By Chris Mason
Political editor, BBC News
Civil servants, advisers, MPs, you name it - there is, not for the first time this year, a swirl of chat within government and beyond that the prime minister might be about to call a general election, or at least have something to say about it.
Cards on the table: I am usually not that excitable about this kind of stuff, because it is usually quickly debunked.
This time, at least as I write this, it feels different.
For over 12 hours now I have been seeking a straight answer to whether Rishi Sunak is about to call an election and no straight answer has come.
Calls that are normally returned haven't been.
It's not a complete wall of silence, but the only question that matters isn't being directly addressed.
Mr Sunak appeared briefly in front of a camera this morning to welcome the fall in inflation, but stuck to his formulation that the general election would be in the second half of the year.
And if he did call it soon-ish, it probably would be - because July is, just, in the second half of 2024.
As I type this in parliament's Portcullis House, it is all folk are talking about.
Plausible cases are being made about why he could go for it now, and why he might not - by MPs of every political colour.
Over to him, and those around him, to clear it up.