The rain poured down outside, fogging up the windows of her office. The clock was inching closer to midnight with every second. She sat on the sofa, hunched over with a drink in her hand. The office was more cluttered than usual as she’d given up on trying to have an apartment. Instead she’d moved her belongings into the office before she was evicted from her apartment. Tsuki may be skilled enough to support both through her work, but over the years she’d begun drinking more and working less. These days she only accepted cases that interested her or paid particularly well unless she was desperate for rent.
On the tinted glass of her office door “Detective medium” was written in large letters, and below it her name Aizawa Tsuki. That she was able to communicate with the dead often did make the job easy when she investigated murders, but it had made it too easy, plus the recently dead could be rather annoying and whiny. Yeah, I get it, you didn’t plan on dying like this. Heard it a thousand times, chum. Cold cases were more interesting, or cases where the victims hadn’t seen the face of their murderer. Some cases stayed with her though. One of the reasons she’d stopped working as much and drinking more were that the most gruesome cases refused to leave her, turning into nightmares in the dark of night.
A loud roar could be heard from somewhere outside, thankfully not too close, but it was shortly followed by screams and a siren. Tsuki took a swig of her drink, got up and walked over to the windows. She couldn’t see much due to the darkness and the rain. Streetlights lit up the area some stories down and cars drove by, but there wasn’t much other movement.
She emptied the remaining liquid in the glass while staring out at the city. Enfield, a city located in the northwestern part of Kapraenia, almost on the border to France. It was a medium sized city, with little going for it, but she had grown up here and it was home more than anywhere else. She had memories of this place going back to her childhood, some good and some bad. The most important thing of all was that she had her family, her friends and her contacts here though. Sometimes her job took her to far off countries, if they paid for her journey, but she always enjoyed returning home.
Tsuki sighed and returned to the sofa. She laid down, turned on the TV and made a mental note that she should buy a bed sofa if she was going to be living in her office from now on, or at the very least a sofa that was longer. There was breaking news about a griffin that had been released from a nearby zoo by some religious fanatic claiming their god had told them to do it. It wasn’t really worth mention as news, considering how often some nutjob did something that their god had told them to do. She respected the gods, but preferred if they stayed out of her business. Tsuki began flipping through the channels, searching for something to watch.
On the tinted glass of her office door “Detective medium” was written in large letters, and below it her name Aizawa Tsuki. That she was able to communicate with the dead often did make the job easy when she investigated murders, but it had made it too easy, plus the recently dead could be rather annoying and whiny. Yeah, I get it, you didn’t plan on dying like this. Heard it a thousand times, chum. Cold cases were more interesting, or cases where the victims hadn’t seen the face of their murderer. Some cases stayed with her though. One of the reasons she’d stopped working as much and drinking more were that the most gruesome cases refused to leave her, turning into nightmares in the dark of night.
A loud roar could be heard from somewhere outside, thankfully not too close, but it was shortly followed by screams and a siren. Tsuki took a swig of her drink, got up and walked over to the windows. She couldn’t see much due to the darkness and the rain. Streetlights lit up the area some stories down and cars drove by, but there wasn’t much other movement.
She emptied the remaining liquid in the glass while staring out at the city. Enfield, a city located in the northwestern part of Kapraenia, almost on the border to France. It was a medium sized city, with little going for it, but she had grown up here and it was home more than anywhere else. She had memories of this place going back to her childhood, some good and some bad. The most important thing of all was that she had her family, her friends and her contacts here though. Sometimes her job took her to far off countries, if they paid for her journey, but she always enjoyed returning home.
Tsuki sighed and returned to the sofa. She laid down, turned on the TV and made a mental note that she should buy a bed sofa if she was going to be living in her office from now on, or at the very least a sofa that was longer. There was breaking news about a griffin that had been released from a nearby zoo by some religious fanatic claiming their god had told them to do it. It wasn’t really worth mention as news, considering how often some nutjob did something that their god had told them to do. She respected the gods, but preferred if they stayed out of her business. Tsuki began flipping through the channels, searching for something to watch.