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canon:ace27:chapter6 [14/03/2026 16:34] – luotu kkurzexcanon:ace27:chapter6 [15/03/2026 09:21] (current) kkurzex
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 +Chapter 6
  
 +The apartment exhaled slowly back into its familiar late-night hush.
 +
 +Ace’s door closed down the hallway—soft metallic click that carried just far enough to register, then nothing.
 +
 +Rain kept tapping the kitchen window in patient Morse. Not insistent. Just present. Steady drops sliding down glass, blurring the city’s violet-amber bleed into softer ghosts.
 +
 +Mai stayed leaning against the counter. Reports still open in front of her, but her eyes weren’t on the pages anymore. Silver-blue gaze drifted toward the hallway, thoughtful, the tiniest lift at one corner of her mouth that hadn’t quite left.
 +
 +Shammy remained seated at the table. Tall frame folded with effortless economy. Silver-white hair catching faint ionized glints from the overhead light. Electric blue eyes calm, watchful. She lifted her coffee mug—black, no steam left—and took a measured sip.
 +
 +“Observation.”
 +
 +Mai didn’t look up immediately. Thumb slid along the edge of a page.
 +
 +“Go on.”
 +
 +Shammy adjusted the tablet beside her elbow. Small shift, deliberate.
 +
 +“She deflected fourteen direct conversational probes.”
 +
 +Mai turned the page with slow precision.
 +
 +“Only fourteen?
 +
 +Shammy inclined her head once.
 +
 +“Fourteen.”
 +
 +Mai let the number sit between them for a beat.
 +
 +“That’s actually lower than average.”
 +
 +Shammy’s brow lifted fractionally—genuine curiosity flickering.
 +
 +“You maintain a baseline?
 +
 +Mai shrugged lightly, shoulders rolling under the open shirt.
 +
 +“Experience.”
 +
 +Shammy nodded again, accepting.
 +
 +“Interesting.”
 +
 +Quiet settled again. Rain kept its rhythm. Somewhere deeper in the building a pipe groaned once, then stilled.
 +
 +Shammy spoke without hurry.
 +
 +“So it was not a one-time interaction.”
 +
 +Mai closed the folder. Neat snap of cardboard.
 +
 +“Correct.”
 +
 +Shammy blinked once—slow, deliberate.
 +
 +“You are certain.”
 +
 +Mai leaned back a fraction against the counter edge. Arms crossing loose under her chest, shirt gaping just enough to show the sharp line of collarbone.
 +
 +“She didn’t deny it.”
 +
 +Shammy tilted her head.
 +
 +“That is not the same thing.”
 +
 +Mai’s smile came faint, almost private.
 +
 +“No.”
 +
 +She picked up her own mug—coffee gone lukewarm, bitter edge still sharp. Took a sip anyway.
 +
 +“But with Ace,” she continued, voice low, “it is usually the closest thing to confirmation you’ll get.”
 +
 +Shammy let the words settle. Considered them for several long seconds, fingers resting motionless on the tablet edge.
 +
 +“That is consistent with historical patterns.”
 +
 +Mai nodded once.
 +
 +“Exactly.”
 +
 +They sat in comfortable silence. Rain softened further outside—drops spacing out, like the night was finally deciding to breathe easier.
 +
 +Then Shammy tilted her head again.
 +
 +“Secondary observation.”
 +
 +Mai exhaled through her nose—small sound, half amusement, half surrender.
 +
 +“Yes?”
 +
 +“Your reaction was… statistically different.”
 +
 +Mai looked up slowly. Silver-blue eyes meeting electric blue without flinch.
 +
 +“Oh?”
 +
 +“Yes.”
 +
 +“How so?”
 +
 +Shammy glanced at the tablet, then back to her.
 +
 +“You appeared amused.”
 +
 +Mai raised one eyebrow—slow arc.
 +
 +“Did I.”
 +
 +“Yes.”
 +
 +Mai took another sip of coffee. Held her gaze over the rim.
 +
 +“That may have been imagination.”
 +
 +Shammy studied her another moment—calm pressure presence, air around him subtly warmer near her.
 +
 +Then nodded once.
 +
 +“Possible.”
 +
 +
 +
 +Down the hallway Ace collapsed onto the edge of the bed. Boots kicked off in two quick motions—thud, thud—landing haphazard against the wall.
 +
 +“Interrogation squad,” she muttered under her breath.
 +
 +She ran both hands through damp black hair, pushing it back from her face. Violet sheen caught the faint city glow leaking through half-closed blinds. She let out a slow breath—long, visible in the cool room air.
 +
 +For a moment she just sat there. Shoulders loose. Jacket still half-unzipped. The quiet wrapped around her like familiar weight.
 +
 +Then a soft laugh escaped—low, private, dry humor threading through it.
 +
 +“Worth it.”
 +
 +She stood eventually. Flicked off the bedside lamp with one thumb. Darkness rushed in gentle—only the city’s bruised purple filtering through slats, painting faint stripes across the floor.
 +
 +Ace disappeared into it without another word.
 +
 +
 +
 +Far above the sleeping sprawl, where rooftops blurred into low clouds and the first pale gray was just beginning to bleed along the eastern horizon, two figures remained motionless.
 +
 +Mephisto looked thoroughly entertained—coat collar high against the damp, dark eyes gleaming.
 +
 +“You see?” he said lightly, almost fond. “That was textbook.”
 +
 +Konrad stayed quiet. Hands deep in pockets. Gaze fixed on the safehouse window below—warm glow still leaking from the kitchen, silhouettes moving slow as the night finally wound itself down.
 +
 +Mephisto gestured lazily toward it.
 +
 +“She returned.”
 +
 +“Yes.”
 +
 +“She did not deny the implication.”
 +
 +“No.”
 +
 +Mephisto’s smile curved wider.
 +
 +“And therefore.”
 +
 +Konrad turned his head just enough.
 +
 +“You misunderstand the variable.”
 +
 +Mephisto raised an eyebrow—elegant, intrigued.
 +
 +“Oh?”
 +
 +Konrad looked back down at the city—rain-slick streets catching the dying neon, puddles reflecting fading lights.
 +
 +“The question was never whether the evening happened.”
 +
 +Mephisto folded his hands behind his back.
 +
 +“Then what was the question?
 +
 +Konrad’s voice came flat, certain.
 +
 +“How much she would allow the others to know.”
 +
 +Mephisto considered that for a long beat.
 +
 +Then chuckled—soft, intimate sound against the pre-dawn quiet.
 +
 +“You’re splitting hairs.”
 +
 +Konrad shook his head once—small, definite.
 +
 +“No.”
 +
 +Below them the kitchen light finally flicked off. Mai set the last report aside. Shammy closed the tablet with a quiet click. The apartment fell properly dark—only the faint violet-amber city bleed remaining.
 +
 +Mephisto watched the window another moment.
 +
 +Then smiled faintly.
 +
 +“Well.”
 +
 +He glanced sideways at Konrad.
 +
 +“One perspective complete.”
 +
 +Konrad nodded once.
 +
 +“Yes.”
 +
 +Mephisto’s eyes gleamed—something older flickering behind the amusement.
 +
 +“Now the interesting part begins.”
 +
 +Konrad already knew where his gaze would turn next.
 +
 +Toward the same apartment.
 +
 +Toward the same quiet window.
 +
 +Toward the second member of the Triad.
 +
 +Mephisto spoke her name softly, almost reverent.
 +
 +“Mai.”
 +
 +Konrad did not disagree.
 +
 +The city stretched endlessly beneath them—lights fading one by one as morning crept closer, pale and unhurried.
 +
 +And somewhere below, entirely unaware of the wager unfolding in the thin space between realities, Mai poured herself another cup of coffee.
 +
 +The steam rose slow.
 +
 +The night ended.
 +
 +The next one waited.