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Caliberated To Kill

Xaryx_0
7
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 7 chs / week.
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Synopsis
“If you step off a ledge, gravity pulls you down. It’s not personal.” But when Vee fell from the rooftop, it didn’t feel like an accident. And I wasn’t supposed to be there. One second, she was arguing with him. The next, she was gone. He didn’t scream. He didn’t run. He just looked at me—like he knew I saw. Everyone says it was a tragic mistake. But I know what I saw. Now he’s watching me. Waiting. And if I say a word… I might be next. Was it murder? A cover-up? Or something even darker? There’s only one way to find out. Read “Precision's Fatal Descent” now.
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Chapter 1 - Chapter - 1 - The Fall

The stairwell was silent except for their voices—sharp, clipped, barely above a whisper.

She was still arguing. Still trying to explain.

"That's not lying—"

He wasn't listening. His expression never changed—calm, unreadable, but his fingers twitched. A subtle movement, barely noticeable, but a sign. The only sign.

Then, he moved.

It wasn't a shove. It wasn't frantic. There was no anger in it—just a quiet, calculated decision.

Vee's foot missed the step.

The realization hit her too late—her hands shot out, reaching for something, anything—but he had already accounted for that.

His grip met hers for just a second, but not to save her.

To let go.

The moment stretched, like time itself resisted what was happening.

Then, her body broke through the air.

A sharp, gasping scream—cut off before it could finish. A sickening, solid crack as her skull met the concrete below.

And then, silence.

The world didn't process it fast enough. But he didn't even look down.

He turned. Adjusted his sleeve. Then, he looked up.

And I was there.

I hadn't meant to be. I wasn't even sure when I stopped walking, when my breath had caught in my throat, when my hands had gone cold.

For a moment, we just stared at each other.

I. Frozen.

Him. Unmoved.

Then, a tilt of his head. Not in surprise. Not in regret.

In acknowledgment.

And then, he walked away.

I didn't scream.

I didn't run.

I just… left.

Back to my dorm. Silent.

The image was burned into my mind—the slow way her body fell, the sound of bone hitting concrete, the way he looked at me after.

My ears rang.

I could still hear it.

I crawled under the covers, eyes open, unblinking.

I didn't sleep.

Didn't move.

Didn't say a word.

Not even when they found Vee the next day.

Not even when the whispers started.

Not even at the funeral.

Because he was there too.

And when our eyes met again, he smiled.