There was one face that continued to pop up; at first he didn’t pay it any mind, assuming that it was just a regular customer. But then he started to see it elsewhere, places where he went when he wasn’t at home or working. He didn’t react to it. He didn’t show any signs that he knew that he had recognised it; and he wasn’t an overly paranoid person, but sometimes enough was enough.
With his tattooed hands shoved deep into his pockets, he wandered back to Serpentine, back to work. It was where he normally went before he tomed home for the night, always making sure he disappeared into his office to do so, and never walking to or from the lair. If someone was following him, he wasn’t about to inadvertently lead them home, even if the place was trapped to the gills and they wouldn’t get beyond the first floor.
When he reached Serpentine, he lingered in the bar. He helped to clean tables, to gather dirty glasses. He was waiting, waiting for that face. The tables were going to be turned tonight. Or whenever he had the chance to turn them. He’d find out who this person was. He’d like to put a profession to the face. He’d like to figure out whether it was friend or foe – paranoia, or truth.