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Chapter 14 - The Wrong Shape of Silence

CHAPTER 14: The Wrong Shape of Silence

The alley did not feel like a crime scene.

It felt like a mistake.

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Detective Izuora stood just outside the perimeter tape, her gaze fixed, unblinking, as though she were staring at a sentence written in the wrong language.

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The flashing lights washed over the walls in restless colors.

Too loud.

Too eager.

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The scene itself didn't match that energy.

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"Ma'am?"

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A uniformed officer approached cautiously.

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"They've secured the area. Forensics is ready."

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Izuora didn't answer immediately.

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Her eyes remained on the body.

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"Do you see it?" she asked.

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The officer hesitated.

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"See what, ma'am?"

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She stepped forward, slipping under the tape.

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"Look," she said simply.

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He followed.

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The body lay against the concrete in a position that resisted interpretation.

One arm bent awkwardly.

The torso twisted just slightly off-center.

The legs misaligned, as though placed and then second-guessed.

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"There was a struggle," the officer offered.

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"Yes," Izuora said.

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Too much of one.

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She crouched slowly, her gaze sweeping across the ground.

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Scuff marks.

Displaced dust.

Faint scratches along the wall.

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All loud.

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All uncontrolled.

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Her eyes returned to the body.

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"This wasn't placed," she said.

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The officer frowned.

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"But it looks like—"

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"It was forced," she corrected quietly.

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A pause.

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"Like someone trying to recreate something they didn't understand."

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The officer looked again.

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Really looked this time.

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And the illusion broke.

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The shape was wrong.

The intention was missing.

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"This isn't the same," he said under his breath.

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Izuora stood.

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"No," she replied.

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Her expression didn't change.

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But something in her mind had already shifted.

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Because this—

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was not escalation.

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This was deviation.

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And deviation meant variables.

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Back on campus—

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Life continued with irritating normalcy.

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Students crossed paths.

Laughter lingered in pockets of space.

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The world, as always, refused to notice when something had already gone wrong.

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Nora Eze sat in her lecture hall, pen moving steadily across her notebook.

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Department of Psychology

Behavioral Analysis — Pattern Recognition & Cognitive Filtering

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Her major was not a casual choice.

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It was alignment.

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The lecturer spoke about human tendency to impose order on chaos.

About how the brain filled gaps—

even when it shouldn't.

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Nora listened.

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Not passively.

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She absorbed.

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Her notes shifted.

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From lecture—

to application.

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Independent Observation Study

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Her pen moved with quiet certainty.

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Pattern A — Consistent temporal disturbance (3:17)

Pattern B — Newly observed anomaly (non-aligned)

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She paused.

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The second line remained underlined longer than necessary.

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Because it resisted her.

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It didn't fit.

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Didn't follow the structure she had mapped so carefully.

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Which meant—

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It wasn't part of it.

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Her gaze drifted slightly.

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Not to the lecturer.

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But inward.

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George.

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Stillness.

Control.

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Her pen tapped once.

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Subject A — stable within Pattern A

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A pause.

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Then, deliberately—

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No confirmed association with Pattern B

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She did not assume.

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She did not leap.

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She built.

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Slowly.

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Carefully.

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Because one wrong conclusion could collapse everything.

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Nora closed her notebook.

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Not finished.

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Just… adjusting the framework.

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Chris pushed open George's door without ceremony.

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"Guy, have you seen the news?"

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George sat by the window, a book resting open on his lap.

His wheelchair angled slightly toward the fading light outside.

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"I don't watch it," he said calmly.

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Chris stepped in, already pulling out his phone.

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"Yeah, well, maybe start," he muttered.

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George turned a page.

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"What happened?"

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Chris hesitated.

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"Another killing," he said.

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George's fingers paused briefly against the page.

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Then stilled.

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Chris continued, his voice lowering instinctively.

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"They're saying it might be connected to the previous ones."

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A beat.

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"But something's off."

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George looked up now.

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Chris frowned slightly, trying to piece together what he had just watched.

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"They're not giving details yet," he admitted. "Police are being tight about it."

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He scratched the back of his head.

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"But the way the reporter said it…"

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He trailed off.

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George said nothing.

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Chris exhaled.

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"Just—another body," he said finally. "And now everyone's starting to panic."

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Silence settled between them.

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George closed his book.

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Carefully.

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"Where?" he asked.

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"Downtown," Chris replied. "Some alley."

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George nodded once.

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Chris studied him for a second.

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"…You're taking this way too calmly," he said.

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George met his gaze.

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"What reaction would you prefer?"

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Chris blinked.

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"I don't know, man. Something human?"

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A flicker of something unreadable passed through George's eyes.

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Then it was gone.

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"People die every day," he said quietly.

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Chris didn't like that.

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Not because it was wrong.

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But because of how easily it was said.

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He shoved his phone back into his pocket.

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"Just… stay sharp, yeah?" he muttered.

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George inclined his head slightly.

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Chris left.

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The door clicked shut.

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The room fell still again.

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George didn't move at first.

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Then—

his fingers tapped once against the armrest of his wheelchair.

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Another killing.

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Connected.

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But withheld.

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Information restricted.

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That meant uncertainty.

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And uncertainty—

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meant something had broken pattern.

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George turned his wheelchair slightly, facing the window fully now.

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The city stretched beyond.

Layered.

Alive.

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His mind began to work.

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Not emotionally.

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Structurally.

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An alley.

Evening.

Unreleased details.

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Police holding information back—

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because they weren't sure what they were dealing with.

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That was the flaw.

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And flaws—

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left traces.

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His grip tightened slightly on the wheel.

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This wasn't expansion.

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It was intrusion.

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Someone else had entered the system.

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Not with understanding.

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But with impulse.

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And impulse—

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was loud.

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Loud enough to attract attention.

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Loud enough to collapse everything.

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George exhaled slowly.

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Then moved.

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His wheelchair rolled back from the window with quiet precision.

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The hunt had shifted.

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Not outward.

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Inward.

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Toward disruption.

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Because now—

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he wasn't searching for a victim.

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He was searching for the one who had dared to echo him—

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without permission.

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Across the city—

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The copycat sat in front of a flickering television.

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The news anchor's voice carried carefully measured urgency.

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"…authorities have confirmed a second killing. While details remain limited, sources suggest possible similarities to the previous cases…"

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The figure leaned forward.

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Eyes locked on the screen.

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Similarities.

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That was enough.

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They didn't hear what wasn't said.

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Didn't notice what was missing.

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Only what connected them.

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A slow smile crept across their face.

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Because they had done it.

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Not perfectly.

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But close enough to be included.

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Close enough to matter.

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Recognition.

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Even diluted—

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was intoxicating.

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Back on campus—

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Nora stood by her window, arms loosely crossed.

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The night stretched quietly before her.

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Her thoughts moved in structured layers.

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Pattern A.

Pattern B.

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Separation confirmed.

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But connection—

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still unproven.

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She didn't chase identity.

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Didn't assign roles.

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Only behavior.

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Two signatures now existed.

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One controlled.

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One unstable.

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And somewhere between them—

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truth waited.

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Patient.

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George moved through the evening air. Close to the copycat's crime scene.

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Not quickly.

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Not aimlessly.

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His wheelchair rolled along the pavement with steady, measured rhythm.

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He wasn't hunting blindly.

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He was thinking.

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Reconstructing.

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Because whoever had done this—

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had made a mistake.

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And mistakes—

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could be traced.

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His eyes moved across the city differently now.

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Not for opportunity.

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But for irregularity.

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Behavior that didn't belong.

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Movement without pattern.

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Someone nervous.

Unrefined.

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Someone trying too hard—

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or not enough.

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Because imitation always left cracks.

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And George—

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was very good at finding cracks.

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Somewhere far from him—

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sirens whispered into the night.

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Faint.

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Unimportant to most.

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But part of something larger.

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Something shifting.

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The city didn't know it yet.

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But the pattern had fractured.

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Not cleanly.

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Not intentionally.

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But enough.

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Enough for attention to gather.

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Enough for minds to turn.

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Enough—

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for the next move to matter more than the last.

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And somewhere within that growing tension—

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George searched.

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Nora calculated.

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Izuora observed.

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And the copycat—

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waited to be seen again.

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3:17

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