You’d learned lying young — a useful muscle, like curling your tongue. You told your mother you loved her casseroles. Told your boss the report was almost done. Told yourself you’d call back. Small deceptions, soft as moths. You became fluent in the grammar of omission.
The fluorescent light buzzed like a trapped fly.
The interrogation room smelled of stale coffee and sweat. Across the table, Detective Marlow slid a photograph into the center: a watch, its crystal shattered, caught mid-flash by a streetlamp’s glare.
You shrugged. “I’m never there.”
But this was different. This watch belonged to a man who’d vanished two nights ago. And you had been there — not to hurt him, but to watch him leave. To memorize the way his shadow split across wet asphalt. To count the seconds before he disappeared for good.
Then you smiled.
“Detective,” you said, and let your voice soften at the edges — just enough to seem human. “I’m a bad liar. That’s why I’m still here.” Bad Liar
“Your alibi,” Marlow said, tapping the photo. “It’s beautiful, really. Three witnesses, a parking receipt, a latte timestamp. Almost too clean.”
Marlow stared at you for a long, dry minute. Then he pushed back his chair, gathered the photograph, and walked out.
Outside, the city exhaled. Somewhere a man with a broken watch was already forgetting your name. And you — you were already practicing your next confession, the one you’d never have to make. You’d learned lying young — a useful muscle,
Your pulse didn’t change. That was the trick: lying isn’t about invention. It’s about subtraction. You remove the tremor from your voice. You sand away the interesting details. You make the truth so boring that no one wants to dig.
He almost smiled. Almost.