TW :: Mild Gore
The small house smelled damp. At first, Catherine attributed that fact to the rain outside but as she ventured deeper into the building, the more she doubted that. The rest, or at least most, of AHPD puttered around her. The beams of their flashlights slashed through the darkness sporadically. Cath shared a glance with Sheriff Heavensbee at her elbow before clicking on her own handheld light.
Her light trailed over a china cabinet. One of the doors had been ripped from its hinges, it glass window shattered onto the ground below. Fine, delicate dishes lay strewn about, their displays tipped ad thrown. Any openable part of the house, furniture and structure, was in a similar state. Whatever it was, it had been looking for something.
Yeah, less than an hour ago. Cath didn't bother vocalizing that sentiment. She came back to Adelaide Hills willingly after all. Well, as willingly as one can after getting a panicked call from their mother in the middle of the night. A murder, Meilin Song had sobbed into her phone. In town!
The news had shocked Catherine. Adelaide Hills was a strange place, filled with strange and unique people, not all of them necessarily human. But, as long as Cath could remember, it had been a safe place. The population was small enough that everyone knew each other, that everyone buried themselves in each other's business. It wasn't the place for a murder, especially an unsolvable one.
And so, without much preamble, Cath packed up her life in Chicago and rushed back to her tiny hometown. She arrived less than an hour ago, exhausted and ready to collapse into her hotel bed. And then the Sheriff called.
Cath's eyes swept over the door, over the bloodied handprints marring the white paint. The victim had tried to escape. Cath looked down the hall, sweeping her light back and forth. There was no blood anywhere else in the ransacked house. Even the blood on the door seemed limited to that singular spot.
With practiced ease, Cath ducked underneath the tape, keeping her forensics kit close to her chest. She stopped just inside the doorway, her stomach lurching violently. This part of the job, it seemed, she never got used to.
The blood covered every surface in the bedroom. It stained the walls and the carpet, splattered across the furniture and soaked into the bedsheets. The body lay on the bed as if the victim had been asleep when they were attacked. Their limbs were thrown out, spread eagle, face tilted towards the ceiling.
Cath ventured closer as tugged on a pair of disposable gloves. She tilted her head, eyes sweeping over the body. Curiously, the toes of the left foot and the thumb of the right finger were missing. When she leaned forward, she noted the missing eyes and tongue, the rope burns etched into the skin of the neck. Cath swallowed thickly. They'd been alive when the removal occurred.
A sound caught Cath's attention. She whipped around, lifting her flashlight a little higher. A pair of shiny, curious eyes watched her from the darkness, animal in nature. She stepped a little closer. The rat continued to stare at her for a long, silent moment. The stare too intelligent to be creature. A twitch of the nose and it turned. Cath lurched forward towards it but it was already gone, no trace of it left behind.
Another officer approached, whispering urgently. Heavensbee cursed lowly under his breath.
Cath started to pull items out of her kit, her flashlight gripped between her teeth, when her eye caught a flash of color. She crouched, reaching out and pulling out a sprig of lavender, fresh and untainted by the crime scene around it. She twisted the stem between her fingers and frowned.
She worked quickly, filling up samples and taking the best pictures she could in the relative darkness. She hoped they managed to get the power on soon so she could take better ones. But for now, it was all she could do. Still no sign of the Sheriff.
Cath stripped her gloves and slipped them into a trash bag before exiting the room and the house. She squinted against the flash of the police lights, noting the poorly controlled crowd. AHPD was not used to dealing with crowd control. They weren't used to crowds at all. Most seemed wise enough to at least keep back from the scene itself though.
Cath looked across the field of people, searching for the face of the Sheriff. But he was nowhere to be seen. She stepped further into the crowd.
The small house smelled damp. At first, Catherine attributed that fact to the rain outside but as she ventured deeper into the building, the more she doubted that. The rest, or at least most, of AHPD puttered around her. The beams of their flashlights slashed through the darkness sporadically. Cath shared a glance with Sheriff Heavensbee at her elbow before clicking on her own handheld light.
"Still no power?"
Cath asked as she stepped over what might've once been a vase.Her light trailed over a china cabinet. One of the doors had been ripped from its hinges, it glass window shattered onto the ground below. Fine, delicate dishes lay strewn about, their displays tipped ad thrown. Any openable part of the house, furniture and structure, was in a similar state. Whatever it was, it had been looking for something.
"Got some fellas from Wrightwater Electric headed over here now,"
Heavensbee explained, his voice deep and booming. "But I figured it's better to show it to ya now, rather than later, right?"
"Right."
Cath agreed readily."'M sorry to drag ya out of bed this late at night,"
the sheriff of Adelaide Hills continued in his thick accent. "Know ya just got into town and all."
Yeah, less than an hour ago. Cath didn't bother vocalizing that sentiment. She came back to Adelaide Hills willingly after all. Well, as willingly as one can after getting a panicked call from their mother in the middle of the night. A murder, Meilin Song had sobbed into her phone. In town!
The news had shocked Catherine. Adelaide Hills was a strange place, filled with strange and unique people, not all of them necessarily human. But, as long as Cath could remember, it had been a safe place. The population was small enough that everyone knew each other, that everyone buried themselves in each other's business. It wasn't the place for a murder, especially an unsolvable one.
And so, without much preamble, Cath packed up her life in Chicago and rushed back to her tiny hometown. She arrived less than an hour ago, exhausted and ready to collapse into her hotel bed. And then the Sheriff called.
"It's just like the last'n,"
Heavensbee said as he gestured to the door leading into one of the bedrooms. Yellow police crossed it off.Cath's eyes swept over the door, over the bloodied handprints marring the white paint. The victim had tried to escape. Cath looked down the hall, sweeping her light back and forth. There was no blood anywhere else in the ransacked house. Even the blood on the door seemed limited to that singular spot.
With practiced ease, Cath ducked underneath the tape, keeping her forensics kit close to her chest. She stopped just inside the doorway, her stomach lurching violently. This part of the job, it seemed, she never got used to.
The blood covered every surface in the bedroom. It stained the walls and the carpet, splattered across the furniture and soaked into the bedsheets. The body lay on the bed as if the victim had been asleep when they were attacked. Their limbs were thrown out, spread eagle, face tilted towards the ceiling.
Cath ventured closer as tugged on a pair of disposable gloves. She tilted her head, eyes sweeping over the body. Curiously, the toes of the left foot and the thumb of the right finger were missing. When she leaned forward, she noted the missing eyes and tongue, the rope burns etched into the skin of the neck. Cath swallowed thickly. They'd been alive when the removal occurred.
A sound caught Cath's attention. She whipped around, lifting her flashlight a little higher. A pair of shiny, curious eyes watched her from the darkness, animal in nature. She stepped a little closer. The rat continued to stare at her for a long, silent moment. The stare too intelligent to be creature. A twitch of the nose and it turned. Cath lurched forward towards it but it was already gone, no trace of it left behind.
"Can we hurry this up, Cath?"
Heavensbee asked from the doorway, his voice strained. "Betcha that wannabe reporter's gunna show up any minute now."
"Right,"
Cath mumbled as she turned back to her work. Big city or small town, it seemed like the press was determined to mess with any crime scene.Another officer approached, whispering urgently. Heavensbee cursed lowly under his breath.
"I'll be back. Someone decided to alert the whole damn neighborhood,"
he rumbled before he disappeared.Cath started to pull items out of her kit, her flashlight gripped between her teeth, when her eye caught a flash of color. She crouched, reaching out and pulling out a sprig of lavender, fresh and untainted by the crime scene around it. She twisted the stem between her fingers and frowned.
"Lavender for luck,"
she whispered to no one in particular before she slid the flower into a sample tube.She worked quickly, filling up samples and taking the best pictures she could in the relative darkness. She hoped they managed to get the power on soon so she could take better ones. But for now, it was all she could do. Still no sign of the Sheriff.
Cath stripped her gloves and slipped them into a trash bag before exiting the room and the house. She squinted against the flash of the police lights, noting the poorly controlled crowd. AHPD was not used to dealing with crowd control. They weren't used to crowds at all. Most seemed wise enough to at least keep back from the scene itself though.
Cath looked across the field of people, searching for the face of the Sheriff. But he was nowhere to be seen. She stepped further into the crowd.
the mundane
cath.
♡coded by uxie♡
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