Josslyn didn’t simply analyze what happened in Britt’s office — she arrived at the answer almost instantly, as if it had been forming in her head long before Britt said a word. The speed wasn’t impressive; it was unnerving. In a matter of seconds, she pinpointed Cullum as Marco’s killer, assessed the danger, and shifted into action mode. That level of certainty doesn’t feel like deduction. It feels like recognition. Which leads to the real question: what exactly was she confirming?

What makes it even more questionable is her reaction. Most people — even trained ones — would pause, second-guess, or at least show some level of shock. Joss did none of that. No hesitation. No need for reassurance. No visible surprise. Instead, she moved forward with focus and urgency, like she had been anticipating this moment all along. That wasn’t someone discovering the truth. That was someone stepping into a plan already in motion.
Then came the most alarming part — her suggestion that Britt should take Cullum out. On paper, it can be justified as survival. Cullum is dangerous, and he’s already killed. But Joss’s delivery didn’t come off as fear or panic. It felt measured. Intentional. Eliminating Cullum wouldn’t just remove a threat — it would silence him for good. And that opens a darker possibility: what if Cullum knows something Joss cannot risk being exposed?
There’s also Britt’s position to consider. By pushing her toward that choice, Joss is cornering her into a no-win situation. If Britt follows through, she sacrifices everything — her career, her freedom, possibly her life. But she also becomes vulnerable. And vulnerability creates control. Whether Joss intended it or not, her suggestion shifts the balance of power — and not in Britt’s favor. This wasn’t just about stopping Cullum. It was about controlling how things play out.

The more you examine it, the more it feels like Joss is operating with hidden knowledge. How did she connect Cullum to everything so quickly? Had she already suspected him? Did she uncover something through the WSB that she hasn’t shared? Or has she been tracking this far longer than anyone realizes? It’s starting to feel like Britt wasn’t the first person Joss put this together for — just the first one she chose to act with.
And if Britt follows her lead, the fallout could be catastrophic. Cullum’s death wouldn’t simplify things — it could make everything worse. Legally, it could destroy Jason. What’s currently a complicated situation could spiral into something far more severe. In trying to “solve” the problem, Joss may actually be locking in Jason’s downfall. Or worse — she already knows that and accepts it. Either way, the damage lands on everyone else. Britt loses everything. Jason risks it all. And Joss remains untouched.
That’s what makes this shift in her character so disturbing. Joss once stood firmly on moral ground — someone who believed in justice, not shortcuts. But now, her actions suggest something far more calculated. She’s not just reacting anymore. She’s influencing outcomes. Guiding decisions. Pushing people into moves they can’t take back. Whether she realizes it or not, she’s starting to think like the very people she used to stand against.
So maybe the biggest mystery isn’t Marco, or Cullum, or even the crime itself. Maybe it’s Joss. What does she actually know? And why is she keeping it hidden? Because nothing about that moment in Britt’s office felt accidental. It felt intentional. And if Cullum ever wakes up, he may not just reveal the truth everyone is chasing — he might reveal the truth Joss has been hiding all along.


