SSS-Class Profession: The Path to Mastery
Chapter 292: Bingo
CHAPTER 292: BINGO
The air didn’t move.
It just pressed in. Heavy. Too quiet for this many thoughts.
Across from me, she still sat motionless—palms folded like a practiced habit, her back straight with unnatural precision. She hadn’t blinked since she said it.
It’s my father.
I stared at her, and for a while I didn’t say anything.
Then, calmly, I asked, "Mary. What do you mean?"
No response.
Not even a twitch.
Her eyes had gone glassy, like she was watching something behind me. Something old.
Something she’d memorized so completely it didn’t need words anymore.
Her silence wasn’t defiance this time.
It was retreat.
"Mary." I kept my tone even. "Look at me."
She didn’t.
So I softened it.
"I’m not here to hurt you. I’m not trying to trap you or corner you. But I need you to answer that question. Because if you don’t... people might make decisions for you."
Still nothing.
I leaned forward a few inches.
"If you’re honest with me—really honest—there’s a chance we can reduce whatever sentence or restrictions come down from this. You’re a minor. You were scared. If there’s more to this story, now is the time to say it."
I waited.
One second. Two. Five.
But her lips never parted.
She didn’t flinch.
Didn’t breathe louder or shift her posture.
It was like she’d left the room and left a statue behind.
So I leaned back.
Let my arms rest on the armrests.
Closed my eyes just briefly—and let everything I’d gathered spin behind them like puzzle pieces searching for their fit.
Deduction (Lv. 8) | ACTIVE
I started with what I knew.
The man—the figure in Lea’s home—wasn’t just an isolated intruder. He’d been watching her. Monitoring. Possibly even analyzing her from a distance. That much was obvious from the photos. The camera angles. The time gaps.
The same man had appeared in other places. Schools, primarily. Always uninvited. Always unnoticed. The figure was pale, thin, and possessed a twisted, artificial smile. The kind that tried to pass as human but never quite landed.
He never attacked directly. He watched.
Waited.
Lingered.
Now take Mary.
Disappeared from school nearly two years ago.
No major clues. No signs of a struggle. Just vanished.
A few weeks later, she reappeared near a gas station. Dazed. No serious injuries. Claimed she’d run away from her parents. The story was thin, but her medicals were clean. Nothing stuck.
So they accepted it.
The girl who came back wore the same hoodie. The same shoes.
But something was off.
She smiled too often. Too correctly.
She was compliant. Always helpful. Never reactive.
And that smile—always that same, crooked tilt. Too symmetrical to be real. Like it had been taught.
At the time, no one questioned it.
But now?
Now, she sat across from me in a dim gray room, whispering that the pale, wrong man we’d been hunting was her father.
And suddenly, every missing thread started to tighten.
I opened my eyes.
And I spoke—soft, clear, deliberate.
"I think I understand what happened."
Mary didn’t react.
Didn’t confirm.
But her shoulders rose, just barely—like a held breath.
Like part of her didn’t want to hear it out loud.
But needed to.
So I kept going.
"When you disappeared, you didn’t run away."
Her fingers twitched.
"You were taken."
Still no denial.
"I think he—whoever he is—found you before anyone else could. Maybe he was already watching your school. Or maybe it was chance. But when he took you, it wasn’t just physical. He didn’t break you. He rewrote you."
I saw the first crack—her jaw clenched. Barely.
"He made himself your father. Or rather, a father. One you didn’t know you needed. One who taught you how to be quiet. How to smile. How to survive his way."
I didn’t blink.
And neither did she.
"But it wasn’t real. That’s why you flinched when I called the smile creepy. Because deep down, you know it is. But you’ve had to wear it for so long that letting go of it would mean letting go of whatever story he drilled into your skull."
Her hands balled into small fists.
"He conditioned you," I said gently. "And maybe you didn’t realize it then. Maybe you thought he was helping. Maybe you were scared. But I think somewhere along the way, you stopped seeing him as a captor."
My voice dropped.
"And started seeing him as family."
The reaction wasn’t dramatic.
But it was real.
A sharp exhale through her nose. Not a sob. Not a cry.
Just the body’s desperate attempt to do something.
I leaned in.
"He taught you the smile."
Her lip twitched. Not a smile—just the ghost of one.
"He called it safe. Called it yours. Told you it meant you belonged."
I could feel it now. The weight shifting.
My voice was quiet, but it filled the space like fog.
"And after a while, you believed him. Didn’t you?"
Still no words.
But her eyes—finally—looked at me.
They weren’t cold.
They weren’t angry.
They were terrified.
Because I’d said what she didn’t dare admit to herself.
"But he got bored," I said. "Didn’t he?"
Her breath hitched.
"You were perfect. Loyal. Silent. But that’s not what he wanted forever. He wanted more."
I sat back slightly.
"And so... he sent you back. Maybe to find new targets..."
She blinked. Once.
"And when you were found, no one questioned it. You were a girl who ran away and came back quiet. Everyone was just relieved. No one dug deeper."
She didn’t nod.
She didn’t speak.
But she didn’t look away.
"He let you go, Mary. Because he wanted another. And he knew you’d help."
My tone stayed calm. Surgical.
"So you did. You went to school again. You watched. You scouted. Maybe you didn’t even know what you were doing at first. Maybe you told yourself you were protecting someone."
Her fingers trembled now.
"And when you found someone like Lea—someone he would like—you didn’t stop it. You let it happen."
Still no words.
So I leaned forward again. My voice barely audible now.
"Tell me if I’m wrong."
She didn’t.
Didn’t even try.
And in that moment, I didn’t need Psychological Insight to read the truth.
It was written in the way her shoulders sagged—like gravity had just remembered she existed.
The way her eyes stared down at the table—like she couldn’t bear to meet mine.
I exhaled slowly.
And then whispered the word.
"Bingo."
The hum of the fluorescent lights seemed louder now.
She didn’t cry.
She didn’t scream.
She just sat there—fifteen, alone, and breaking from the inside.
And for a moment, I hated what I had to do next.
But I would.
Because I had the story now.
I had a method.
And I had a girl who might finally talk.
Eventually.
But not yet.
So I sat there with her.
Not as a hunter.
Not as a cop.
Just as the only person who saw through the smile.