Except the Sun sets (here, at least) at 2111, so the ISS is counted as a daylight pass and may not be visible at all...............
We may, however, see the SpaceX which will track from just north of SW to just south of SE. I say 'may' because it still won't be full dark and at its maximum it will only achieve magnitude -0.3. That's just slightly brighter than Vega in Lyra, if anyone's familiar. Considerably fainter than Venus, Jupiter and the ISS which was mag -3.8 when I saw it last night (roughly on a par with Venus). It achieves maximum brightness more or less passing the Moon but it will pass north of the Moon, not right by it. Look up Crew Dragon on Heavens Above. Put in your location as a lat/long then click on the entry in the list (you need to select 'all passes' to see the first one) and you get a sky chart. HA also shows the ISS and Starlink vermin passes.
I believe the ISS has sparked a few 'UFO sightings' recently...............