You know that
feeling that you get when you just know something is wrong? Like there’s
something that you can’t see, but you know it’s out there? Yeah, that’s how I’m
feeling as I stare down at this girl, maybe nineteen years old, laying on her
back in the grass.
She’s dead, by the
way.
You may be
wondering why I’m looking at a dead body. Don’t worry; I don’t have some weird
fetish. I’m a detective, a police detective. This is my job. I get to find out
who, what, when, where, and why a person ended up in the morgue. It doesn’t
seem like it would be a very fun job, but it is. Well, not the dead person part,
but I love solving a case, or just the thrill I get when I chase down bad guys.
Not that I really
get to do it very often, of course. Crystal Haven is just so quiet. Nothing really goes on here,
unless you count the sale Wal-Mart had last weekend.
Oh, how rude of
me; I haven’t introduced myself yet, have I? My name is Samantha Spencer, but
most people call me Sam. I’ve only been a detective for about three years, but
so far I’ve done pretty well for myself. At least, that’s what my partner, Head
Detective Alexander Burnes, tells me. He’s a great guy.
Anyway, back to
the body. I didn’t see anything wrong with it, other than the fact that she was
dead, but she did have a look of pure shock and pain on her face.
“Do we know what
happened here?” Burnes asks the analyzer, a guy named Parker.
He shrugs. “It’s
hard to tell. We do have an ID, though.” He holds up a wallet open to the girls
drivers license that is in an evidence bag. “Victims name’s Katherine Globe,
twenty years old. Her card tells us that she’s had a history of heart problems,
but we can’t rule that as a cause of death quite yet.”
“Well, we can’t
rule it out, either.” Burnes says with a roll of his eyes.
“How about we head
over to the morgue to talk to Carl?” I suggest.
“In a minute,”
Burnes tells me, “I want to check out the area around the body.”
I nod and follow
him. Nothing about this girl is too unusual, I note. Brown hair, shoulder
length, grey eyes, average height and weight. Crime scene tape surrounds the
area around her.
After a while, it
gets uncomfortable staring at her, so I choose to look at the grass instead.
I’m glad I do, because I notice something really weird: there’s a pattern in
the grass.
“Burnes,” I call,
motioning him over with my hand, “come look at this.” I study the grass some
more. It made a weird shape, sort of like this:
~øº~øº~øº~øº~
And it goes around
in a circle, all around the body.
“Is that… a crop
circle?” Burnes asks me, his face pale and his voice strained.
I nod. “Do you
think we should tell the Chief?” I ask wryly. “After all, aliens as a cause of death. We won’t sound crazy at all.” Note my
heavy use of sarcasm
“Maybe this should stay between us,” he says,
“we’ll let them know the victim died of a heart attack.”
I nod in
agreement. “I wouldn’t like to be locked up in the loony bin, that’s for sure.”
I say, and we head off to type up our reports.
Maybe if we had
stayed a moment longer, we would have noticed a gray-skinned figure fade into
sight next to the body, before it disappeared in a beam of light.
~Fin~