There's something about her.
From the moment he sees Olivia standing in line at a sushi bar, he understands what most people miss: connection isn't luck. It's structure. It's timing. It's inevitability.
He doesn't believe in chaos.
He believes in momentum.
Olivia is kind, intelligent, and slowly drifting away from a relationship that no longer fits. He doesn't interfere impulsively. He observes. He adjusts. He removes obstacles carefully - because real love isn't reckless.
It's patient.
But when the past resurfaces and questions begin to circulate, the careful architecture he's built starts to shift. A comment lingers too long. A detective knocks twice. A sister watches too closely.
And for the first time, inevitability feels uncertain.
Told from the chilling perspective of a controlled, calculating narrator, There's Something About You is a slow-burn psychological thriller about obsession, perception, and the quiet ways people convince themselves they're the hero of their own story.
Some connections are accidental.
Others are engineered.