warrant and a small forensic team.The chain on the warehouse door was removed carefully, photographed before anyone touched the metal. As the heavy doors groaned open, a stale, metallic smell drifted out into the damp morning air. The building had been abandoned for years, yet it wasn't empty.A single folding chair stood near the center of the concrete floor. Beside it was a small folding table holding a coffee cup, a notebook, and a pair of binoculars.Marcus crouched beside the cup,
By mid-afternoon, the rain had eased into a fine mist that clung to the pavement and softened the harsh edges of the city. Hawthorne Street was far quieter than Marcus remembered. Small repair shops sat squeezed between aging brick buildings, their faded signs hinting at local businesses that had survived more out of stubborn habit than actual profit.The alley marked on the anonymous map was easy enough to find. Narrow and utterly unremarkable, it was exactly the sort of place most people would walk past without a second glance. Amelia stood beside Marcus, her hands buried deep in the pockets of her winter coat. "This is where she disappeared?" Marcus nodded, his eyes scanning the bricks. "According to the traffic cameras." She looked from one end of the alley to the other, her brow furrowed. "There has to be another way out." "So I thought."They walked its length slowly, their footsteps echoing against the damp walls. A rusted fire escape zigzagged down the back of one building,
Rain lingered over the city well into the next morning, leaving the streets slick and the air cool enough to keep most people indoors. Marcus preferred weather like this. People hurried through it with their heads down, paying far less attention to who was watching them. He arrived at the newspaper office shortly before nine. Amelia was already waiting in the lobby with a cardboard archive box tucked beneath one arm. The dark circles under her eyes suggested she hadn't slept much, but there was a steadiness about her that hadn't been there the day after the wedding. "I brought everything I could find from around that time," she said as they walked toward a quiet, glass-walled conference room. "Old planners, receipts, photographs... even things I probably should've thrown away." Marcus smiled faintly. "People rarely throw away the things that matter."She looked at him. "You say that like you've done this before.""I've seen enough families solve old mysteries because someone kept
Marcus didn't return to the station immediately after leaving the café. Instead, he drove aimlessly through the evening traffic, one hand resting on the steering wheel while the other tapped absently against the evidence envelope on the passenger seat. The anonymous photograph sat inside it, protected from fingerprints, but not from questions. Whoever had mailed it hadn't asked for money, demanded attention, or issued a threat. They had simply nudged the investigation forward.That bothered him more than an outright warning would have. People who wanted revenge usually made themselves known, and people who wanted justice eventually came forward. Whoever was behind this seemed interested in something else entirely. His phone buzzed through the car's speakers. "Lena." "We got a hit," Officer Brooks said, her voice tight. Marcus straightened in his seat. "On what?" "The woman in the hat." His grip tightened on the wheel. "You identified her?" "No, but traffic cameras did."
The newsroom looked entirely different after two days away. The overhead televisions still hummed, reporters hurried between desks with half-finished coffees, and the sharp scent of printer ink lingered in the air. Yet Amelia felt like a ghost walking through someone else's life. Heads turned the moment she stepped out of the elevator. Some colleagues offered sympathetic smiles; others looked away, suddenly fascinated by their monitors. She preferred the ones who looked away. "Amelia." Her editor, Graham Foster, emerged from his corner office carrying a heavy stack of folders. He was in his late fifties, with a mop of silver hair and a habit of removing his reading glasses whenever a conversation actually mattered. He held his office door open and said, "Come inside." His office overlooked the city skyline, though today the blinds were drawn half-shut against the glare of the afternoon sun. "You've probably guessed why I asked you to come in," Graham began, setting the file
Detective Marcus Hale left Ethan’s apartment with far more questions than answers. The hallway outside was dead quiet, but his mind wasn't; he replayed the conversation as he walked toward the elevator, lingering on Ethan’s description of the strange woman from the construction site. "Do you believe people can disappear without leaving?"It wasn't a threat, and it wasn't even a warning. To Marcus, it sounded much more like someone testing whether Ethan was paying attention. The elevator doors opened with a soft chime, and Marcus stepped inside, pressing the button for the ground floor while watching his reflection in the brushed steel walls.After twenty-three years on the force, he’d learned to trust an instinct he could never fully justify in written reports. Cases spoke to him in different ways. Some were straightforward, leaving behind a trail of physical evidence that required nothing more than patience. Others seemed almost alive, revealing only what they wanted to reveal, pre







