As the clock struck midnight, the fourth detective—a silent woman who had been taking notes the entire time—finally spoke. "It’s a 4x3 problem," she said, her voice cutting through the tension. "Four detectives, three murders. But look at the table."
The first case sat in the center of the table: a delicate glass swan, its neck snapped with surgical precision, found inside a locked jewelry box. Detective Miller, a gruff veteran from the 1950s, chewed on an unlit cigar. "It’s not just about the break," he rumbled. "It’s about the message. Who kills a piece of art?" The Second Miniature: The Tin Soldier Little Murders 4x3
Realization dawned on the group. The miniatures were never the victims. They were the keys to a larger vault hidden right beneath their feet. The "Little Murders" were merely the opening act for a much grander heist. As the clock struck midnight, the fourth detective—a