Marek frowned. He had the police report on his desk for that exact car. It had been reported stolen and burned to a crisp on . 🔍 The Discrepancy
His own name. Underneath it was a photo of his own apartment, taken from the street an hour ago, with a red "X" over the window.
In every photo, reflected in a window or a chrome bumper, was a man in a pale grey suit. He wasn't holding a camera; he was holding a stopwatch. ZdjД™cia do ubezpieczenia.zip
As Marek clicked through the gallery, the "insurance photos" became a surreal tour of impossible timing:
### 📸 The First ImageIt was a vintage 1964 Porsche 911, pristine and gleaming under a streetlamp. The location was clearly the Poniatowski Bridge. The timestamp read: . Marek frowned
Insurance fraud involving items that were never actually destroyed.
Marek realized this wasn't a record of what had been lost. It was a catalog of what was being . The "Zdjecia do ubezpieczenia.zip" wasn't sent by a whistleblower—it was a ransom note from a rival syndicate. They were showing the "Ghost Insurer" that they knew exactly where the "destroyed" assets were being kept. ⚠️ The Final File 🔍 The Discrepancy His own name
A famous oil painting, "The Night Watchman," hanging in a private study. It had been officially "destroyed in a gallery fire" six months prior, resulting in a 10-million-zloty payout. The Shadow in the Frame