LOGINSaoirse POV
Priya came to the new apartment on a Saturday at eleven.
I had been preparing for it all week. Not the apartment, the apartment was ready, had been ready since Siobhán lined the shelves I had been preparing the version of myself that was going to receive my best friend for the first time since the night I had lied to her by omission about a thing I was, for the foreseeable future, never going to be able to tell her.
I made coffee in the small French press I had bought myself the day after moving in. I set out two mugs. I put a plate of small things on the table the orange shortbread she liked, the dried apricots she pretended not to like and ate all of and I sat in my chair by the window and I rehearsed, one more time, the shape of the conversation I was about to have.
She buzzed at eleven-oh-three.
I let her in.
──
Priya in my doorway was a thing I had not been prepared for, even with a week of preparation.
She looked at me. Her eyes did the small inventory eyes do when a person who loves you has not seen you in two weeks during which something they cannot name has changed about you. She did not comment on the wrap on my wrist. She had seen it last week. She did not comment on the apartment, though her eyes registered it, and registered the trees through the window, and registered I watched this happen the small fact that there was no second mug on the drying rack.
She crossed the threshold.
She put her arms around me.
She held me for a long time, the way Priya holds people who are not telling her something, which is to say: without asking, without pressing, without making the hug itself a question I would have to answer.
I held her back.
I did not cry. I had decided, in the week of preparation, that I was not going to cry. Priya already carried enough.
──
We sat. We drank coffee. She ate the apricots.
She asked me, gently, about the apartment. About the move. About my mother. I gave her the small ordinary answers a woman gives her oldest friend on a Saturday morning, and I watched, the whole time, the careful operation of the muscles in my own face, calibrating each sentence the way I had once calibrated sentences for Derek.
I want to tell you what that calibration cost me.
Priya was not Derek. Priya was the person I had been least careful with for fifteen years. I had told Priya things across our friendship that I had told no one else. The two of us had a vocabulary of trust we had built over a decade and a half, and the calibration I was running with her that morning the careful sentence-by-sentence engineering of a truth I could not give her was a violation of that vocabulary that I, not Marcus, was committing.
I was the violator, here.
That sat in my chest the whole time she was in my apartment.
──
At some point, near the end of the coffee, Priya said: “God, I’m exhausted. Work has been unhinged. We’ve been running cases through this new AI thing the office bought last year, and the volume’s gone through the roof. I think it’s a good tool. I think it’s also making me crazy.”
I said: “An AI thing?”
“Some predictive tool. Sorts cases by risk tier. We’re supposed to escalate the highest-tier ones through their system instead of through the regular channels. Faster review, in theory.” She rolled her eyes. “In practice, I escalate a case, it disappears into their review queue, and I get a closure note three weeks later. I have no idea what they’re actually doing with them.”
She laughed.
I did not laugh. I made the shape of a laugh with my face. Inside, I made a small private note that the name of the AI thing was something I was going to ask her, very carefully, about another time. Not today. Today was not the day to gather data from my best friend like a homicide detective taking statements.
I said: “Sounds awful.”
She said: “It’s awful in the way good tools are awful. I keep telling myself it’s helping somebody.”
I drank my coffee.
──
She left at twelve forty.
At the door, she stopped, and she looked at me for a long second.
She said: “Saoirse. If you ever if there’s a thing you need to tell me. About any of it. About Derek. About the night. About what comes next. There’s nothing you could say that I would not handle.”
I looked at her.
I said, with the steady voice I had been practicing: “I know.”
She nodded.
She went down the stairs.
I closed the door, and I stood with my forehead against the wood for the length of one breath, and then I straightened up and I picked up my keys and I went out, because I could not stay in that apartment for another minute with the residue of a lie I had just told the one person in my life I had never, before this autumn, lied to.
──
I walked to the small café on Cortelyou Road that I had been visiting on Saturdays.
I ordered a coffee I did not need. I sat at the window.
And about four minutes into the sitting, I felt it.
The specific cold quality at the back of my neck. The arm-hairs. The body-knowing. I did not turn around. I did not scan the room. I sat with my hands wrapped around the second coffee of the morning and I let my body register the fact that I was being looked at not by the man across the table reading on his phone, not by the woman with the dog by the door, but by someone whose attention had the specific shape I had only ever felt once before, in my own living room, at 9:47 on a Tuesday in November.
I did not turn around.
I drank my coffee.
I read, with intentional unhurried attention, the menu I was not going to order from.
When my coffee was done, I stood up. I walked, calmly, out of the café. I did not look at the other tables. I did not scan the street. I got back in the van, which I had parked half a block down, and I drove home to my apartment.
──
On my doormat there was a small object.
Not flowers. Not a card.
A photograph in a small silver frame.
My grandmother on the porch of her house in Donegal, the summer before she died. The photograph I had packed into the duffel the night of, and then — I had not been certain until this moment — had left in the drawer of my old desk in the bedroom at 437 Birchwood because the duffel had been full and I had thought I would come back for it.
I had not come back for it.
He had.
He had been in my apartment again, after I had not gone back, to retrieve the one thing he had noticed I had wanted to take and had failed to.
I picked the frame up.
I held it.
The photograph was undamaged. The frame had been cleaned the small tarnish that had been on it for years was gone. He had cleaned the frame before he gave it back to me.
I let myself in. I closed the door behind me. I locked it twice.
I did not check it a third time.
I put the photograph on the kitchen windowsill, in the morning light, where my grandmother could see the trees.
I sat down at the table.
I understood, with a cold clarity, that the distance had closed.
The man who had been watching me from data was no longer just watching me from data. The man who had been leaving things on stoops was no longer leaving things on stoops. The next time, I understood, I was going to see his face.
I did not know whether I wanted that or feared it.
I noted, with the small honest precision I was learning from this autumn, that both could be true.
Marcus POV Eddie Doyle was already at the table when I arrived.He had chosen, of the several tables the restaurant had available at one PM on a Monday, the one in the back corner with its back to the wall and a clear sightline to the door the table a man chooses when he has spent thirty-one years making sure he sees who comes in before they see him. He had a cup of coffee in front of him. He had no notebook, no folder, no phone on the table. He had his hands folded on the table in front of the coffee, and he watched me cross the room to him with the unhurried completeness I had read about in the trial transcripts and had now, for the second time, the experience of being on the receiving end of.I sat down across from him.I did not offer my hand. He did not offer his. We had, two nights ago on a sidewalk in Ditmas Park, already exchanged the only greeting our relationship was going to be built on, which was a man letting another man photograph him.Doyle said: “Mr. Reed.”I said: “M
Saoirse POV I drove to Brooklyn Heights on Sunday at seven thirty PM, the way I had told him I would, and I did not, on the drive over, rehearse the gentle version of the evening I had imagined on Friday.On Friday I had imagined Sunday as a soft thing. I had imagined arriving at his house and being given tea and sitting in the front room and letting the two of us begin, slowly, the work of being two people who were choosing each other with both sets of eyes open. I had imagined the quiet. I had earned the quiet, I had thought, and so had he.That version of Sunday had died on Saturday night, at my kitchen table, when Priya told me about the compliance question.I drove over with the dead version of the evening in the passenger seat and the live version the one where I walked into his house and detonated the careful architecture he had spent two months building in my hands on the wheel.Faraz opened the door before I knocked.He had, I understood, been watching for the van. He looked
Saoirse POVPriya arrived at seven with two bags and the good curry.The good curry came from the Thai place on Church Avenue that she had been getting it from for the eight years we had been doing this the panang she liked and the drunken noodles I liked and the spring rolls neither of us admitted to ordering for ourselves and both of us ate. She came in out of the November cold with the bags and her cheeks pink and her scarf still on, and she put the bags on my kitchen counter, and she turned around and she looked at me, and the first thing she said was not about the curry.The first thing she said was: “You said you wanted to talk to me about something.”I had forgotten, in the four hours since I sent the text, that I had announced the conversation in advance. Priya had not forgotten. Priya had carried the sentence on the train from her apartment, and she had walked in the door holding it, and she was not going to let the curry happen on top of it.I said: “Let’s eat first.”She lo
Saoirse POV Saturday I did what I had told myself on Friday I was going to do.I bought the book on Friday afternoon walked into the store on Cortelyou, went to the back, took it off the shelf at the Cs, and carried it to the counter and paid for it like a woman buying a book, which is a small ordinary act I had not performed in three years. The girl at the register put it in a paper bag. I carried it home. I put it on my own shelf, in my own apartment, in the spot I had cleared for it.I did not open it Friday night.I had decided the book was for Saturday.On Saturday I took it to the café.──I want to tell you about the reading, because the reading was the entire point of the day, and the day was the last fully quiet day I was going to have for a long time, though I did not know that yet.I sat at the window seat at the café on Cortelyou my window seat, the one I had been sitting in on Saturdays, the one I had been sitting in when his attention had come in behind me two weeks ago
Marcus POVI sent the message to Doyle at seven oh-three AM.I had set the timer the night before. The message was already composed, encrypted, queued in a routing system that would deliver it through a sequence of services that did not require my hand on a keyboard at the moment of sending. I had wanted, in advance, to remove the small superstitious pleasure of being able to second-guess myself between waking and the act of sending. The act of sending was already done before I got out of bed.I made coffee. I checked the message had gone through. It had.I dressed.I went down to the kitchen. Faraz was already there. He had, I understood, been there since six — had let himself in with the key he had kept for seven years, had started the coffee in the small machine I had stopped using in favor of the French press, and had been sitting at the kitchen island with the *New York Times* opened to the business section.He had not, in seven years, made coffee in my kitchen before I came down
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Saoirse POVEddie Doyle came to my apartment on a Saturday at seven-eighteen PM.I had been home for two hours by then. I had eaten dinner at the small kitchen table I had bought myself the week before. I had put my grandmother’s photograph on the windowsill. I had been, in the slow careful way a w
Marcus POVI was at the café before her.I want to tell you why, because the why matters. I had not engineered the encounter. I had in the eleven days since the burial of the tulips stopped engineering. The folder had grown to twenty-one entries, and the entries had begun, without my having decided
Marcus POV I read Detective Reyes’s interview notes on Wednesday evening.I want to be specific about the access, because the access is the kind of thing a person should be uncomfortable with. Arbitr AI has an enterprise contract with the NYPD that processes case data through our threat-classifica
Saoirse POV Detective Reyes came to my mother’s apartment on a Wednesday, eight days after I reported Derek missing.I had been expecting her. Or someone like her. The Verdict Killer, the man whose name I did not yet have, the man I was still, in my own head, calling ‘him’ had told me at the door t







