Commander Zemil Vymes
Oct 9th, 2003, 12:17:01 PM
"What do you remember?"
She continued to stare at me with wide-distant eyes. Her knees were pulled up to her chest, and she shrank into the far corner of my office.
"Kala?"
Nothing. But more than nothing. She had to have seen. You could almost see the smoking gun reflected in her eyes. The last punctuated moments before Laius Mirthos passed into oblivion. Death left its fingerprints on everyone around it. You didn't need to be a CSI to know it.
Father murdered. Mother Jocasta and brother Turna missing.
In the squeeze of a trigger, the world had crashed down around Kala Mirthos. Now she needed an escape. Unfortunately for me, I had to pull her back into it. Another pleasant perk to my thankless job.
"Tell me about the man."
Truth be told, I didn't know if it was a man, woman, alien, or droid. The bloodstains had barely begun to dry, but already, clues were evaporating in the dead of night.
And Kala wasn't talking. She inhaled deeply, and gulped, eyes fixated at something beyond me and nothing at once.
My coffee was cold.
"You want to go with Zorah and get something to eat?"
She didn't move. I paged Zorah to my office. The only thing I could do was go back to mucking with what little we had, and hope that Kala came out of her shell. I needed her to talk.
Somewhere on my streets, there was a murderer, and with Jocasta and Turna Mirthos missing, the possibilities only widened.
She continued to stare at me with wide-distant eyes. Her knees were pulled up to her chest, and she shrank into the far corner of my office.
"Kala?"
Nothing. But more than nothing. She had to have seen. You could almost see the smoking gun reflected in her eyes. The last punctuated moments before Laius Mirthos passed into oblivion. Death left its fingerprints on everyone around it. You didn't need to be a CSI to know it.
Father murdered. Mother Jocasta and brother Turna missing.
In the squeeze of a trigger, the world had crashed down around Kala Mirthos. Now she needed an escape. Unfortunately for me, I had to pull her back into it. Another pleasant perk to my thankless job.
"Tell me about the man."
Truth be told, I didn't know if it was a man, woman, alien, or droid. The bloodstains had barely begun to dry, but already, clues were evaporating in the dead of night.
And Kala wasn't talking. She inhaled deeply, and gulped, eyes fixated at something beyond me and nothing at once.
My coffee was cold.
"You want to go with Zorah and get something to eat?"
She didn't move. I paged Zorah to my office. The only thing I could do was go back to mucking with what little we had, and hope that Kala came out of her shell. I needed her to talk.
Somewhere on my streets, there was a murderer, and with Jocasta and Turna Mirthos missing, the possibilities only widened.